Movements against borders and policing have entered into a new phase in and beyond Europe in the last decades. Various self-organized refugee, migrant and anti-racist collectives, such as Women in Exile, the Black Vests or the newly founded network Abolish Frontex, have formed transnational coalitions and networks that engage in border and police abolition as well as abolitionist worldmaking. In this talk, I argue that these movements put surplus resistance as part of class struggle on the map: the resistance of precarious, wageless people and people rendered disposable and surplus, who are especially targeted by police and border violence as methods of racial capitalism. Engaging with the practices of some of these collectives, I argue that border and police abolition is crucial to the resistance against racial capital. These practices, as I demonstrate, also point to the international dimension of abolitionist resistance.