I used Interactive Brokers for some of my investments, mainly because they offer margin accounts at a very low cost (look for my posts about leverage). Here is the link to get a free stock when you open your account:
I love Athletic Greens and I used it for half a decade. If you want to try and use my link, you will get a bottle of Vitamin D3+K2 plus 5 free AG1 Travel Packs and I get a free AG1 Pouch.
If you decided to move to Italy to work, here is a link to a good therapist to a service that can help you navigate the many tax intricacies of your new home (a possibly save some EURs):
P2P lending platforms offer new investors sign-up bonuses or cashback deals, sometimes on a permanent basis, sometimes as one-off deals. I will add here the list of the offers I am part of, so check back regularly or sign up to the mailing list to hear it first.
I am not planning to get rich and retire early out of this but you can help me keep the site running while you get something out of the deal as well.
Each platform has its own minimum, small print and rules. Click on the links below and follow their instructions to participate to each program.
If you want to try your hand at becoming a VC, here my link to Seedrs to get a £10 credit:
Last but not least, a credit card offer. It has been five years now that I use American Express and I can only share positive words about them…from a service point of view. If you look closely at it, it is not the fairest thing out there: an AmEx card makes sense only if you can cover its expenses with the rewards, meaning you have to spend at least £1500 each month on it, meaning you have to be not in the bottom 80%, considering that these are expenses excluding rent/mortgage, utilities, nursery, insurance, etc. It is a transfer of wealth from the non-AmEx user to the AmEx user, since they both pay the same price but the AmEx user gets something back; you can see it as a transfer from the poor to the rich, so to speak. So if the ESG investor in you is not too outraged about it, here is the link: