None of them, really.There are basically six ways to get to Scandinavia:As a tourist. Welcome, have a nice stay, please don’t destroy anything, and buy some souvenirs before you leave. No, you can’t stay.As an EU citizen. Welcome. Our country is your country, almost literally – we can also move there if we want.As a refugee. Welcome to a rather miserable existence when we investigate if you’re actually fleeing and decide what to do with you.As a student. Welcome, if you can pay tuition and living.As a high-skilled job applicant. Welcome, but only if you have an employer backing you and they can’t fill the position by hiring someone from Scandinavia.As someone married to a Scandinavian. Welcome, in a year and a half when we have investigated that you’re not just using your Scandinavian S.O. to circumvent immigration rules.If you’re in any of those categories, you have a chance. Then I would propose Norway or Sweden, since those languages are easiest to learn if you know English. Danish is harder because pronunciation, Icelandic is much harder because grammar, and Finnish is near impossible unless you’re born there. And you need to learn the local language eventually.If you’re not in any of those categories, you will find that none of the Scandinavian countries – or European countries, for that matter – are particularly good for immigration.Krister Sundelin, Quora Profits from free accurate cryptos signals: https://www.predictmag.com/