A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Thailand — around £2,000/month for a couple, versus £2,150 in Croatia (about 7% more).
Cost of living, side by side
| Croatia | Thailand | |
|---|---|---|
| Modest (couple/mo) | £1,550 | £1,300 |
| Comfortable (couple/mo) | £2,150 | £2,000 |
| Premium (couple/mo) | £3,100 | £3,200 |
Indicative monthly estimates for a couple — real costs vary by location, lifestyle and exchange rates.
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.
Thailand: Foreigners can own a condominium outright (freehold) within a building's 49% foreign quota; land itself is held via a long lease or a genuine Thai company (never a nominee).
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.
Thailand: Most retirees use the Non-Immigrant O / O-A retirement visa (age 50+, with income or savings requirements).
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.
Thailand: Private hospitals in Bangkok, Phuket and Chiang Mai are internationally accredited and excellent, at a fraction of Western prices; most expats use private insurance or pay out of pocket, budgeting perhaps £80-150 a month for cover at older ages.
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.
Thailand: Since 1 January 2024 Thailand taxes residents (183+ days) on foreign income they remit into the country, so a UK pension brought in may be assessable; the UK-Thailand double-tax treaty, careful timing, and the pensioner LTR visa (which exempts remitted foreign income) can reduce or remove the bill, so take advice.
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.
Thailand: Tropical and hot year-round; the cooler, dry season from roughly November to February is most comfortable, with a hot spell (March-May) and a monsoon (June-October) that varies by coast. Generally very safe and welcoming; English is widely spoken in tourist and expat areas, driving is on the left, and daily life is easy for British retirees.
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.
Thailand: Budget around 6-8% of the price in one-off costs, a 2% transfer fee, possible specific business tax or stamp duty, plus legal fees; a condo is the freehold option for foreigners and can complete within a few weeks once due diligence is done.
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.
Thailand: Phuket for beaches and resort living, Chiang Mai for a cooler, cultured and cheaper base, Hua Hin for a quieter seaside town near Bangkok, and Bangkok itself for amenities and top healthcare.
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