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Retire abroad · compared

Italy vs Turkey: where should you retire?

A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Turkey — around £1,800/month for a couple, versus £2,700 in Italy (about 33% more).

Cost of living, side by side

ItalyTurkey
Modest (couple/mo)£1,900£1,150
Comfortable (couple/mo)£2,700£1,800
Premium (couple/mo)£4,300£2,900

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

Can a foreigner buy property?

Italy: Foreigners can buy property freely in Italy.

Turkey: Foreigners from most countries can buy freehold property outright, registered in their own name on the tapu (title deed); individual foreign ownership is capped at 30 hectares nationwide and barred in military zones. No residence permit is needed to buy.

Retirement visas

Italy: The elective residence visa suits retirees with stable passive income.

Turkey: Turkey has no dedicated retirement visa; most retirees obtain a short-term residence permit (usually valid up to two years and renewable) by showing sufficient income or savings, valid health insurance and a local address.

Healthcare, tax & lifestyle, compared

Healthcare

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.

Turkey: Turkey has modern, low-cost private hospitals, especially in Istanbul, Antalya and the coastal resorts. New residents must hold private health insurance, which is inexpensive, and after a year of residence under-65s can join the public SGK scheme for a modest annual premium.

Tax on your pension

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.

Turkey: Once you are tax-resident, Turkey can tax worldwide income including foreign pensions, though the UK-Turkey double-tax treaty and generous allowances often keep the burden light; UK government-service pensions remain taxable in the UK. Take local advice on your position.

Climate & everyday life

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.

Turkey: A hot, dry Mediterranean and Aegean summer with warm, mild coastal winters makes for a long beach season, and spring and autumn are ideal. Inland winters, by contrast, are cold. The tourist coasts are safe and welcoming; they drive on the right, and English is widely spoken in expat and resort areas though far less so inland, where some Turkish goes a long way.

Cost of buying

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.

Turkey: The main one-off cost is the 4% title-deed (tapu) transfer fee, legally split with the seller but often paid in full by the buyer, plus modest notary, translator and agency fees; budget around 5-8% all in. A transfer can complete within a week or two once checks are done.

Where expats settle

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.

Turkey: Antalya and its suburbs for a warm coastal city; Fethiye and Calis for a relaxed resort feel; Bodrum for a smarter Aegean scene; and Altinkum/Didim for budget-friendly seaside living.

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