Trusted External Resources
The Trusted External Resources page is for the moment when you do not need another explanation, you need the official page itself. Choose a country and topic, and the tool pulls together the public links that are most likely to matter for setup, work, health, or credentials.
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This tool is link-first by design. It should shorten research time, not replace official instructions.
What to open first
Official links
These are the core public pages for the selected country.
Why a link-first page matters
There is a point in every migration plan where summaries stop being enough. You can read ten posts about work authorization, healthcare registration, local tax setup, or credential rules, and still need the exact public page that actually governs the step. That is the purpose of this page. It is less interested in retelling the rule and more interested in helping you reach the source quickly, with enough context to know why that source matters.
This is especially important because relocation advice ages badly. A checklist can stay useful for a long time, but official links are where changes show up first. Eligibility wording changes. Forms move. Government pages get restructured. Pass or permit rules are updated. Registration instructions change by country, and sometimes by region. A page like this does not solve every problem on its own, but it reduces one common failure point: getting stuck in secondhand explanations when the real answer is sitting on a public site.
The page is organized by planning topic because that is how people usually search under pressure. Sometimes the immediate need is arrival and identity setup. Sometimes it is work paperwork. Sometimes it is health coverage. Sometimes it is licensing or test evidence. Grouping the source bundle by topic keeps the page practical. It also helps people move from broad planning into exact verification without losing the thread of what they were trying to solve in the first place.
When to use this page first
- Use it when you are close to a deadline and need the controlling public page, not a summary.
- Use it after one of the planning tools gives you direction and you need to verify the country-specific rule.
- Use it when community advice conflicts and you need to see the official wording yourself.
- Bookmark the links you return to often, especially if your move involves multiple agencies or registration steps.
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