A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Costa Rica — around £2,100/month for a couple, versus £2,500 in Cyprus (about 16% more).
Cost of living, side by side
| Costa Rica | Cyprus | |
|---|---|---|
| Modest (couple/mo) | £1,500 | £1,800 |
| Comfortable (couple/mo) | £2,100 | £2,500 |
| Premium (couple/mo) | £3,400 | £3,800 |
Indicative monthly estimates for a couple — real costs vary by location, lifestyle and exchange rates.
Costa Rica: Foreigners can buy and hold titled property with the same freehold rights as Costa Rican citizens. The main exception is the Maritime Zone: the first 200 metres from the high-tide line, where the initial 50 metres are public and the next 150 metres are usually held under renewable concession rather than outright title.
Cyprus: Foreigners can buy property in Cyprus, with some permissions required for non-EU buyers on certain purchases.
Costa Rica: The Pensionado residency suits retirees with at least US$1,000 a month of lifetime pension income, while the Rentista route uses stable unearned income or a bank deposit; both are renewable and can lead to permanent residency.
Cyprus: Cyprus offers residency routes that are popular with retirees; requirements vary by nationality.
Costa Rica: Costa Rica is well regarded: legal residents join the public CAJA system by income-based contribution, alongside excellent private hospitals such as CIMA and Clinica Biblica in San Jose. Many keep private cover too, which is good value.
Cyprus: Cyprus's GESY national health system covers residents, including pensioners (often via a UK S1 form), for low contributions and small co-payments, and the main towns have good private hospitals; many expats also keep affordable private cover for speed and choice.
Costa Rica: Taxation is territorial, so a resident's foreign pension and overseas income are not taxed in Costa Rica, only locally sourced income is. That makes a UK or other foreign pension straightforward to draw here, though you keep any home-country obligations.
Cyprus: A resident retiree can elect each year to tax a foreign pension at a flat 5% above a €5,000 exemption (raised for 2026) instead of the progressive bands, and non-domiciled residents are exempt from tax on dividends and interest for up to 17 years, an attractive regime you should confirm with an adviser.
Costa Rica: Tropical with a dry season December to April and a greener rainy season May to November; the Central Valley stays spring-like around 22-27C year-round while the coasts are hotter and more humid. Safe by regional standards with everyday care against petty theft; Spanish is the language but English is widely used in expat and tourist areas, and driving is on the right.
Cyprus: Hot dry Mediterranean summers and mild winters, with more sunshine than almost anywhere in Europe; spring and autumn are the most comfortable seasons. Cyprus is very safe and English is very widely spoken as a former British colony, and driving is on the left like the UK, making it one of the easiest places for British retirees to settle.
Costa Rica: Expect total one-off costs of about 5-6%: a 1.5% transfer tax plus registry stamps, with the balance for notary and legal work; foreigners are treated like locals outside restricted coastal concession zones. Purchases usually complete within a few weeks.
Cyprus: Budget roughly 4-8% in one-off costs, transfer fees on resale homes run 3-8% on a sliding scale but a 50% reduction usually applies (and none is due where VAT was paid on a new home), plus legal fees; stamp duty was abolished from 2026, and completion commonly takes weeks to months.
Costa Rica: The Central Valley towns of Escazu, Santa Ana, Atenas and Grecia for a spring-like climate and expat services, plus Guanacaste (Tamarindo, Nosara) and the Central and South Pacific (Uvita, Dominical) for the beach.
Cyprus: Paphos for the largest, long-established British retiree community and archaeology, Larnaca for a flatter, lower-cost coastal base near the airport, Limassol for a busier cosmopolitan city, and the surrounding villages for quieter living.
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