1. Coronado, Panama
Monthly budget: $1,800
Monthly rent: $600
Panama
caters to foreign retirees like no other country in the world.
Day-to-day living is affordable, the approach to taxation is favorable
and property prices remain a bargain outside the capital city. The
country boasts perhaps the world's most generous incentive program for
retirees and uses the U.S. dollar as its currency, meaning no
exchange-rate risk for retirees whose retirement income is also
denominated in greenbacks.
Panama
City is being remade in real time right now thanks to a myriad of
public works projects, including the expansion of the Panama Canal.
Panama also offers some of the most advanced medical care facilities in
the region. Many Panamanian doctors are U.S.-trained, and Panama City's
hospitals are first-rate.
2. Languedoc, France
Monthly budget: $2,300
Monthly rent: $800
Not everyone is cut out for life in the Tropics or the developing world. If you prefer old world living, consider France. With its food, wine, architecture, history, museums, parks, gardens and cultural and recreational offerings, this country is the world's best example of getting what you pay for.
Specifically,
for retirement in 2014, I'd recommend the "other" South of France. Not
Provence (which is pricey), but west of there, in the
Languedoc-Roussillon region, between Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur to the
east, the Midi-Pyrenees to the west and the Auvergne to the north. Spain
is a few hours' drive to the south. This region is colorful, eclectic,
always changing, never follows a formula and is very open to retirees.
This is wine country, with a long history and a lot of heart.
Monthly budget: $2,000
Monthly rent: $800
Warm, welcoming, independent and private. These four perhaps seemingly contradictory adjectives best describe both Belizeans and their country. Belize is also one of the safest countries in the world, despite what you may read about it. Belize was a colony of Britain until 1981, meaning the people here speak English. They also value their freedom, as it's relatively new.
In the
nearly 30 years that I've been spending time in this country, I've joked
that "the good news from Belize is no news from Belize." This is a
sleepy Caribbean nation with but 350,000 people and three highways. On
the other hand, little Belize offers a whole lot of what many retirees
are looking for: A chance to start over on sandy, sunny shores. Prices
for a bit of sand on Ambergris, the most developed of Belize's islands,
are not cheap, but it is cheaper than elsewhere in the Caribbean. And it
is this island, home to the country's biggest expat community, that has
the services to cater to retirees. I would recommend Ambergris to any
retiree dreaming of retirement on the Caribbean Sea this new year.
Legal
residency is easy to obtain in Belize, and foreign residents pay no tax
in Belize on non-Belize income. I would not recommend Belize if you
have a serious health concern or existing medical condition. Health care
facilities and standards are improving but limited.
Monthly budget: $1,300
Monthly rent: $500
Ecuador is also one the world's best places to retire overseas on a budget and to live better for less. The cost of living is low, and the cost of real estate is near rock bottom for Latin America. The health care is high quality and inexpensive.
Specifically,
I would recommend Cuenca, Ecuador, a beautiful colonial city with a
fresh, spring-like climate 12 months of the year and a large and growing
expat community that is one of Latin America's most diverse and
well-blended. Ecuador has other colonial cities, but Cuenca is the
cultural heart of the country, with an orchestra and active art, theater
and even tango traditions that you can often enjoy free.
Perhaps
the biggest draw to Cuenca is its cost of living, which is low in an
absolute sense. The falling dollar has caused prices to go up sharply
for overseas Americans in some countries where goods are priced in the
local currency. This won't happen in Ecuador as long as the country
continues to use the U.S. dollar as its currency. Real estate, too, is
an absolute bargain. You can buy a small condo for less than $40,000.
5. Chiang Mai, Thailand
Monthly budget: $1,100Monthly rent: $400
Thailand
is arguably the cheapest place on earth to live well. Expat friends in
this part of the world have long tempted me with tales of $1 Pad Thai
lunches and $11-a-night hotels (including breakfast and free WiFi).
My
top recommendation for retirees considering Thailand in 2014 is Chiang
Mai, about 450 miles north of Bangkok, in a fertile river valley
surrounded by mountains. Chiang Mai, home to more than 17,000 foreign
residents, enjoys a more temperate climate than other parts of Thailand
and is an area rich in history with a culture distinctly different from
that in central and southern Thailand. Another big plus for Thailand is
health care, which is both very good and very cheap. Downsides include
the distance from North America.
6. Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
Monthly budget: $2,000Monthly rent: $700
Mexico
is a big place with a bad reputation. The reputation isn't altogether
undeserved, as drug cartels do control parts of this country, but not
all of it. And some of the most appealing regions for both living and
investing sit outside the war zones. Mexico offers two long coasts,
mountain towns and colonial cities, plus Mayan ruins, jungle, rain
forest, rivers and lakes. It's also the most accessible "overseas" haven
from the United States. You could drive back and forth if you wanted.
For
all these reasons, Mexico is home to the biggest established
populations of American expats in the world, making it a great choice if
you seek adventure with the comforts of home. Mexico is no longer a
super-cheap option, but it is my top pick for enjoying a luxury coastal
lifestyle on a budget in Puerto Vallarta. Puerto Vallarta is more
expensive than other places where you might consider living or retiring
overseas, but in Puerto Vallarta that's not the point. This isn't
developing-world living. This stretch of Mexico's Pacific coastline has
already been developed to a high level.
Life
here can be not only comfortable, but easy and fully appointed, with
world-class golf courses, marinas, restaurants and shopping. This is a
lifestyle that is available only on a limited basis worldwide, and is
truly (not metaphorically) comparable to the best you could enjoy in
southern California if you could afford it. Here you can afford it even
on an average budget.
Monthly budget: $1,300
Monthly rent: $500
Geographically,
Nicaragua is blessed, with two long coastlines and two big lakes, plus
volcanoes, highlands, rain forest and rivers. In this regard, it's got
everything Costa Rica and Panama have got, all less discovered and
developed and available for the adventurer and eco-traveler at bargain
rates.
Architecturally, too,
Nicaragua is notable. Its two sister colonial cities, Granada and Leon,
vie for the title of Oldest City in the Americas. Whichever story you
believe (that the Spanish conquistadores settled first on the shores of
Lake Nicaragua at Granada or, perhaps, a few months earlier in Old
Leon), Nicaragua is the big winner, with impressive colonial-era
churches, public buildings and parks to her credit.
Property
values have fallen significantly in this country over the past several
years, thanks to the re-election of Sandinista President Daniel Ortega
and the global recession, which has hit this country hard. As a result,
you can buy a house on Nicaragua's Pacific coast for less than $100,000.
8. Medellin, Colombia
Monthly budget: $1,800
Monthly rent: $500
Colombia
is the world's top up-and-coming retirement haven. Specifically,
Medellin, Colombia's city of flowers and eternal springtime, offers a
very appealing and competitive retirement lifestyle option. Medellin is a
pretty place with strong Euro-undertones, meaning it's a chance to
embrace a sophisticated, cosmopolitan retirement on a modest budget. The world just hasn't figured that out yet.
Kathleen Peddicord is the founder of the Live and Invest Overseas publishing group.
With more than 28 years experience covering this beat, Kathleen reports
daily on current opportunities for living, retiring and investing
overseas in her free e-letter. Her newest book, "How To Buy Real Estate
Overseas", published by Wiley & Sons, is the culmination of decades
of personal experience living and investing around the world.
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