A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Sri Lanka — around £1,350/month for a couple, versus £2,500 in France (about 46% more).
Cost of living, side by side
| France | Sri Lanka | |
|---|---|---|
| Modest (couple/mo) | £1,700 | £800 |
| Comfortable (couple/mo) | £2,500 | £1,350 |
| Premium (couple/mo) | £3,800 | £2,300 |
Indicative monthly estimates for a couple — real costs vary by location, lifestyle and exchange rates.
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.
Sri Lanka: Foreigners cannot buy land outright, but since 2018 can purchase freehold apartments or condominiums on any floor, provided the full price is paid upfront by inward foreign remittance before the deed is transferred. Land and houses are otherwise accessed on long leases of up to 99 years.
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.
Sri Lanka: The 'My Dream Home' residence visa is for applicants aged 55+ and typically requires a US$15,000 fixed deposit plus around US$1,500 in monthly remittance (US$750 per dependant); it is granted for two years and is renewable.
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.
Sri Lanka: Public healthcare is free but basic and stretched, so expats lean on Colombo's good private hospitals such as Asiri, Nawaloka, Lanka and Durdans — near-Western standards with English-speaking staff at a fraction of UK prices, though complex procedures still add up. An international health policy is wise, with premiums rising after age 60.
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.
Sri Lanka: Since April 2025 a resident's foreign income remitted to Sri Lanka through a licensed bank is taxed at a flat 15% (after the LKR 1.8m personal relief), so a UK pension brought in can be taxable. Income kept abroad is generally outside the net, and the UK-Sri Lanka double-tax treaty can reduce the bill, so take advice.
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.
Sri Lanka: Tropical and warm year-round on the coast, cooler in the hills, with two monsoons — the southwest (May-September) wetting the west and south, the northeast (October-January) the east. The west and south coasts are loveliest from December to March. Safe and genuinely welcoming; English is widely spoken thanks to the colonial legacy and schooling, they drive on the left, and daily life is easy for British retirees though the roads can be hectic.
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.
Sri Lanka: Budget roughly 4-6% in one-off costs — stamp duty of about 4% plus attorney and notary fees of 1-3%. Foreigners buy freehold apartments for cash with the full price remitted from abroad, and a straightforward condo can complete within a few weeks to a couple of months.
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.
Sri Lanka: Colombo for amenities and the best hospitals, the historic fort town of Galle on the south coast, cooler hill-country Kandy, and Negombo near the airport for beach life close to the city.
Thinking seriously about France or Sri Lanka?
Two honest Brits, a private call, and straight answers — see if a freehold home abroad is a fit for you.
See if you qualify →