A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Philippines — around £1,650/month for a couple, versus £2,300 in Greece (about 28% more).
Cost of living, side by side
| Greece | Philippines | |
|---|---|---|
| Modest (couple/mo) | £1,600 | £1,000 |
| Comfortable (couple/mo) | £2,300 | £1,650 |
| Premium (couple/mo) | £3,700 | £2,700 |
Indicative monthly estimates for a couple — real costs vary by location, lifestyle and exchange rates.
Greece: Foreigners can buy property freely in Greece.
Philippines: Foreigners can own a condominium unit outright (freehold) as long as foreign ownership across the building stays within the 40% cap, but cannot own land directly. Land is instead held through a long-term lease (recently extended up to 99 years for qualifying projects) or via a genuine majority-Filipino company.
Greece: Residency-by-investment and other routes attract retirees; passive-income options exist.
Philippines: The Special Resident Retiree's Visa (SRRV) is the main route; since a 2025 overhaul it opens from age 40 with a bank deposit (from roughly US$15,000 for pensioner applicants aged 50+, more for younger or non-pension applicants) plus proof of income.
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.
Philippines: Private hospitals in Manila and Cebu are modern and far cheaper than in the West, and most expats use them; the state PhilHealth scheme is basic, so private cover is common — international plans from about US$1,000 a year, or cheaper local HMOs. Retirees enrolled through the retirement authority pay a modest annual PhilHealth fee of around US$250.
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.
Philippines: The Philippines taxes residents only on Philippine-source income, so a foreign pension is generally not taxed at all; retirement income remitted from abroad, and SRRV-holders' pensions, are explicitly exempt. It is one of the more tax-friendly bases for a pensioner, though your home country may still tax the pension.
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.
Philippines: Tropical and hot year-round with high humidity; the dry season (roughly November-April, coolest December-February) is most comfortable, while June-November is wetter with typhoon risk. Famously warm and welcoming, with normal precautions against petty crime and some far-southern areas best avoided; English is an official language and very widely spoken, and driving is on the right.
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.
Philippines: For the buyer, one-off costs are roughly 4-5% — documentary stamp tax of 1.5%, transfer tax of 0.5-0.75%, plus registration and notary fees — while the 6% capital gains tax is customarily the seller's. Foreigners can own condominium units (not land), and title transfer through the Registry of Deeds takes some weeks.
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.
Philippines: Cebu for city amenities with beaches close by, Metro Manila for the widest choice of hospitals and services, laid-back Dumaguete for an affordable university-town pace, and Tagaytay for cooler upland air near the capital.
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