Country rankings by WRI: how WorldPath AI scores 187 jurisdictions
Choosing where to move stopped being a tradeoff between tax rates and weather a long time ago. The rules have shifted too quickly over the past five years. Several investment residency programs have closed, prices on the ones that remain have doubled or tripled, and new jurisdictions have appeared that nobody talked about five years ago. Visa-free lists get rewritten several times a year. Banks now want proof of real tax ties to a country, not just a passport in your pocket. global passport rankings covers travel access, the Heritage Foundation covers economic freedom, and cost-of-living data covers cost of living — each answers its own narrow question. A family with kids, a working business, and capital is asking different questions.
What the WRI is
The WorldPath Relocation Index (WRI) is a composite index covering 187 countries, built by WorldPath AI. Each country receives a score from 0 to 100 across seven independent dimensions, which cover almost everything people actually relocate for: where to keep capital, where to live, where to educate children, and where to retire in peace—one score, but with real structure behind it.
The seven dimensions and their default weights
Dimension | Weight | What it measures |
Investment | 18% | Taxes, capital controls, and currency stability |
Safety | 17% | Crime, civil unrest, and institutional resilience |
Residency | 15% | Cost, processing time, and rights of residence permits |
Business | 15% | Speed of company setup, rule of law |
Citizenship | 13% | Naturalisation, dual citizenship, and passport value |
Education | 13% | Schools, IB/A-Level coverage, top universities |
Retirement | 9% | Healthcare, climate, cost of living |
Expert defaults, then adaptation to you
The default weights are not arbitrary numbers. The WorldPath AI team set them based on hundreds of real client consultations. In the average inquiry from a family with capital, Investment and safety matter most; education and citizenship come next; and retirement usually enters the picture later. That is the working assumption the platform uses for every new visitor.
From there, the weights are no longer universal. The moment a specific person starts using the platform — opening country pages, comparing programs, filtering by tax or by schools — the system reweights things to fit that person's profile. No long onboarding form. The current distribution is visible right on every country page: the sliders show where you stand, and any of them can be moved by hand if the algorithm guessed wrong.
Sources and updates
Under the hood, the WRI draws on around 40 external sources, including global passport rankings, the Tax Foundation, the IMF, Transparency International, the World Bank B-Ready, the Global Peace Index, the OECD PISA, and others. WorldPath's own data on the cost and timing of specific residency programs is layered on top. The base refreshes once a quarter. There are also off-cycle revisions whenever an event genuinely changes the answer: a country shutting down its citizenship-by-investment program, introducing a worldwide income tax, or landing on the EU blacklist.
Why this matters right now
The turbulence of the last few years is not a figure of speech. The OECD tax landscape is shifting, KYC is tightening, trade blocs are being redrawn, and geopolitical fragmentation is growing. What looked like a safe choice in 2019 may, by 2026, turn out to be a jurisdiction with frozen transfers, revoked golden visas, and broken tax treaties. Relying on disconnected legacy rankings or on advice from someone who moved three years ago is a decision built on outdated data.
How to use the index
The WRI does not answer the question "which country is best." It shows which jurisdictions are currently strongest on the dimensions that matter to a particular person. The top 10 by Investment is not the same as the top 10 by Education. A Caribbean passport is strong on mobility and middling for business. On the WorldPath AI countries page, you can compare any jurisdictions by overall score and by each of the seven dimensions, look at the trend across recent quarters, see how the algorithm has reweighted things for you, and override those weights by hand if you want. The formulas, weights, and sources are all published — this is a page for people who recheck the numbers.












