Relocation FAQ
Direct answers — with sources.
31+ relocation questions answered with concrete numbers and explicit citations. Every figure links to its underlying institutional source — World Bank, OECD, WHO, IEP, Eurostat, named regulators.
Cost & Affordability
What is the cheapest country to live in 2026?
The cheapest countries to live in 2026 are Bangladesh, Nepal, Vietnam, Pakistan, and India's tier-2 cities — they consistently rank as the world's lowest-cost destinations on a PPP-adjusted basis. A comfortable single-expat lifestyle (1BR central rental, eating out 4-5x/week, basic private healthcare, transport) lands around $900-1,250/month in their capitals. Indonesia (outside Bali), Cambodia, and Laos sit just above. Three caveats: (1) international-tier private healthcare and English-medium international schools are excluded from these figures, add $300-1,500/mo for those depending on family profile. (2) visa pathways are uneven — Bangladesh has no formal long-stay visa for most Western passports. (3) quality-of-life factors (pollution in Dhaka/New Delhi, infrastructure gaps, women's safety) vary widely. Cost is necessary but not sufficient. Cross-check against safety + healthcare rankings before committing.
How much does it cost to live in Lisbon, Portugal?
It costs about $2,000-2,500/month to live in Lisbon, Portugal as a comfortable single expat. A 1BR rental in central Lisbon (Príncipe Real, Santos, or Alfama) is ~$1,400-1,700/mo; eating out 4-5x/week, basic transport, and private health insurance (~$80-120/mo) make up the rest. A couple in a 2BR runs $2,800-3,800/mo. Lisbon's overall cost-of-living index is roughly 20-25% lower than the global benchmark (New York City = 100). The D8 Digital Nomad Visa requires roughly 4× the Portuguese minimum wage in income; the D7 passive-income visa is more accessible at ~€820/mo per person. SortaRich anchors all costs to your home city — your $2,500 from Toronto buys differently than your $2,500 from Singapore.
Which countries can I retire in on $2,000 a month?
You can retire on $2,000 a month in Mexico (most cities outside CDMX premium), Panama (with Pensionado discount benefits stretching the budget further), Ecuador (Cuenca + Quito), Portugal (outside Lisbon/Porto premium areas), Malaysia (Penang), Thailand (Chiang Mai + smaller cities), Vietnam (Da Nang + Hoi An), Colombia (Medellín, Cartagena outside the walled-city), Costa Rica (with Pensionado), and the Philippines. A $2,000/mo budget supports a comfortable single-retiree lifestyle in those destinations. For couples, $2,000 covers most of the same destinations more tightly — couple budgets in the $2,500-3,500 range open up significantly more options including Spain (Valencia, Málaga), Greece, and Croatia coastal towns.
How does cost of living in Bangkok compare to New York City?
The cost of living in Bangkok runs roughly 60-65% lower than New York City on the overall cost-of-living index. A 1BR apartment in central Bangkok (Sukhumvit, Sathorn) averages $700-1,200/month versus NYC's $3,500-4,500. Restaurant meals at mid-range venues are about 70% cheaper. Groceries are 50-55% cheaper. The big inversions: imported wine + cheese + premium electronics are similarly priced or higher in Bangkok; international school tuition is 30-50% of US equivalents but still $8K-30K/year for tier-1 schools. SortaRich's PPP comparison anchored to NYC (the global benchmark = 100) gives a multiplier showing how far the same income actually goes.
Is it cheaper to live in Mexico City or Lisbon?
Mexico City is moderately cheaper than Lisbon — its overall cost-of-living index runs roughly 25-30% lower as of 2025. A 1BR rental in central Mexico City (Roma Norte, Condesa) runs $700-1,400/month vs Lisbon's $1,400-1,700. Restaurant prices in Mexico City are roughly 40-50% lower at mid-range venues. Where the gap narrows: imported groceries, cars + fuel, and international school tuition are similar in both cities. Quality-of-life trade: Lisbon has stronger walking/transit infrastructure + EU-residency pathway; Mexico City has stronger food scene + much larger size + closer US proximity. Both have well-developed expat infrastructure.
Where can my dollar buy the most?
Your dollar buys the most in Pakistan (~$3.50 PPP-adjusted purchasing power per US dollar), Bangladesh (~$3.40), India tier-2 cities (~$3.20), Vietnam (~$2.90), Egypt (~$2.80), Indonesia (~$2.60), the Philippines (~$2.40), Mexico (~$1.80), Argentina (volatile due to inflation cycles), Brazil (~$1.70), Peru (~$1.65), Portugal (~$1.40), and Spain (~$1.30) — per World Bank ICP 2021 + Penn World Tables. Higher = your dollar buys more goods + services locally than at home. SortaRich shows this exact ratio per city, anchored to your home city — so a Toronto traveler's ratios differ from a US visitor's. The PPP "cheap multiplier" is the strongest single signal for "where will my income go furthest" — but always cross-check against safety + visa + healthcare before committing.
Visas & Residency
What digital nomad visas are available for US citizens in 2026?
Digital nomad visas available for US citizens in 2026 span 40+ countries. The most established programs: Portugal D8 (income requirement pegged to ~4× the Portuguese minimum wage), Spain DNV (~200% of Spanish minimum wage), Estonia DNV (fixed EUR threshold), Croatia DNV (income-based, tax-exempt on foreign income for 12 months), Mexico Temporary Resident (income or savings basis — most accessible), Costa Rica Rentista (income or $60K bank deposit alternative), UAE Virtual Working Programme (~$5,000/mo income), Brazil Digital Nomad Visa, Colombia Digital Nomad Visa (~3× Colombian minimum wage), and the Czech Republic's Zivno trade-license route. Income thresholds + processing times shift annually — always verify with the official immigration authority before applying. SortaRich tracks current thresholds in its visa database.
How does Portugal's D7 visa work?
Portugal's D7 is a passive-income residency visa for retirees, FIRE-track expats, and anyone with stable non-employment income (pensions, rental income, dividends, royalties). The income threshold is ~€820/month for the primary applicant, with smaller increments for dependents (~€410 for spouse, ~€246 per dependent child). Required: proof of stable income for at least 12 months, NIF (Portuguese tax number), Portuguese bank account, accommodation (rental or purchase), private health insurance until SNS access. Initial residency is 2 years, renewable for 3-year periods. Permanent residency available after 5 years. Citizenship was historically available after 5 years; the 2024-25 nationality-law reform tightened this to 7-10 years for most applicants (Lusophone-country exception aside) — verify current AIMA rules before relying. Tax residency comes with NHR / IFICI program access for qualifying applicants.
Which countries offer golden visa programs?
Countries that offer golden visa (residency-by-investment) programs as of 2026 include the UAE (10-year Golden Visa, AED 2M property/deposit or specialized-talent endorsement), Greece (post-Aug 2024 reform: €800K real estate in Attica, Thessaloniki, and islands with population > 3,100; €400K elsewhere; the historic €250K floor now survives only for narrow conversion + restoration use cases), Portugal (post-2023 reform — closed to real estate, still open via investment funds + research/cultural donations), Malta (Permanent Residence Programme ~€150K combined), the Caribbean CBI countries (Antigua, Dominica, Grenada, St Kitts, St Lucia from $100K-200K), and Türkiye (Citizenship by Investment, $400K real estate). Spain's Golden Visa was abolished by Law 1/2025 effective April 3, 2025 — closed to new applicants. Always confirm current thresholds and program status with the official immigration authority — these programs change frequently.
What's the easiest country to get residency in?
The easiest countries to get residency in for Western passport holders are Mexico (Temporary Resident — income-based threshold easily satisfied with US/EU pension or remote-work income, ~30-day processing in many consulates), Panama (Pensionado — only $1,000/mo lifetime pension required, the lowest threshold in the world for a real residency program), Paraguay (Permanent Residency — one of the world's most accessible, bank deposit + simple paperwork), Uruguay (mature passive-income residency program), Costa Rica (Pensionado/Rentista), and Portugal (D7 for income > €820/mo). For self-employed: the Netherlands DAFT visa under the US-Dutch Friendship Treaty needs only ~€4,500 starting capital. "Ease" itself ranges across multiple axes — required income, processing time, paperwork burden, language requirement.
Tax & Financial
How does FEIE (Foreign Earned Income Exclusion) work for US citizens abroad?
The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (Section 911) lets US citizens and resident aliens exclude up to $126,500 of foreign-earned income from US federal income tax in 2024 (the figure inflation-adjusts annually — verify current year). Two qualification paths: (1) Bona Fide Residence — establish residency in a foreign country for an uninterrupted period including a full tax year; (2) Physical Presence — be present in foreign countries for at least 330 days during any 12-month period. FEIE excludes earned income only (W-2 + self-employment), not investment income, pensions, or distributions. State taxes don't go away — US states have their own residency rules and may continue to tax you. Self-employment tax (15.3% on net SE earnings) is NOT excluded by FEIE. Always work with a US-expat-CPA before filing.
Which countries have territorial tax systems?
Countries with territorial tax systems for individuals include Hong Kong, Singapore (territorial in practice for most income), Malaysia (foreign-source income exemption), Panama, Costa Rica (foreign-source exempt for non-residents and most residents), Paraguay, Uruguay (5-year tax holiday on foreign income for new residents), Thailand (foreign-source income exempt if not remitted in same year — being tightened 2024-25), and the Philippines (for non-resident citizens). Territorial systems tax only income earned within the country's borders, exempting foreign-source income. Several countries have special-regime systems that effectively achieve similar outcomes (Portugal NHR/IFICI, Spain Beckham Law, Italy 100K flat tax for new residents). Always verify current status — tax-system changes are frequent.
What is Portugal's NHR / IFICI tax regime?
Portugal's Non-Habitual Resident (NHR) regime closed to new applicants in 2024 and was replaced by the IFICI ("Tax Incentive for Scientific Research and Innovation") regime, which is significantly narrower in scope. IFICI is restricted to specific high-skilled professions (researchers, certain tech workers, qualified industrial-investment activities) and offers a 20% flat rate on Portuguese-source qualifying employment + self-employment income for 10 years, plus exemption on most foreign-source income. The original NHR program (which was much broader, covering passive income from pensions + dividends + capital gains) is still in force for those who registered before the 2024 deadline — those benefits run for the original 10-year window. Verify with a Portuguese tax advisor before relying on either regime.
Schools & Family
How much do international schools cost abroad?
International schools abroad cost (annual primary + secondary tuition, before fees): Lisbon $5K-29K, Madrid $6K-28K, Bangkok $8K-30K, Kuala Lumpur $4K-18K, Mexico City $6K-22K, Dubai $8K-30K, Tokyo $14K-30K, Singapore $25K-45K (one of the world's most expensive markets), Hong Kong $20K-35K. The "true cost" — registration + capital fees + transport + lunch + uniform + exam fees — typically adds 20-40% on top of published tuition. Multi-year waitlists are common at British/American/IB-curriculum schools in capital cities. Curriculum choice (IB vs British vs American vs French) shapes options. SortaRich's schools database tracks tuition + curriculum + accreditation per school.
Best countries for families with school-age children?
The best countries for families with school-age children are Portugal (D7 passive-income visa, good IB schools $5K-29K/yr in Lisbon/Porto, free SNS healthcare after residency), Spain (Non-Lucrative Visa, IB + bilingual schools $5K-22K/yr, universal healthcare), Malaysia (MM2H visa, KL international schools $4K-18K/yr, strong English fluency), Mexico (Temporary Resident, schools $6K-22K/yr in CDMX), Costa Rica (Pensionado/Rentista, schools $6K-15K/yr), and Japan (Long-Term Resident pathways, public schools are free + excellent for Japanese-language families). All consistently score well across cost + safety + education + visa accessibility. PISA scores favor East Asia + Northern Europe at the academic top. SortaRich ranks all by combined cost + outcomes + visa.
Is homeschooling legal abroad?
Homeschooling is legal abroad in many countries but legality varies dramatically. Fully legal: US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Mexico, Czechia, Russia. Legal with registration or curriculum requirements: Portugal, Spain (varies by region), France, Italy, Estonia, South Africa, India. Restrictive or banned: Germany (effectively banned — mandatory school attendance enforced via fines + prosecution; only narrow exceptions), Sweden, Greece (restricted), Netherlands (very restrictive), most Gulf states, China. Always verify current law with the destination country's ministry of education before relocating — rules change. SortaRich tags every country page with its homeschool-legality status.
Country Comparisons
Lisbon vs Bangkok for digital nomads — which is better?
Lisbon vs Bangkok for digital nomads comes down to different tradeoffs across cost, infrastructure, visa, and lifestyle. Bangkok wins on cost (single-expat budget $1,500-2,200/mo vs Lisbon's $2,000-2,500), street food + restaurant scene depth, and pure tropical-warmth lifestyle. Lisbon wins on EU-residency pathway (D8 nomad visa is mature; Bangkok's LTR visa is real but newer + harder), Schengen-area travel access, weather variety (4 mild seasons vs Bangkok's hot-and-hotter), pollution (Lisbon excellent vs Bangkok seasonal AQI issues), and English-friendly admin. Internet quality is comparable in both major nomad districts. For a 1-2 year base: Bangkok if you optimize cost + Asia-timezone clients; Lisbon if you want EU-residency-track + balanced climate.
Spain vs Portugal for retirement?
Spain vs Portugal for retirement: Spain is significantly larger + more diverse (Mediterranean coast, mountain regions, Madrid, the Canaries) with stronger public-healthcare coverage for non-lucrative visa holders + lower regional cost variation. Portugal is smaller, more concentrated (Lisbon, Porto, Algarve, Madeira), historically cheaper but has tightened with the post-2020 expat boom (Lisbon prices doubled 2018-24). Visa: Spain's Non-Lucrative requires ~€2,400/mo per person + private health insurance; Portugal's D7 requires only ~€820/mo per person and grants SNS access after residency. Tax: Spain offers no broad expat tax program (Beckham Law is for new employment-income residents only); Portugal's NHR closed in 2024, IFICI is narrower. Both grant EU-residency pathway. Choose Spain for scale + healthcare access; Portugal for lower income threshold + Atlantic-coast lifestyle.
Mexico vs Costa Rica for retirement?
Mexico vs Costa Rica is mostly a tradeoff between cost + scale (Mexico) and safety + ecology (Costa Rica). Mexico: vastly larger + cheaper (single-retiree budget $1,500-2,500/mo in CDMX, Querétaro, Mérida; couples $2,200-3,500), Temporary Resident visa is income-based and easy, healthcare is mid-tier (excellent in Mexico City + Guadalajara private system, mixed elsewhere), and the cost variation across Mexico is huge. Costa Rica: smaller + slightly pricier (single $1,800-2,800; couples $2,500-3,800), Pensionado visa needs only $1,000/mo pension, exceptional ecology + outdoor lifestyle, no army (lower geopolitical risk), and well-developed expat infrastructure in Atenas/Escazú/Tamarindo. Healthcare quality is comparable (Costa Rica's public CCSS is universal but slow; private is excellent and ~30% cheaper than US).
Best countries to leave the US for in 2026?
The best countries to leave the US for in 2026 are Portugal (D7 + D8 visas, EU-track), Mexico (closest, easy visa, lower cost), Canada (familiar culture, healthcare, harder skilled-migration pathway), Spain (Non-Lucrative + cultural compatibility), Costa Rica (Pensionado), Panama (Pensionado at $1,000/mo pension threshold), Italy (1-million-Euro elective-residency option + cultural appeal), Uruguay (tax-holiday residency), Thailand (LTR for retirees + remote workers), and the Netherlands (DAFT visa for US-self-employed). The decision hinges on family ties, climate preference, language tolerance, and whether you're prioritizing cost-savings or quality-of-life. SortaRich's `/leaving/us` page ranks all by your specific income + family profile.
Which is safer — Mexico or Colombia?
Mexico vs Colombia for safety: at the country level Mexico ranks higher on the IEP Global Peace Index than Colombia, but both vary dramatically by region and country averages are misleading. Mexico City + Querétaro + Mérida + Guadalajara score similarly to many European mid-tier cities; Tijuana + parts of Sinaloa do not. Medellín + Bogotá + Cartagena have transformed dramatically since the 1990s — Medellín's 2025 homicide rate is comparable to many US Sunbelt cities. SortaRich aggregates city-level safety data where available rather than relying on country averages, because country-level Latin American safety stats genuinely mislead. Always check the specific neighborhood + barrio data, not just the headline country number.
What's the safest country in the world?
The safest country in the world is Iceland (#1 in the IEP Global Peace Index 2025, every year since 2008). The top 15: Iceland, New Zealand, Ireland, Austria, Singapore, Portugal, Slovenia, Switzerland, Denmark, Japan, Czechia, Canada, Finland, Croatia, Australia. The composite combines internal violence (homicide, violent crime, incarceration), external conflict (military expenditure, deployment), political stability (WGI), and societal safety perceptions. SortaRich pulls from this index plus city-level homicide rates + WGI political stability + survey-based perceived-safety data — country-level safety can mislead at the city level (Mexico City scores above the country average, parts of Sinaloa score far below). Always check the city-level data on the destination's page.
Retirement Abroad
How much do I need to retire abroad?
You need between $1,500/mo and $4,000+/mo to retire abroad, depending on the destination. A comfortable single-retiree budget ranges from $1,500/mo in lowest-cost destinations (rural Vietnam, Cambodia, Bolivia, parts of Nepal + India) to $4,000+/mo in higher-cost destinations (Switzerland, Singapore, premium Lisbon/Madrid neighborhoods, Caribbean tax havens). The most-trafficked retirement zones — Portugal, Spain, Mexico, Panama, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam — support comfortable single-retiree lifestyles in the $1,800-2,800/mo range, couples in $2,500-3,800. Always include private health insurance ($80-300/mo for a 60-year-old), visa-renewal fees, periodic flights home, and a 15-20% buffer for currency volatility + inflation. SortaRich's retirement budget calculator anchors all figures to your home-country income.
Best country for early retirement (FIRE)?
The best countries for early retirement (FIRE) — for retirees with passive income (~$2,500-5,000/mo from investments) — combine cost, visa, healthcare, and tax favorability: Portugal D7 (low income threshold ~€820/mo, EU access, SNS healthcare after residency), Mexico Temporary Resident (cheap, easy visa, healthcare access via IMSS or private), Panama Pensionado (low threshold, territorial tax — foreign income exempt), Uruguay (5-year tax holiday on foreign income), Malaysia MM2H (recently relaxed, low cost), Costa Rica Pensionado/Rentista (Pensionado-discount benefits compound the low-cost advantage), and Thailand LTR (10-year visa for income-eligible retirees + remote workers). Avoid high-tax-on-foreign-income jurisdictions (Spain Non-Lucrative still subjects you to Spanish tax on worldwide income). Always model your specific income mix against the destination's tax-residency rules before relocating.
Digital Nomads
Where do digital nomads actually live in 2026?
Digital nomads in 2026 actually live in Lisbon (Portugal D8), Mexico City + Playa del Carmen + Mérida (Mexico Temporary Resident), Chiang Mai + Bangkok + Bali (Long-Term Resident + B211A), Medellín (Colombia DNV), Buenos Aires + Mendoza, Tbilisi (Georgia's 1-year visa-free entry for many nationalities), Belgrade (Serbia), Sofia + Plovdiv (Bulgaria), Cape Town (South Africa Remote Work Visa launched 2024), and Dubai (UAE Virtual Working Programme). These are the most-trafficked nomad bases per Statista, Nomad List, and visa-program uptake. Nomad concentration tends to follow visa availability + cost + internet quality + community network — once a city hits "Nomad List top 20" it tends to stay there 3-5 years before saturation pushes the next wave to a sibling city.
How fast is internet in popular nomad cities?
Internet speeds in popular nomad cities (median fixed-broadband download per Speedtest Global Index, 2024-25): Singapore 280+ Mbps, Hong Kong 240+, South Korea 220+, Dubai 200+, Lisbon ~150 Mbps, Bangkok ~140 Mbps, Mexico City ~95 Mbps, Buenos Aires ~85 Mbps, Bali (varies by area) 30-100 Mbps, Chiang Mai 80-140 Mbps, Tbilisi 50-80 Mbps. Mobile 4G/5G generally exceeds fixed in many SEA + Latin American cities — useful as backup. For video-call-heavy work, target 100+ Mbps downstream + 20+ Mbps upstream. Most established nomad neighborhoods have specific buildings + coworking spaces with verified speeds — research at the building level, not just the city level.
Relocation Logistics
How do I get permanent residency abroad?
To get permanent residency abroad: (1) qualify for an initial residency visa (income-based, employment, family reunification, investment, or special-regime), (2) maintain in-country presence for the required minimum (typically 5-10 years depending on country + visa type), (3) demonstrate integration (language test, civic-knowledge test, criminal-background clearance), and (4) apply for permanent residency. Country-specific timelines: Portugal 5 years on D7/D8/Golden + basic Portuguese (A2 level); Spain 5 years on Non-Lucrative + basic Spanish; Germany 5-8 years + B1 German; Australia typically 4 years on skilled-migration; UK 5 years on most worker/family visas + Life in the UK test. Some countries (Mexico, Panama, Paraguay) are notably faster than others (Switzerland, Liechtenstein) for permanent residency.
What documents do I need to relocate to Europe?
The documents you need to relocate to Europe are: passport (valid 6+ months past intended stay), apostilled birth certificate, apostilled marriage certificate (if applicable), apostilled criminal-background check from every country lived in 6+ months in the past 5 years, proof of income (12 months of bank statements + tax returns), private health insurance valid in destination country, proof of accommodation (rental contract or property deed), passport-sized photos meeting destination specifications, and the destination country's specific visa-application forms. Apostilling typically takes 4-12 weeks per document — start 6 months before your target arrival date. Some countries also require sworn translations (Portugal, Spain accept apostille + sometimes a sworn translation; Italy requires sworn translation by a registered translator).
Should I keep my US bank accounts when moving abroad?
Yes — most US-citizen expats keep at least one US checking + one brokerage account active. US banks are increasingly closing accounts of customers with foreign addresses (especially Vanguard, Fidelity for non-domiciled accounts), so set up a US-domiciled address (a relative, mail-forwarding service like Earth Class Mail, or a state of last residence) before leaving. Keep a credit card with no foreign-transaction fees (Charles Schwab debit card refunds ATM fees globally; Capital One Venture/Bank of America Travel Rewards work no-foreign-fee). Charles Schwab International Brokerage opens accounts for non-US residents; Wise + Revolut + Mercury are common multi-currency alternatives. Always file FBAR (FinCEN 114) if you hold > $10K aggregate in foreign accounts in any year — the penalties are punitive.
How do I get healthcare abroad as an American?
To get healthcare abroad as an American you have three options: (1) Local public healthcare in destination country — usually accessible after legal residency (Portugal SNS, Spain SNS, Mexico IMSS, Costa Rica CCSS, Thailand UCS for residents). Quality varies; private parallel system is often used for non-urgent care. (2) International private health insurance — Cigna Global, Allianz Care, GeoBlue, William Russell, Bupa Global. Premiums for a healthy 40-year-old typically run $150-400/mo for comprehensive worldwide coverage; older + family plans scale up substantially. (3) Local private insurance — often cheaper than international plans but with geographic restrictions (limited or no US coverage). Best practice for most: combine local public access (where available) with a moderate-tier international plan for emergency evacuation + worldwide coverage. Medicare does NOT cover most care outside the US.
How long does it take to relocate abroad?
Relocating abroad takes 6-9 months minimum from "decided to move" to "settled in destination." Phase 1 (months 1-2): destination research, visa-eligibility check, document gathering started. Phase 2 (months 3-4): apostille + translate documents, schedule consulate appointments, finalize destination housing arrangement. Phase 3 (months 4-5): consulate appointment + visa decision (varies wildly — Portugal D7 is currently 2-6 months; Mexico Temporary Resident at consulate is 1-4 weeks). Phase 4 (months 5-7): notice at job + lease, ship/sell belongings, fly out, post-arrival registration (NIF, residency card, bank account, healthcare). Phase 5 (months 7-9): settle in, school enrollment if applicable, integrate. Compressing below 6 months is possible (especially via Mexico/Panama/Paraguay) but increases stress + risk of paperwork problems.
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