A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Morocco — around £1,900/month for a couple, versus £2,700 in Italy (about 30% more).
Cost of living, side by side
| Italy | Morocco | |
|---|---|---|
| Modest (couple/mo) | £1,900 | £1,200 |
| Comfortable (couple/mo) | £2,700 | £1,900 |
| Premium (couple/mo) | £4,300 | £3,000 |
Indicative monthly estimates for a couple — real costs vary by location, lifestyle and exchange rates.
Italy: Foreigners can buy property freely in Italy.
Morocco: Foreigners can buy urban residential and commercial property freehold, registered in their own name through the land registry (Conservation Fonciere) via a notary. Agricultural land is generally off-limits unless officially reclassified, and properties in military or security zones are restricted. There are no caps on foreign ownership of residential units.
Italy: The elective residence visa suits retirees with stable passive income.
Morocco: Morocco has no dedicated retirement visa; most retirees enter on a long-stay (type D) visa then apply for a residence card (carte de sejour) within 90 days, showing stable pension income and health cover.
Italy: Italy's public health service (SSN) is well regarded and low-cost; retirees on an elective-residence visa register voluntarily for a means-tested annual fee starting around EUR 2,000 (capped near EUR 2,800 for higher incomes), or use comparatively affordable private cover. Facilities are generally strongest in the north and larger cities.
Morocco: Expats rely on private clinics in Casablanca, Rabat, Marrakech and Agadir, where doctors speak French and increasingly some English and care is good value; Rabat's Cheikh Zaid and Marrakech's Clinique du Sud are well regarded. Private insurance runs roughly MAD 500-1,500 (about GBP 40-120) a month depending on age.
Italy: As a resident you are taxed on worldwide income including foreign pensions at progressive rates, but retirees moving to a small town (population under 30,000) in the eight southern regions can elect a flat 7% tax on all foreign income for up to ten years. UK government-service pensions are usually taxed only in the UK under the double-tax treaty, so take advice.
Morocco: Foreign pensions transferred to Morocco in dirhams have long enjoyed a large reduction of around an 80% abatement, and recent reforms move further toward exempting basic pension income for residents. It is a genuinely favourable regime, but confirm your own position with a local adviser.
Italy: Warm Mediterranean summers and mild winters in the south and along the coasts, with colder, wetter winters and hot summers inland and up north. Spring and autumn (April-June and September-October) are the most pleasant times. Italy is safe with a relaxed pace, though petty theft occurs in tourist cities; they drive on the right, and while English is common in cities and tourist areas, some Italian makes daily life far easier in smaller towns.
Morocco: Warm and sunny with regional variety: hot inland summers in Marrakech above 35C, milder Atlantic coasts, and mild winters, with Agadir enjoying 300+ sunny days a year. Spring and autumn are ideal. Generally safe and hospitable with a large established expat community; French is the key second language and English less so outside tourism, driving is on the right, and life is affordable and comfortable for British retirees.
Italy: Registration tax is 9% for a second home or 2% for a main residence, charged on the property's cadastral value which is usually well below the market price (new-builds carry VAT of 10% instead), plus notary fees and agent commission of around 3% plus VAT. Completion typically takes two to three months.
Morocco: Budget roughly 8-10% of the price in one-off costs, comprising about 4% registration tax, 1.5% land-registry, notary fees of 0.5-1% and agency commission around 2.5%; a purchase usually completes in a couple of months.
Italy: Puglia and Abruzzo for affordable, sunny southern living and the 7% flat-tax towns; Tuscany and Umbria for classic rolling countryside; the northern lakes such as Como for scenery; and Liguria for a milder coastal base.
Morocco: Marrakech for culture and a big expat scene, Agadir for the best year-round sunshine and modern comforts, Essaouira for a breezy artistic coastal town, and Rabat for a calm, green capital.
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