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Croatia vs Mauritius: where should you retire?

Costs are broadly similar — roughly £2,150/month for a couple in Croatia and £2,100 in Mauritius.

Cost of living, side by side

CroatiaMauritius
Modest (couple/mo)£1,550£1,400
Comfortable (couple/mo)£2,150£2,100
Premium (couple/mo)£3,100£3,300

Indicative monthly estimates for a couple — real costs vary by location, lifestyle and exchange rates.

Can a foreigner buy property?

Croatia: EU/EEA and Swiss citizens buy on the same terms as Croatians. Non-EU nationals (including UK citizens) can usually buy an apartment or house but need Ministry of Justice consent under a reciprocity agreement, or can purchase through a Croatian company; farmland, forest and some protected coastal land remain off-limits.

Mauritius: Non-citizens buy mainly through government-approved schemes such as the Property Development Scheme (PDS), IRS and RES, or in ground-plus-two apartment developments, where they can own freehold. A qualifying purchase above set price thresholds can also confer residence. Buying ordinary land outside these schemes generally requires special approval.

Retirement visas

Croatia: Non-EU nationals can apply for temporary residence on the grounds of financial self-sufficiency — showing modest but stable income or savings, health insurance and accommodation — renewed annually.

Mauritius: Those aged 50+ can apply for a Retired Non-Citizen residence permit by undertaking to transfer around USD 2,000 a month into a local account; buying a qualifying scheme property can also grant residence for as long as it is held.

Healthcare, tax & lifestyle, compared

Healthcare

Croatia: Croatia's public health fund (HZZO) is open to resident retirees for roughly EUR 90-100 a month, with an inexpensive top-up policy (dopunsko) covering most co-payments; UK state pensioners can instead use an S1 form. Private clinics are available for faster access.

Mauritius: Free public hospitals exist but expats use private clinics, chiefly the C-Care group (with branches at Grand Baie, Tamarin and Wellkin in Moka) plus others, offering good care in English and French, with anything highly specialised sometimes handled abroad. Private insurance is widely used and relatively affordable.

Tax on your pension

Croatia: Croatia taxes residents on worldwide income, but under most double-tax treaties a foreign pension is taxed only in your country of residence; pension income also gets a personal allowance and a 50% reduction, so effective rates are modest. Confirm your treaty position.

Mauritius: Mauritius has a flat 15% income tax and no capital-gains or inheritance tax, and a resident is taxed on foreign income only if it is remitted to Mauritius; the over-50s retirement permit needs about USD 24,000 a year of income. Take advice on remittance timing.

Climate & everyday life

Croatia: A warm, dry Mediterranean summer along the Adriatic coast with mild winters, turning more continental and colder inland. May, June and September are the sweet spots. Croatia is very safe and easy-going; they drive on the right, English is widely spoken along the coast and by younger people, and daily life is comfortable for British retirees.

Mauritius: Warm and tropical all year, with hot humid summers from December to March and pleasantly mild drier winters from June to September; cyclone season runs January to March. Winter is the most comfortable time. Very easy for British retirees, as English is an official language and driving is on the left as in the UK; the island is safe, stable and welcoming with a large established expat community.

Cost of buying

Croatia: Buyers pay a 3% real-estate transfer tax on resale homes (new-builds carry 25% VAT in the price instead), plus legal, notary and agency fees of a few percent. Non-EU citizens such as Britons need Ministry of Justice consent under a reciprocity rule, which can add two to six months to the process.

Mauritius: Foreign buyers purchase through approved schemes such as the PDS from a USD 375,000 minimum, and expect registration duty of around 5%, though from mid-2026 this is rising toward 10% for scheme purchases, so check the current rate; completion takes weeks to a few months.

Where expats settle

Croatia: Istria (Pula, Rovinj, Porec) for a gentle, Italian-flavoured peninsula close to Western Europe; the Dalmatian coast around Split and Zadar for island-hopping and sun; and Dubrovnik for beauty at a premium.

Mauritius: Grand Baie and the north for a lively expat hub, Tamarin and Black River on the west coast for a laid-back beach lifestyle, and Flic en Flac for lagoons and amenities.

Thinking seriously about Croatia or Mauritius?

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