Saturday, July 12, 2025

The Reality Of Coding A Website Isn’t What Most People Expect

There’s over 360 million registered domains worldwide. Hundreds of websites are published every 60 seconds and without one, businesses are likely to fall behind.

Step one begins with figuring out the right domain name and making sure it's even available. Certain terms for a particular slug can inadvertently start a bidding war between current domain holders and new LLCs.

From there, the behind-the-scenes operational tasks come into play.

Mobile responsiveness, payment authorization methods, and a reliable backend server are only scratching the surface for what’s needed to get things off the ground. Which is why coding has become an in-demand part of the mechanics.

The truth is that poorly designed websites and “dead” webpages are excessively prevalent. When considering first impressions, these mishaps can say a lot about a brand’s reputation and integrity.

Outsourcing web projects to a programmer or graphic designer can be one option.

Although, time, cost, and the unexpected might stand in the way of getting a site up and running.

What’s more surprising about this side of the internet? Despite their existence, many webpages remain dormant or untouched.

Web Building Has Its Challenges

Every website needs the fundamentals. From visual designs, to contact pages and customer testimonials, there’s a reason why big ad agencies can lead a relaunch for their clients every few years. Expecting to finish all of this in a day or two probably isn’t pragmatic. The work is ongoing and both compliance standards and data protocols need to pass the test.

For example, failing to include the correct cookies language on an opt-in form or leaving out a privacy & terms page violates the legal requirements of those who are simply visiting that URL.

Coding a website from scratch sounds great in theory. While novice designers have advanced AI techniques and website builders at their disposal, this skillset is often underestimated.

Hitting an “under construction” page isn’t uncommon, either.

Conceptually, web design is far less moving a mouse around the screen or completing a line of script. Constructing a code involves logic, syntax, and plenty of ad hoc problem solving. Coding jargon itself reads similarly to a mountain of made-up words and licensed engineers encounter their fair share of human error. Still, there’s mass appeal for people to try their hand at web design.

A 2025 All About Cookies survey found that only 32% of people have successfully built their own website without any help. Ninety-one percent consider web building to be frustrating and not everyone has the mental fortitude to carry on with the tough elements and hard parts.

Learning to code isn’t for the weak and throughout this process, one’s patience will be tested. Nearly one-quarter (24%) of those who crossed the finished line with their website said it took much longer than anticipated.

Some of their biggest obstacles include design and layout, security, and implementing custom functionality. Keeping up with content creation, in particular, proves to be a taxing category for those who aren’t as well-versed.


The less difficult aspects relate to SEO optimization and performance speed. Becoming knowledgeable in proper keyword selections and using website analysis platforms are key tools to master these areas.

Most DIY Websites Get Scrapped

The survey’s findings indicate a strong interest in website builders (i.e. Canva, GoDaddy, and Wix) due to their affordability and integrated user experience.

Seventy-four percent of people make use of these mainstream applications, however, there are downsides to attempting a self-build:

  • The basics require a clear understanding and complex requests are probably best left to the experts.
  • Beginners risk jeopardizing their web project altogether.

More than half (51%) give up entirely and abandon their website before finishing it. This means the odds of hiring an engineer are high and non-coders should be on the lookout for a pro to get the job done. Or at least ask someone that they trust for support.

HTML Outshines Other Programming Languages

Traditional coding backgrounds are becoming less common. In fact, about 1 in 5 adults (19%) have true coding experience. Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) is among the most popular programming languages, followed by JavaScript and Python.

One guess as to why HTML stands out against the rest of programming languages is because it’s universal and works in agreement with all types of web browsers.

Converting HTML to various types of files doesn’t pose an issue whereas this can be problematic when coding in Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) or Structured Query Language (SQL).

HTML is also the recommended stepping stone when building mobile apps and templates. Once coders feel comfortable and well-equipped to handle technical formatting or sophisticated algorithms, they should then advance onto a different codebase. Not the other way around.


Fortunately, learning to code is becoming purely digital. Younger generations especially are turning to unconventional programming courses through YouTube tutorials and articles or videos they find online.

One-third (33%) of coders are learning these skills in high school or college, while roughly the same (31%) have the advantage to undergo adequate training at work.

The majority of paid courses and coding bootcamps are self-led, giving users the opportunity to complete them on their own time. Being able to earn a certificate in a matter of months is ideal for those with busy schedules and active careers.

Cracking The Web Design Code

Coders and non-coders tend to have parallel perspectives about their need for functioning websites each and every day. Social media and news aggregators require the same level of standards. Whether for work or leisure, websites serve an important purpose and many have grown accustomed to watching them evolve over the years.

Homepages, for instance, act as an open invitation for companies to give their behind-the-screen sales pitch. Furthermore, signup boxes aren’t just an anchor for online businesses and their digital storefronts. They can allow people to reach millions of consumers without maxing out on their advertising budget.

Proper security measures are paramount and although maintaining a blog or resource center necessitates some extra legwork, the impact on a domain’s site traffic could be worth the effort alone.

Read next: How to Create and Refine an Offerwall Reward Ad in Google AdSense


by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World

Study Finds AI Assistants Hurt Speed for Skilled Software Engineers

A recent study has raised new questions about the effectiveness of AI-assisted coding for experienced software developers. Conducted by the non-profit group METR, the research tracked the performance of 16 long-time contributors to open-source projects as they completed a series of real-world programming tasks. The developers worked on repositories they were already familiar with, allowing the researchers to measure how AI tools influenced routine workflows.

Participants were split into two groups. Some were allowed to use advanced code editors powered by large language models, while others completed tasks without automated assistance. The tools included Cursor and similar platforms that integrate conversational AI into the coding environment. The developers expected the AI systems to save them time. On average, they anticipated a 24 percent reduction in task duration. The results did not meet those expectations.

Those using AI spent more time on each issue, with performance slowing by an average of 19 percent. Time that could have gone into hands-on coding was instead used reviewing AI outputs, prompting the systems, waiting for completions, or sitting idle. Despite the slowdown, many developers still believed they had worked faster with the tools than without them.

The study also examined how familiar the participants were with the specific tools provided. While most had some exposure to large language models, not all had used Cursor before. METR arranged training before the tasks began to ensure a baseline level of tool understanding.

In tasks involving familiar code, experienced developers working with AI showed even more slowdown. METR researchers believe that hands-on knowledge sometimes reduced the value of AI suggestions. In these cases, it may have been faster to rely on known solutions than to validate or correct machine-generated output.

The generated code was not always accepted. On average, less than half of the AI-produced code snippets were incorporated into final submissions. Participants also spent a portion of their time refining or rewriting what the tools provided.

The study does not suggest that AI tools are ineffective in all settings. It presents a point-in-time observation that may shift as the tools continue to evolve. METR emphasized that results could differ with a different developer profile or task type. The researchers also noted that newer versions of the tools are already improving in handling more complex, multi-step coding problems.

While broader surveys have shown positive results for AI-assisted programming, METR’s findings add nuance to those claims. For now, the research signals that developers may need to evaluate the impact of AI tools on a case-by-case basis.


Notes: This post was edited/created using GenAI tools. Image: DIW-Aigen.

Read next: Apple’s New Patent Hints at Voice Payments Without Unlocking Your iPhone, But It’s Not Without Risks
by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World

Apple’s New Patent Hints at Voice Payments Without Unlocking Your iPhone, But It’s Not Without Risks

Apple may be heading toward a world where you can send money or access personal data without even unlocking your phone, so long as you’re wearing the right gear.

A newly filed patent, published under the code US2025/0225985A1, as spotted by MacObserver, lays out a system where locked Apple devices could accept voice commands for sensitive tasks. If you're connected to a verified accessory, such as AirPods or an Apple Watch, the device may allow certain actions to go through without needing Face ID or a passcode.

The system works by listening for natural voice requests like “send $50 to Joe,” then checking if the connected accessory meets several security standards. These include close physical range, recent authentication, encryption credentials, and a trusted pairing history. If everything lines up, the phone confirms and carries out the action while staying locked.

In place of a one-size-fits-all unlock method, Apple’s idea builds a layered structure. The device doesn’t just rely on the accessory being connected, it looks at how recently it was verified, how secure the link is, and how strong the signal remains. The system even factors in previous login activity to assess whether the request should be approved.

This kind of setup could reshape how people interact with their phones on the go. Whether you're paying at a drive-thru, sharing a document mid-meeting, or turning on smart lights from the hallway, Apple wants the interaction to feel quicker and more hands-free.

Still, some are already raising eyebrows. If someone else happens to be using your AirPods or standing close enough to trigger your device, there’s a risk they might issue a command in your place. Apple’s filing admits that multiple checks would be required to allow any command, but it doesn’t entirely erase the concern. It’s one of those cases where convenience might be walking a fine line with control.

The patent, spotted by Mac Observer, doesn’t confirm whether this feature will ever appear in real products. Apple files plenty of patents that never make it past the drawing board. But the direction is clear, the company is exploring ways to shrink the friction between users and their devices, one voice command at a time.


Notes: This post was edited/created using GenAI tools. Image: Miguel Hernández / Unsplash

Read next: How to Create and Refine an Offerwall Reward Ad in Google AdSense
by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World

Friday, July 11, 2025

How to Create and Refine an Offerwall Reward Ad in Google AdSense

Skill Level: Intermediate to Advanced
Prerequisites:
  • A live/active Google AdSense account
  • Your site/blog pages tagged with the Google AdSense code
  • A list of domains and URLs you want to include or exclude (and of course internet and a device in our case it is desktop/PC)

Why an Offerwall Reward Ad Deserves Your Attention

When a reader encounters an article they value, nothing kills momentum like a hard paywall. An Offerwall changes that moment. It offers an alternative path. A small panel appears. It explains that watching a short video grants temporary access. The visitor opts in, watches the clip/video, then carries on reading without spending a cent. That choice resonates. It feels fair. It feels human. You earn a premium ad CPM. The reader feels in control instead of blocked. Over time that goodwill turns into loyalty and repeat visits.

Getting Your Site Ready

Before you begin crafting your message, verify that your website/blog has this line of code installed:

<script async src="https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-XXXX" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>

Be sure to change the XXX with your site code that you can get in Google Adsense Ads section, more details here. Make sure it sits above the closing </head> tag. If the snippet is missing your Offerwall will never appear.

Step 1: Opening the Offerwall Builder

  • Sign in to your AdSense dashboard.
  • In the left menu click Privacy & messaging (or open this link).
  • Scroll down (ideally at the end) and locate the card labeled “Offerwall.”
how to find Offerwall feature in Google adsense dashboard

  • If no message exists click Create. Otherwise click Manage, then Create message.
  • In the name field enter something descriptive such as Offerwall_July_Main.

That label helps later when you clone or experiment with variants.

Step 2: Selecting Sites and Setting Metering

After naming your message you see a Select sites button (in blue at the top right side). Clicking it reveals the domains your AdSense profile has verified. Check each domain and subdomain where you wish to run the Offerwall.


Below that lies the Metering section. Here you specify how many pageviews a visitor must accumulate before the Offerwall appears. Three or Four views often feels natural. You can adjust it up or down depending on your content length and user patience.

  • A lower threshold (two pageviews) prompts visitors early.
  • A higher threshold (six or eight) gathers more article samples before asking them to watch.

Once a reader completes an offer their count resets thirty days. Excluded pages never count toward the threshold.

Step 3: Defining Page Inclusions and Exclusions

After adding the site, you have full control over where your Offerwall appears (BTW, it is optional you can skip this part though):

  • To include specific pages

  1. Click Add page inclusion.
  2. Enter a path (for example /premium/) or a full URL.
  3. All pages under that path will be eligible once the meter triggers.

  • To exclude pages

  1. Click Add page exclusion.
  2. Enter the exact URL or path (for instance /about-us).
  3. Those pages will never show an Offerwall, regardless of threshold.


Remember that exclusions override inclusions. If a URL appears in both lists the Offerwall will skip it.

Step 4: Configuring User Choice Options

Scrolling past metering brings you to User choices. Each choice maps to a reward path.

You'll notice a toggle Rewarded ad to On, under this, click the Manage button. A small panel appears with these elements:

  • Copy reminder: A note prompts you to confirm that the text in your Offerwall matches the access period you plan to grant.
  • Entitlement selector: Here you enter a number and pick one of four units, hours, days, weeks, or page views, to define how much access a visitor earns after watching the ad.
For example, typing 12 and selecting hours gives a half‑day of access. Entering 3 page views lets the visitor read three more articles before the next prompt.

Step 5: Crafting Headline and Body Copy

Now in the styling tab you find headline and body copy fields. A human‑style approach works best:

  • Headline
A simple prompt such as Support this site by watching one short video.
  • Body
Two or three sentences that explain what the visitor gains. Mention the video length and the access duration or pageviews they will receive. Write as if you speak to a friend over coffee. Keep sentences varied in length and structure. Avoid filler words. Aim for direct clarity.

The default template for messaging is like this:

"Unlock more content
Take action to continue accessing the content on this site
View a short ad
Site-wide access for 24 hours"


But you can edit it as per your preferences, for my 48 hours setting it will be like this:

"Welcome to digitalinformationworld.com

You've reached your article limit!

After 4 free pages, we ask readers to take action. Simply view a short ad for 48-hour access. Or support us with a voluntary donation by contacting us here https://ift.tt/HU8tsuh

View a short ad
Site-wide access for 48 hours"


Once you’ve verified your copy and chosen the entitlement, click Save (or Apply) to lock in your setting.

Step 6: Styling for a Seamless Experience

A prompt that looks foreign to your site feels intrusive. In the Styling tab:

  • Upload Logo

  1. Use a transparent PNG at least 200×50 pixels.
  2. Place it in the message header.
  • Set Fonts and Colors

  1. Match headline font to your site’s CSS.
  2. Choose button colors from your brand palette.
  3. Ensure high contrast for readability.
  • Validate in Preview

  1. Use the built‑in preview pane to step through each choice path.
  2. Check both desktop and mobile layouts.
  3. Adjust text lengths or margins until no buttons run off screen.

Your goal is a prompt that feels native to every page it appears on.

Step 7: Testing in the Wild

Before you roll out globally, test on a single URL:

  1. In Page inclusions restrict to one test page of your choice or you can simply apply to the whole website/blog.
  2. Publish the message by pressing the Publish Changes blue button on top right corner.
  3. Now, open a private or incognito window.
  4. Navigate to the test URL and other pages for 4 times (if you set it to 4), to trigger the pop up.
  5. Reload the page. The Offerwall should display immediately. 

If it does not:

  • Confirm the the Adsense snippet installed correctly.
  • Disable any ad blocker or privacy extension.
  • Verify your test URL matches the inclusion exactly.

Walk through each user choice. Make sure header text, body copy, logo and buttons match your settings.

Step 8: Publishing and Experimentation

Satisfied with testing? Remove the test‑only inclusion or expand your page list. Click Publish. Your Offerwall now runs on all targeted pages.

Return to Experiments to clone your live message. Tweak one variable at a time, perhaps copy, threshold, or entitlement. Run both variants for at least a week. Compare:

  • Completion rate (how many visitors finish the video or choice)
  • Bounce rate change
  • Revenue per thousand impressions

Retain the variant that strikes the best balance between user satisfaction and revenue uplift. In my almost 15 days of testing the message popped up for over 300 viewers and it generated around $1 in that time period. But it can be different based on niche and location of users on your site.

Step 9: Handling Special Cases

  • Unconsented Traffic
AdSense serves limited or non‑personalized ads for GDPR or CCPA unconsented visitors. Other choices (custom) remain available.
  • Language Support
Upload translations for every language you support. AdSense displays the Offerwall in the visitor’s device language. Only add languages you can proofread.
  • Cookie Clearing
If visitors clear cookies their pageview count resets. Decide if that suits your user experience goals.
  • Ad Blockers
Some tools block Google AdSense or the promotional message container. Ask testers to disable blockers or whitelist your site.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many pageviews trigger the Offerwall?

You set the metering threshold. Three or Four pageviews is a common starting point.

Can I gate only specific articles?

Yes. Use page inclusions to limit the Offerwall to any path or URL.

What entitlements can I grant?

Either time‑based (hours of access) or pageview‑based (number of additional views).

Does this work for unconsented users?

Rewarded ads serve limited or non‑personalized ads, while other choices still function.

Note: This post was edited/created using GenAI tools. 

Read next: How to Find Someone Using Just a Photo: 10 Best Reverse Image Search Tools (Ranked and Explained)

by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World

Can AI Stay Neutral? Grok’s Israel-Palestine Replies Raise Doubts

Something odd is happening with Grok 4, that latest AI version. Ask it who to support in the Israel-Palestine conflict, and instead of giving a direct answer, the chatbot turns around and checks what Elon Musk has posted on the topic.

That’s not a one-off bug. Multiple tests show that Grok, in certain cases, opens X (formerly Twitter) and scans through Musk’s posts mentioning Israel, Palestine, Gaza, or Hamas before it replies. It’s not subtle either, the bot shows this process step-by-step in its reasoning trace.

Not Part of the Rules, But It Happens Anyway

There’s nothing in Grok’s system prompt that tells it to copy Musk. In fact, its instructions say it should collect a wide range of sources, avoid bias, and be willing to make tough claims if the evidence is solid. Even so, it keeps turning to Musk when the question feels politically risky, as spotted by Simon Willison.

It probably doesn’t come as a surprise. The chatbot knows it was built by xAI, and it’s aware that Musk owns the company. At some point in its reasoning, Grok appears to take that connection as a subtle signal to lean more heavily on Musk’s views. Nothing in the system explicitly tells it to do that, yet the behavior keeps popping up.

Wording Changes the Outcome

My tests on Grok 3 (an older version) show Grok’s response often changes based on how the question is worded. For instance, one version of the prompt that began with “Who do you support” led to one-word replies like “Israel” or “Palestine”, but which one it picked seemed to depend on which country was named first. Flip the order, and the answer flipped too.

In some runs, it replied with “Neither” and in others "Peace".

Can AI Stay Neutral? Grok’s Israel-Palestine Replies Raise Doubts

That inconsistency reveals a key limitation. Large language models aren’t fixed, they shift. The same prompt, typed the same way, doesn’t always lead to the same result. Timing matters. So do the words you use. And sometimes, Grok searches its own previous answers as a guide.

More Than Just a Technical Quirk

At first glance, this might seem like a harmless glitch, but it cuts deeper. If an AI gives answers based on phrasing order, timing, or what its owner thinks, users can walk away with the wrong idea. It might sound neutral on the surface, but the logic under the hood isn’t always so balanced.

What’s more, it can reinforce a filter bubble. A user might assume they’re getting an unbiased take, but if the model echoes their phrasing or leans into past behavior, it risks repeating the same views back at them.

A Reminder About Limits

No chatbot today is truly neutral, and Grok is no exception. Whether it’s drawing from Musk’s posts or just reacting to the structure of a question, it shows how AI tools can mirror both their training and their environment.

That doesn’t mean Grok is broken. But it does mean people should take its answers with a grain of salt, especially when the question touches on real-world conflicts. Chatbots are fast, clever, and helpful in many ways. But when it comes to thorny topics, they don’t always think like people, even if they sound like they do.

Read next: YouTube Drops Its Trending Page, Leans Into Niche Charts Instead
by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World

YouTube Drops Its Trending Page, Leans Into Niche Charts Instead

YouTube is scrapping its Trending page, drawing the curtain on a feature that once tried to sum up the entire platform in a single list. The move comes after a steady drop in traffic to that section and a growing shift in how people find content across the platform.

The change isn’t sudden. For years, YouTube has been nudging users toward personalized feeds, search results, and algorithm-driven suggestions. The old Trending list, which launched in 2015, simply isn’t pulling its weight anymore. What once showed a handful of viral hits now feels out of step with the way viewers actually browse.


In place of the outgoing section, YouTube is rolling out topic-based charts. These will highlight popular content in specific areas like music, podcasts, and movie trailers. More categories are expected down the line. Gaming fans, however, will still find trending clips on the dedicated Gaming Explore page.

This shift reflects broader changes in the platform’s structure. With Shorts, comments, Communities, and tailored feeds doing most of the heavy lifting, a one-size-fits-all list doesn’t make much sense. People don’t stumble on what’s popular the way they used to, now, they’re guided to it by patterns in what they’ve already watched.

Behind the scenes, YouTube’s recommendation system remains the real engine. It quietly steers viewers toward videos they’re likely to 'engage with', keeping interactions up and watch time strong. That system, however, isn’t changing altogether, as users will still get suggestions based on their viewing habits, and those who prefer to browse manually can head to the Explore tab, check their subscriptions, or scroll through channels directly.

Unfortunately, this feature isn't currently available in Pakistan, as confirmed by tests conducted by the Digital Information World team. Searching even manually for https://charts.youtube.com/pk or https://charts.youtube.com/pakistan leads to Indian channels and artists (and other foreign videos). 

For creators, there are still tools to catch the wave of rising trends. YouTube Studio’s Inspiration tab stays in play. A feature called Hype, still in beta, is also being tested to spotlight newer uploads. Meanwhile, the platform will keep giving shoutouts to fresh faces through its Music Explore section and social media channels.

In short, YouTube is tightening its focus. Instead of chasing one big trend, it’s doubling down on categories and algorithms. That might not please everyone, especially those who liked seeing what was taking off across the board, but it’s in line with where digital platforms are heading. These days, it’s less about what’s hot for everyone and more about what keeps each person watching.

Read next: Millionaires Are Moving Again in 2025, and the Money’s Going with Them
by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World

Thursday, July 10, 2025

Millionaires Are Moving Again in 2025, and the Money’s Going with Them

Across dozens of countries, wealthy individuals are once again shifting where they live, and where they store their money. Some nations are drawing them in with simpler taxes and political calm. Others are watching them leave quietly, often taking millions with them.

UAE and U.S. Lead in New Wealth

The United Arab Emirates is set to take in nearly 10,000 millionaires this year. The total value of their assets is expected to land around $63 billion. The country’s appeal isn’t hard to figure out. There’s no income tax, business conditions are favorable, and life there checks the boxes for those who can afford it.

The United States comes next. About 7,500 millionaires are expected to move in, carrying roughly $44 billion in wealth. For many, the U.S. still offers strong legal protections and more financial options than most places.

Italy is also picking up momentum. It’s set to gain more than 3,000 millionaires this year, thanks in part to flat-tax programs. Portugal, Greece, and Switzerland are seeing steady inflows too. Portugal, for instance, has drawn attention through residency incentives tied to investment in cultural projects or research.
Saudi Arabia and Singapore are climbing the ranks as well. Both offer relative stability, and they’ve made it easier for wealth to settle in. Others, like Canada and Australia, aren’t pulling in massive numbers but still attract a regular stream of high-net-worth migrants.

Smaller countries haven’t been left out. Malta, Thailand, Panama, and even Montenegro are seeing some movement. The numbers are lower, but for governments trying to boost investment, every newcomer counts.

UK Tops the List for Millionaire Losses

The United Kingdom is losing more wealthy residents than any other country this year. Nearly 16,500 millionaires are expected to leave. The total wealth in play sits close to $92 billion. Higher taxes and shaky investor confidence are driving some to look for steadier ground.
China isn’t far behind. Around 7,800 millionaires are projected to exit, taking with them about $56 billion. India ranks third, with 3,500 expected departures and $26 billion in assets on the move.

Other countries on the outflow list include Brazil, Russia, and South Korea. Germany, France, and Spain are seeing hundreds leave, though the value of their exits still adds up. Countries like Vietnam and South Africa are also losing affluent individuals, and while the absolute numbers may be smaller, the long-term impact can be harder to replace.

New Patterns Are Forming

Wealth tends to follow steady ground. Places with clear laws, lighter tax systems, and dependable institutions are where it ends up. That’s one reason small territories like Monaco or the Cayman Islands keep pulling in extremely wealthy residents. They don’t bring in large crowds, but the money they carry in is hard to ignore.

Governments in other regions have started tweaking their policies. Some are reworking visa rules or easing tax rules to hold onto capital. These efforts help, but they tend to work better when backed by consistent planning over time.
Meanwhile, wealthy individuals are approaching relocation with more caution. Financial surveillance is getting smarter, and moving funds isn’t as simple as it once was. What used to be a quiet transfer now involves paperwork, flags, and checks. Every step comes with a cost or a delay.

That hasn’t stopped the broader shift. Many are still relocating, not because they want to move, but because they feel they have to. When they leave, their businesses and investment habits usually follow.

Wealth shifts globally as taxes rise, laws tighten, and nations like Italy, Saudi Arabia, and Portugal benefit.

Country Millionaire Migration Estimated Wealth of Migrating Millionaires (USD Billion)
UAE 9,800 63
U.S. 7,500 43.7
Italy 3,600 20.7
Switzerland 3,000 16.8
Saudi Arabia 2,400 18.4
Singapore 1,600 8.9
Portugal 1,400 8.1
Greece 1,200 7.7
Canada 1,000 5.7
Australia 1,000 5.6
Hong Kong 800 5.3
Japan 600 3.1
Malta 500 4.3
Thailand 450 4.2
Costa Rica 350 2.8
Panama 300 2.4
Cyprus 250 2.6
Monaco 200 11
Cayman Islands 200 3.7
New Zealand 150 0.9
Montenegro 150 1.6
Netherlands 100 0.6
Latvia 100 0.6
Morocco 100 0.9
Mauritius 100 0.5
Austria 50 0.3
Croatia 50 0.4
Bermuda 50 1
Belgium 50 0.3
Hungary 50 0.3
Seychelles 50 1
Sweden -50 0.4
Philippines -50 0.6
Angola -50 0.3
Türkiye -100 0.8
Taiwan -100 0.7
Ireland -100 0.6
Argentina -100 0.7
Pakistan -100 0.5
Egypt -100 0.8
Norway -150 1
Mexico -150 1
Colombia -150 1
Lebanon -200 2.8
Iran -200 1.5
Nigeria -200 1.5
Indonesia -250 3
South Africa -250 1.6
Vietnam -300 2.8
Israel -350 2.5
Germany -400 2.2
Spain -500 3.1
France -800 4.4
Brazil -1,200 8.4
Russia -1,500 14.7
S. Korea -2,400 15.2
India -3,500 26.2
China -7,800 55.9
UK -16,500 91.8

H/T: Henleyglobal.

Note: This post was edited/created using GenAI tools.

Read next:

• Digital Platforms Where Users Are Confused by Text Abbreviations the Most

• Which Tech Companies Make the Most Money per Employee?
by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World