A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Ecuador — around £1,600/month for a couple, versus £2,200 in Malta (about 27% more).
Cost of living, side by side
| Ecuador | Malta | |
|---|---|---|
| Modest (couple/mo) | £1,050 | £1,600 |
| Comfortable (couple/mo) | £1,600 | £2,200 |
| Premium (couple/mo) | £2,400 | £3,300 |
Indicative monthly estimates for a couple — real costs vary by location, lifestyle and exchange rates.
Ecuador: Foreigners enjoy the same property rights as Ecuadorians and can buy freehold with just a passport, with no limit on the number of properties. The main restriction is a national-security zone within 50km of the Colombian and Peruvian borders; popular expat areas such as Cuenca, Quito and Salinas are unrestricted.
Malta: Foreigners can buy freehold, but non-residents (and non-EU buyers) usually need an Acquisition of Immovable Property (AIP) permit, which typically limits them to a single home for personal use. In designated Special Designated Areas (SDAs), foreigners can buy multiple properties with no such restriction.
Ecuador: The Pensioner (retirement) visa broadly requires around US$1,400 a month of pension or lifetime income; it begins as a two-year temporary residence and can convert to permanent residency.
Malta: Non-EU retirees can apply under the Malta Retirement Programme (age 55+, in receipt of a pension) or the Malta Permanent Residence Programme; both require a qualifying property purchase or rental, health insurance and evidence of stable income.
Ecuador: Ecuador is very affordable: residents can join the public IESS social-security health scheme for a low monthly contribution, and private hospitals in Quito, Guayaquil and Cuenca are good and inexpensive. Private cover costs a fraction of Western prices.
Malta: Malta's public health service is good and free at the point of use for those enrolled, and UK state pensioners can register an S1 so the UK funds their care; English is the language of medicine, which makes it easy to navigate. Many expats add affordable private cover for shorter waits.
Ecuador: Ecuador is widely treated as taxing residents mainly on Ecuador-source income, so many retirees' foreign pensions are effectively untaxed, and over-65s also receive a large personal allowance. The letter of the law is debated and enforcement is tightening, so declare correctly and take local advice.
Malta: Malta taxes residents on a remittance basis, so foreign income kept offshore is not taxed; the Malta Retirement Programme offers a flat 15% on pension income remitted to Malta, with a minimum tax of about EUR 7,500 a year, provided you remit most of your pension there. Take advice on which basis suits you.
Ecuador: Climate follows altitude rather than season: the Andes and Cuenca stay spring-like near 20C by day all year, while the coast is hot and humid. Highland weather splits into drier and wetter spells rather than hot and cold. Ecuadorians are warm and the cost of living is low, but security has worsened in some coastal cities, so many expats prefer calmer highland towns like Cuenca; Spanish is essential, English limited, and they drive on the right.
Malta: Classic Mediterranean, with hot dry summers and mild wet winters, and more sunshine than almost anywhere in Europe. Spring and autumn are gloriously warm. Very safe, English-speaking and familiar to Britons, and unusually for the Mediterranean they drive on the left, so the roads feel immediately natural to UK retirees.
Ecuador: Buying is inexpensive and straightforward: a transfer tax (alcabala) of roughly 1% plus municipal registration and legal fees of around 1%, so total costs are low. Completion is usually quick.
Malta: One-off costs run around 6-7%: stamp duty of 5% (some reliefs may apply), plus notary fees of about 1-2% and agency commission. Non-EU buyers usually need an AIP permit for a home outside the special designated areas, and completion takes two to three months.
Ecuador: Cuenca is the standout expat hub, colonial and spring-like; Quito for city life; Vilcabamba and Cotacachi for valleys and villages; and Salinas, Manta or Olon on the coast.
Malta: Sliema and St Julian's for a lively seafront with every amenity; the historic Mdina and the Three Cities for character; and Gozo for a slower, greener island pace.
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