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Virgin Islands
Hi all,
Been thinking about a wild idea for years and only now am I realizing it may indeed be possible. I don't want to live in a big city and would favor the life of an island (Where I'm from originally). Has anyone on BE ever lived on either the BVI or USVI? I would rather move to a US island to continue my citizenship path. I'd be curious to explore the cost of living and so on when it comes to moving to a place like this. Job wise I wouldn't be terribly worried as I can go fire/police/ems amongst more general day-to-day jobs, if indeed there is availability (which it seems there is). Any thoughts? |
Re: Virgin Islands
Originally Posted by notaclue
(Post 12906569)
Hi all,
Been thinking about a wild idea for years and only now am I realizing it may indeed be possible. I don't want to live in a big city and would favor the life of an island (Where I'm from originally). Has anyone on BE ever lived on either the BVI or USVI? I would rather move to a US island to continue my citizenship path. I'd be curious to explore the cost of living and so on when it comes to moving to a place like this. Job wise I wouldn't be terribly worried as I can go fire/police/ems amongst more general day-to-day jobs, if indeed there is availability (which it seems there is). Any thoughts? |
Re: Virgin Islands
I'm not terribly keen on Guam or Hawaii due to cost of living. The attraction to the VI's are the close proximity to a UK territory (Only four hours by boat).
Looking at renting an apartment, it's cheaper than here in Houston. Purchasing a home is around $250-300 for 1500sq/ft. Not great but my alternative is to have my boat shipped there and live on that (She's over 40ft in length so could live on it quite comfortably). |
Re: Virgin Islands
Originally Posted by notaclue
(Post 12906602)
I'm not terribly keen on Guam or Hawaii due to cost of living. The attraction to the VI's are the close proximity to a UK territory (Only four hours by boat).
Looking at renting an apartment, it's cheaper than here in Houston. Purchasing a home is around $250-300 for 1500sq/ft. Not great but my alternative is to have my boat shipped there and live on that (She's over 40ft in length so could live on it quite comfortably). |
Re: Virgin Islands
The pictures look pretty.
Just keep in mind if your the politically minded your votes for US Federal offices are not on par in US Territories.
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Re: Virgin Islands
Originally Posted by ddsrph
(Post 12906593)
Interesting idea. Also consider Puerto Rico, Guam and Hawaii.
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Re: Virgin Islands
Unless one speaks Spanish Puerto Rico might be more difficult, when I visited while the tourist places English was common, day to day life Spanish is a necessity, most everything outside tourism is done in Spanish.
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Re: Virgin Islands
Salary for police is 60k which is only 5k less than my base right now. The only issue is they require citizenship so unless a waiver is possible....That said I could indeed look in to remote work!
My biggest hesitancies would be a job, and meeting someone new. |
Re: Virgin Islands
Try posting this and asking questions in BE's Caribbean forum
https://britishexpats.com/forum/caribbean-121/ |
Re: Virgin Islands
Thanks!
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Re: Virgin Islands
I have moved the thread into the Caribbean forum.
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Re: Virgin Islands
Dont want to burst your bubble, do enquire and see what you can achieve, but you have no right of abode in the bvi and only in the usvi if you have a us passport - and getting a job in either requires a prospective employer to prefer you over a local,, and pay for the privilege. This is normal. Usvi is the same unless you are a us citizen.
https://dougall-luxury-bvi.com/bvi-i...loyment-rules/ |
Re: Virgin Islands
I'm a UKC and USPR with pending citizenship, so would have right of abode in either, correct? I'm looking at the USVI. I have existing job offers, just not precisely what I want to do (I'm a cop/medic).
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Re: Virgin Islands
I can’t be sure what your TLAs mean, but a uk citizen gets no rights either place, and a US citizen has right of abode in the us islands.
Be careful you make sure your us status means you don’t break any laws in relation to their immigration, it could backfire on not just your presence on that island. Im sure the immigration people there can answer that for you. |
Re: Virgin Islands
UK citizen and US permanent resident! :)
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