This article examines the multifold dimensions of householding strategies in Taiwan, which have been embedded in a globalization process in the last two decades. It demonstrates how people mobilize family resources and attain household reproduction through ways such as international marriage, hiring migrant workers as domestic helpers and caregivers, overseas retirement, and studying abroad to pave the way for family migration. It concludes that globalization is the cause as well as the solution to the household crisis of reproduction in Taiwan. Yet, the crossborder strategies of households raise the need for government to formulate inclusive policies to create a multicultural society.