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Retire abroad · compared

Greece vs Malta: where should you retire?

A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Malta — around £2,200/month for a couple, versus £2,300 in Greece (about 4% more).

Cost of living, side by side

GreeceMalta
Modest (couple/mo)£1,600£1,600
Comfortable (couple/mo)£2,300£2,200
Premium (couple/mo)£3,700£3,300

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

Can a foreigner buy property?

Greece: Foreigners can buy property freely in Greece.

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.

Retirement visas

Greece: Residency-by-investment and other routes attract retirees; passive-income options exist.

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.

Healthcare, tax & lifestyle, compared

Healthcare

Greece: Greece's public ESY system covers residents (retirees often via a UK S1 form), and private care is high-quality, affordable and frequently English-speaking, with the best hospitals in Athens and Thessaloniki; many expats buy private cover for roughly £80-250 a month depending on age.

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.

Tax on your pension

Greece: A retiree who moves tax residence to Greece can elect a flat 7% tax on all foreign income, including pensions, for up to 15 years (you must not have been Greek-resident for five of the prior six years and must spend 183+ days a year there); otherwise standard progressive rates apply, so take 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.

Climate & everyday life

Greece: Classic Mediterranean with hot dry summers and mild winters, the islands and south being warmest; late spring and early autumn are the loveliest months. Greece is very safe and famously welcoming; English is widely spoken in tourist and expat areas, driving is on the right, and the relaxed pace suits many British retirees.

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.

Cost of buying

Greece: Budget around 5-8% in one-off costs, a 3.09% transfer tax on resale homes (new builds may carry 24% VAT, currently suspended), notary about 1-2%, land registry near 0.5%, plus legal and agent fees; buying typically takes one to three months.

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.

Where expats settle

Greece: Crete for a large island with hospitals, airports and year-round life, Peloponnese towns like Kalamata for value and nature, Athens for the best services and flights, and islands such as Rhodes or Corfu for classic island living.

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.

Thinking seriously about Greece or Malta?

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