A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Costa Rica — around £2,100/month for a couple, versus £2,500 in France (about 16% more).
Cost of living, side by side
| Costa Rica | France | |
|---|---|---|
| Modest (couple/mo) | £1,500 | £1,700 |
| 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.
France: There are no nationality restrictions on owning French property: non-residents can buy freehold (pleine propriété) apartments, houses and land on the same basis as citizens. Every sale is completed by a notaire, who guarantees legal title and collects taxes.
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.
France: EU/EEA nationals need no visa; others (including UK citizens) generally use the long-stay visitor visa (VLS-TS visiteur), requiring stable income of roughly €1,400+ a month, private health insurance and accommodation, renewed annually.
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.
France: France's public health system is excellent; after three months' residence you can join it (PUMA), and UK state pensioners use an S1 form so the UK covers their care. Most residents add a top-up mutuelle policy, often EUR 50-150 a month, to cover the balance the state does not.
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.
France: Under the UK-France treaty most UK pensions, both state and private, are taxed in France at progressive rates after a 10% allowance, while UK government-service pensions stay taxable in the UK. S1 holders are exempt from France's social charges on pension income, a valuable saving.
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.
France: Temperate in the north and west with mild, wet winters and warm summers, turning Mediterranean and hot in the south. Late spring and early autumn are especially lovely. France is safe and well-run, with petty theft mainly a big-city concern; they drive on the right, and while English is spoken in cities and tourist spots, some French is important for rural life and officialdom.
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.
France: Budget around 7-8% of the price in frais de notaire on an existing home (much less, 2-3%, on a new build), mostly transfer duty of up to 5% plus the notaire's fee and registration; agency commission is often already in the price. Completion typically takes about three 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.
France: The Dordogne for its long-established British community and countryside; Provence and the Occitanie south for sun and Mediterranean life; Brittany for a familiar green coast close to the UK; and the Riviera for glamour at a price.
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