About the Founder of Anticitizen
Leon Hill is the founder of Anticitizen. He doesn't have a single country. He has a portfolio of them.

That portfolio is the result of sixteen years of work: ten citizenships and residences held across multiple continents, and more than sixty nations travelled. A life built, dismantled, and rebuilt across borders until the question that started it all (how does a person stop depending on a single government?) became something he could answer from experience rather than theory.
Why a Successful Australian Founder Left for Lower Taxes
Born in Australia, one of the luckiest and most prosperous nations on earth, he had every reason to stay. At 23 he founded his first company there, and inside a year it had grown into a million-dollar business. The kind of early success most entrepreneurs spend a decade chasing.
Then the tax bill arrived. Australia's 30% corporate tax took a sharp cut of everything he had built and handed it to a government that, by every measure he could see, was giving less back each year. The taxes being high was no secret. The harder truth was that life in Australia was demonstrably getting worse, year after year, while the cost of staying kept climbing. The math no longer worked, and neither did the trajectory.
So he set out to find a better arrangement. A way to keep more of what he earned, and to live somewhere that was improving rather than declining. That search became the rest of his life.
A citizen belongs to a country. An Anticitizen makes countries compete for them.
Sixteen Years of Flag Theory and Plan B Strategy
All of this began long before any of it became a business.
Sovereignty, flag theory, and the idea of a personal Plan B had been a private discipline for sixteen years. Read about, tested in person, and refined through what happened to the people nearby who stayed anchored to one passport and one bank on the assumption that the rules would never change.
The motive was never fear. It was freedom. The freedom to leave, the freedom to stay, and the freedom to decline a system that treats a citizen's loyalty as permanent and their consent as automatic. By the time the work became public, it had already been proven in private for years. That is the foundation everything Anticitizen publishes rests on: the experience of a practitioner who decided to write it all down.
Where the Word "Anticitizen" Came From
There was no word for a life lived this way, so Leon coined one: Anticitizen.
An Anticitizen is someone who lives outside the system of any single country. Not a tourist, not an exile, not someone evading the law, but a person who has made a deliberate choice never to let one government own their future. An Anticitizen diversifies across borders the way a disciplined investor diversifies across assets, so that citizenship, banking, business, and freedom no longer sit inside the same jurisdiction, exposed to a single bad law or a single bad election.
A citizen belongs to a country. An Anticitizen makes countries compete for them.
It's an idea worth understanding in full, and it's the foundation of everything here. Read the complete definition of what an Anticitizen is.
That idea reshaped one life first, then became the foundation of a brand. Once a passport stops being an identity and becomes one tool among many, the world gets larger and the leverage returns to the individual.
What Anticitizen Offers Its Members
Anticitizen is the practical expression of everything learned the hard way.
The international mobility industry is full of intermediaries who profit from confusion: golden visas nobody needs, passports that underdeliver, offshore structures built to generate fees rather than results. Anticitizen was built as the deliberate alternative. A publication and a private community for people serious about jurisdictional diversification and willing to do the work.
Members get the same strategies that built the portfolio in the first place. How to acquire a second citizenship, where residency genuinely pays off, how to bank across borders without having accounts frozen, how to structure a business to keep more of what it earns, and how to reduce a tax bill legally rather than dangerously. Real jurisdictions, real numbers, and nothing recommended that hasn't first been tested in practice. The aim is simple: to hand people the map that took sixteen years to draw.
Why Anticitizen Exists
Strip away the passports and the travel and the years, and the work amounts to a single quiet idea: you don't have to be born into the right country to become free. You have to start, and you have to refuse the assumption that where you began is where you must remain.
It took sixteen years, ten jurisdictions, and more than sixty countries to prove. Anticitizen exists so the people who follow get there far faster — read more about why Anticitizen exists.
The game is rigged. Act accordingly.
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