The Expat InvestorSee if you qualify
Retire abroad · compared

Cyprus vs France: where should you retire?

Costs are broadly similar — roughly £2,500/month for a couple in Cyprus and £2,500 in France.

Cost of living, side by side

CyprusFrance
Modest (couple/mo)£1,800£1,700
Comfortable (couple/mo)£2,500£2,500
Premium (couple/mo)£3,800£3,800

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

Can a foreigner buy property?

Cyprus: Foreigners can buy property in Cyprus, with some permissions required for non-EU buyers on certain purchases.

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.

Retirement visas

Cyprus: Cyprus offers residency routes that are popular with retirees; requirements vary by nationality.

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.

Healthcare, tax & lifestyle, compared

Healthcare

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.

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.

Tax on your pension

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.

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.

Climate & everyday life

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.

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.

Cost of buying

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.

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.

Where expats settle

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.

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.

Thinking seriously about Cyprus or France?

Two honest Brits, a private call, and straight answers — see if a freehold home abroad is a fit for you.

See if you qualify →

Go deeper

Cost of retiring in Cyprus Cost of retiring in France

More comparisons