Door of Return Relocation OS

Offline Planning Guide for Black Diaspora Families

What you'll get inside the Door of Return Relocation OS Bundle

Offline HTML Planning Guide

→ Your complete relocation workspace — open in any browser, no login needed. Fill in every section, save your copy, and plan your move without 50 scattered tabs. Covers country fit, visas, housing, schools, budget, timeline, documents, and family conversations in one guided file.

Multi-generational FBA families relocate to FBA-friendly countries
Multi-generational FBA families relocate to FBA-friendly countries

Country & City Fit Matrix

🌍→ A built-in scoring system to compare up to 4 destinations side by side — weighing cost of living, visa ease, schooling options, diaspora community presence, and long-term legacy alignment against your family's non-negotiables.

Built for FBA Families, Not Just Employees
Built for FBA Families, Not Just Employees
an abstract photo of a curved building with a blue sky in the background

Visa & Pathway Planner

You📑→ Map your visa and residency options for each country with fields for requirements, questions to ask, and status tracking — so you always know exactly where you stand and what comes next.

You've Been Planning This Move in Your Head for Months.

Sound familiar? You've done the YouTube research. You have notes everywhere. But nothing feels organized enough to actually act on. And this move is bigger than logistics — your ancestors, your children, and your legacy are all part of this decision.

You've done the YouTube research. You have notes everywhere. But nothing feels organized enough to actually act on. This guide gives you one calm, guided workspace to bring it all together.

Afraid of Expensive Mistakes

Wrong visa, wrong city, wrong school — a move abroad can cost thousands if you get it wrong. You need structure, not vibes. This guide organizes your options so you make confident, informed decisions.

You're not just moving. You're answering a call. Your ancestors, your children, and your legacy are all part of this decision. This guide holds space for both the practical and the ancestral.

This Is Bigger Than Logistics
50 Open Tabs, Zero Clear Plan
"Door of Return Relocation OS turns that scattered energy into one guided workspace."

GHANA 🇬🇭

Ghana offers Right of Abode (ROA) for people of African descent—indefinite residency with work rights and no visa renewal. Government fee: $360–$480 USD for Black Americans (GH₵1,940), with typical processing in 6–8 months.

Accra hosts a growing FBA community with access to entrepreneurship, tech, food, and cultural opportunities at a fraction of U.S. living costs. After years of residency, citizenship pathways open for those seeking a Ghanaian passport.

Housing, Budget & Timeline OS

🏡→ Compare rentals and land options, build a monthly living budget in local currency and USD, track one-time relocation costs, and map a 6–18 month milestone timeline with owner and status fields.

Top rated by 100+ clients

★★★★★

PORTUGAL 🇵🇹

Portugal offers two powerful pathways for Black diaspora professionals — the D8 Digital Nomad Visa for remote workers and freelancers, and the D7 Passive Income Visa for retirees and investors. Both allow you to live legally in Portugal with full Schengen travel access across Europe.

Lisbon, Porto, and the Algarve host a growing diaspora community with world-class infrastructure, lower cost of living than most US cities, and a pathway to permanent residency and citizenship after 5 years. Government fees start at €90 (D7) and €83 (D8), with processing typically taking 2–4 months.

Portugal ranks #6 globally as a top destination for digital nomads — and for Black diaspora families, it represents one of the most accessible, stable, and culturally rich bases in Europe.

BONUS: Relocation Readiness Checklist PDF

→ Score your readiness across 8 key areas — emotional, financial, legal, housing, schooling, career, health, and community — so you know exactly what to tackle first.

BONUS: 30-Day Action Plan Template PDF

📅→ Week-by-week daily actions for your first month of serious relocation planning — from country research to visa prep to family conversations — so you build momentum without overwhelm.