Single Points of Failure
Every engineer knows that a system with a single point of failure is fragile. The same logic applies to citizenship. When your rights, travel freedom, banking access, and legal identity all flow from one document controlled by one government — you're exposed. Understanding what a Plan B passport really is is the starting point for anyone thinking seriously about this.
Passport Power Isn't Equal
The world's 195 countries issue passports with wildly different levels of access. A German passport provides visa-free entry to 190+ countries. A Pakistani passport accesses around 30. For holders of restricted passports, the daily costs are significant. A second citizenship from a program like Vanuatu meaningfully expands these options.
Governments Change
Even strong passports from stable democracies have been affected by unexpected policy shifts. Exit taxes, capital controls, asset freezes, and travel bans have been imposed in countries that once seemed immune. Diversification is not paranoia — it's prudence. The real question is how to leave your country legally if you ever need to — and whether you've prepared for that possibility.
The Cost of Not Having It
The moment you need a backup plan is usually the worst moment to start building one. Processing times, due diligence, and government bureaucracy mean that citizenship takes months to obtain. The time to apply is when you don't urgently need it. Programs like Vanuatu's DSP at least offer speed — but even 2–3 months requires planning ahead.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which passport is considered the strongest?
As of 2026, Japanese, Singaporean, and several EU passports rank highest for global visa-free access.
Can I travel on both passports?
Yes. You can choose which passport to present depending on the destination and the advantages each offers.