A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Philippines — around £1,650/month for a couple, versus £2,500 in Japan (about 34% more).
Cost of living, side by side
| Japan | Philippines | |
|---|---|---|
| Modest (couple/mo) | £1,650 | £1,000 |
| Comfortable (couple/mo) | £2,500 | £1,650 |
| Premium (couple/mo) | £3,900 | £2,700 |
Indicative monthly estimates for a couple — real costs vary by location, lifestyle and exchange rates.
Japan: Foreigners have the same rights as Japanese nationals and can buy land, houses and apartments freehold, with no residency or visa requirement. From April 2026 buyers must disclose nationality at registration (a record-keeping step, not a restriction), and a small number of plots near defence sites can be reviewed.
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.
Japan: Japan has no dedicated retirement visa. Self-funded retirees typically use a long-term 'Designated Activities' stay, broadly needing substantial savings (around ¥30 million) or steady pension income of roughly ¥250,000 a month; spouse and family routes are also common.
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.
Japan: Healthcare is excellent and universal — residents on a long-stay visa enrol in National Health Insurance, paying income-based premiums and then about 30% of costs (less for the elderly), with high-quality hospitals nationwide. Care is affordable by Western standards, though English can be limited outside the major cities.
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.
Japan: For your first five years as a Japanese tax resident you count as a 'non-permanent resident', so foreign income such as a UK pension is taxed only to the extent you remit it into Japan; after five years Japan taxes your worldwide income. Rates are progressive (national 5-45%, plus a flat ~10% local inhabitant tax), and the UK-Japan treaty helps avoid double taxation.
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.
Japan: Four distinct seasons: hot, humid summers with a June-July rainy spell and late-summer typhoons, and cold, often snowy winters on the north and Japan Sea side. Spring cherry blossom (late March-April) and crisp autumn colour (October-November) are the best months. Extremely safe with very low crime; English is limited outside big cities and tourist areas, but they drive on the left, which is familiar for Brits, and daily life runs smoothly once you settle in.
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.
Japan: Budget roughly 6-10% in one-off costs whether you're foreign or not — Japan adds no buyer surcharge for foreigners — covering agent commission (about 3% plus a fixed fee), a real-estate acquisition tax of around 3% of assessed value, registration and licence tax, stamp duty and a judicial scrivener's fee. A purchase typically completes within one to two 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.
Japan: Tokyo for energy, amenities and top hospitals; Fukuoka for a mild, affordable, walkable base popular with newcomers; Kyoto for culture and history; and subtropical, laid-back Okinawa — with cheap rural 'akiya' houses dotted across the countryside.
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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