They’re not building bunkers. They’re buying farms in Patagonia and booking flights to Reykjavik. And they’re doing it now — not later.
As geopolitical tensions hit levels not seen since World War II, a quiet but urgent conversation is spreading beyond military circles and into dinner tables, Reddit threads, and real estate offices: If the worst happens, where do you go?
The Data Is Harder to Ignore Than Ever
The 2025 Global Peace Index found that global peacefulness has reached its lowest level since the index began, with key conflict indicators now worse than at any point since World War II. The Vision of Humanity The report identified 56 active conflicts worldwide — the most on record — with 92 countries involved in wars beyond their own borders.
That’s not background noise. That’s a pattern.
Amid escalating tensions between major powers, security analysts have begun circulating assessments of which territories are most likely to avoid the direct shockwaves of a global war — based on geographic distance, resource availability, and political neutrality. Nation Thailand
So what does the evidence actually say?
The Countries That Keep Coming Up
New Zealand tops almost every credible list. It sits roughly 2,000 kilometres from its closest neighbour, Australia, which puts it far from major power centres where conflicts are most likely to erupt. New Zealand ranks third on the Global Peace Index and is considered highly self-sufficient — a recent study placed it as the top pick for survival in the event of a global crisis. LADbible
Wealthy buyers have already taken note — there are reports of billionaires quietly acquiring land there. Fiery Trippers
Iceland offers something different: energy independence. The country generates 100% of its energy from renewable sources within its own borders, harnessing geothermal and hydroelectric power. While the rest of the world scrambles for oil and coal, Iceland simply doesn’t need to. Visit World It ranks among the top five most peaceful nations on Earth in 2025. The Vision of Humanity
Switzerland brings a different kind of resilience. Its long-standing neutrality means it is less likely to be targeted by belligerent powers — and its well-prepared defence infrastructure, including fortified bunkers and compulsory military training, gives its population a structural layer of protection most countries lack. DAN MERRIAM
Bhutan, Chile, and Argentina round out what analysts call the “geography-first” tier. Bhutan’s rugged Himalayan geography and neutral posture make it difficult to access militarily, while Argentina’s vast agricultural capacity — grains and livestock — is seen as a critical buffer if global trade collapses. Nation Thailand
Here’s What We Actually Know
To cut through the speculation, here are the verified factors experts consistently cite:
Political neutrality reduces the likelihood of being drawn into conflict or targeted
Geographic isolation — particularly island or Southern Hemisphere locations — limits exposure to nuclear fallout and invasion routes
Food and energy self-sufficiency becomes critical if global supply chains collapse
Low strategic value matters: islands like Tuvalu are considered unattractive military targets precisely because of weak infrastructure and small populations The Mirror
Underground bunkers with internal ventilation remain the most effective physical protection in extreme scenarios Parcil Safety
Why This Conversation Is Happening Now
A recent YouGov poll of over 7,000 respondents across the UK, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain found that between 41% and 55% of respondents believe their countries are not prepared for a major conflict. Visit World
That fear is translating into action — Google searches for “safest countries WW3” have surged repeatedly since 2022, and the conversation has moved from fringe forums into mainstream media.
The hard truth, as analysts note, is that nowhere is fully safe. A nuclear exchange changes every calculation. But distance, neutrality, and self-sufficiency are not just survival instincts — they’re measurable, data-backed advantages.
The most likely answer remains that no place would be entirely safe — unless, as one outlet quipped, NASA completes its lunar domes. But several countries are demonstrably safer than others, and the gap between them and the rest of the world is growing. LADbible
The question isn’t really “where do you go?” It’s whether you’ve thought about it at all.