Write for MigrantIQ
We publish free, practical migration guides for a global audience. Guest writers and subject-matter experts can submit original articles for editorial review. Every accepted piece is reviewed by our team before publication.
Who can write for MigrantIQ?
Anyone with genuine migration or relocation experience can pitch a guest post. You do not need your own blog — though if you have one, we are happy to link back from your author profile and article byline.
We welcome:
- First-hand migration journeys — from visa planning through arrival and settlement.
- Corridor and country guides with practical tips, timelines, and real costs (with sources).
- Work, study, and family relocation experiences that help readers plan with confidence.
- Scam awareness, document checklists, and trust & safety lessons from the field.
Guidelines for guest posts
Original content
Submissions must be original and not published elsewhere online or in print. Rewritten pieces are welcome if they are substantially different from any earlier version.
SEO structure
Content should be search-friendly: include a clear focus keyword (or phrase), a descriptive title, and subheaders (H2, H3, H4) that match how readers search for migration topics.
Word count
Articles should be at least 1,500 words. Shorter community experiences may fit our People Stories section instead — see below.
Format & submission
Share your draft in Google Docs (view or comment access). Include image source links, official government or regulator URLs, and other outgoing references inside the article.
Images
Include at least four original, landscape-oriented photographs where possible (JPEG or PNG). They should relate to your story — city life, documents, housing, workplace, or campus — not stock-only galleries. We may use approved images in MigrantIQ blog or social posts with credit.
Links
You may include one or two links to your own blog or social profiles, and one or two links to relevant MigrantIQ pages or official sources, provided they genuinely help the reader.
Video (optional)
You may embed or link to relevant YouTube or Instagram content that adds context — for example a campus tour, employer Q&A, or arrival walkthrough.
Bio & profile
Send a profile photo, a short bio (2–4 sentences), credentials if applicable, and links to your website or social profiles. Accepted guest writers receive a public author page at /blog/authors/[your-name]/.
Tone & accuracy
Keep your voice, but stay friendly and informative. Avoid profanity. Do not guarantee visa outcomes or quote unverified fees and deadlines — link to official sources instead. Content is general guidance, not legal advice.
Spelling
Use US spelling throughout (e.g. “organization”, “traveling”, “program”).
Topics we publish
Pick the closest match when you pitch:
- Immigration and Visa Policy 2026
- Case Study
- Visa Guides
- Planning & Preparation
- Settlement & Integration
- Work & Employment
- Study Abroad
- Family & Dependants
- Citizenship & Permanent Residence
- Trust & Safety
- Scams & Fraud Prevention
- Cost of Living & Finance
- Documentation & Checklists
- Policy Updates
- Country Guides
- Corridor Guides
What we do not publish
- Guaranteed visa outcomes or “100% approval” claims
- Unverified fees, deadlines, or statistics without official links
- Promotional content for unlicensed immigration consultants
- AI-only drafts without human review and fact-checking
- Content already published verbatim on other sites
How to submit
Email editorial@migrantiq.com (or info@migrantiq.com) with:
- Proposed title, focus keyword, and 2–3 sentence summary
- Google Doc link to your full draft (or pitch outline for pre-approval)
- Target countries, corridors, or visa types
- Profile photo, short bio, and links to your site or social profiles
- Image files or links, with sources noted
- Your background and credentials, if relevant
Accepted guest posts show Written by [you] and Reviewed by [Editorial Lead] on the live article. Shorter reader-submitted experiences belong in People Stories — not the editorial blog.
