With Swedish Passport you can go everywhere in the world

The most beloved passport in the world by rich people is not American.  European citizens are the owners of the most valuable passports in the world with the top ten spots all countries in Europe. But the world’s most powerful passport belongs to Sweden. The findings come from offshore consulting firm Nomad Capitalist, who have ranked 199 passports globally.

The report said holders of Swedish passports have visa-free access to 176 countries, the ability to easily escape Swedish taxes by moving overseas, the ability to hold dual or multiple citizenships, high levels of personal freedom and an excellent reputation abroad.

The rest of the top 10 include Belgium, Spain, Italy, Ireland, Finland, Germany, Denmark, Switzerland and Luxembourg. The United States passport, on the other hand, isn’t so desirable. It ranked 35th on the list, in a tie with Slovenia.
Although US citizens are able to travel easily to more countries than Australia — with visa-free access to 174 countries — they are also taxed on their worldwide income no matter where they live, do not have a respected reputation globally, and appear to have less freedoms than other countries.
The least powerful passport, ranking 199, is the Afghan passport. Citizens from Afghanistan are only allowed to travel easily to 25 countries, are strictly forbidden to hold other citizenships, are often taxed on their worldwide income, and encounter substantial hostility globally.

The “Nomad Passport Index” ranks passports based on visa-free travel (50% of ranking), taxation (30% of ranking), perception (10% of ranking), the ability to hold dual citizenship (10% of ranking) and overall freedom (10% of ranking). Each country’s value in each category is given the indicated weighting to achieve a country’s total score using the formula. “This index is designed to show the true value of citizenship in each country from the perspective of a high-achieving citizen who wants the freedom to minimize his or her tax obligations, diversify his or her wealth, and travel freely without judgment,” the report says. “We believe that no one should be forced to pay tax by virtue of their citizenship alone.”