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Mexico vs Uruguay: where should you retire?

A comfortable retirement works out cheaper in Mexico — around £2,100/month for a couple, versus £2,400 in Uruguay (about 12% more).

Cost of living, side by side

MexicoUruguay
Modest (couple/mo)£1,400£1,650
Comfortable (couple/mo)£2,100£2,400
Premium (couple/mo)£3,600£3,700

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

Can a foreigner buy property?

Mexico: Foreigners can own property, via a bank trust (fideicomiso) in the restricted coastal and border zones.

Uruguay: Foreigners have the same property rights as citizens, can buy full freehold with no restrictions, and do not need residency to purchase. Property rights are well protected and the buying process is transparent.

Retirement visas

Mexico: Temporary and permanent resident visas suit retirees who meet income or savings thresholds.

Uruguay: Residency is commonly obtained by showing stable monthly income (broadly from around US$1,500) from a pension or other sources; a Pensionado route is tied to a qualifying investment of about US$100,000 in property or securities held long-term, and leads to permanent residency.

Healthcare, tax & lifestyle, compared

Healthcare

Mexico: Private hospitals in the big cities and expat hubs are good and far cheaper than in the US or UK, with English-speaking doctors common in expat areas. Legal residents can enrol voluntarily in the public IMSS scheme for roughly US$500-700 a year, though it excludes some pre-existing conditions, so many pair it with private insurance.

Uruguay: Uruguay's respected system pairs public hospitals with private 'mutualista' membership co-ops that most expats join, typically US$70-200 a month depending on age, plus very low co-pays on visits. Care in Montevideo and Punta del Este is good, though many mutualistas cap new members around 60-65, so check age limits before relying on one.

Tax on your pension

Mexico: Temporary residents are generally not taxed on foreign pensions for their first years, and even permanent residents who become tax-resident benefit from double-tax treaties and foreign-tax credits that usually keep the bill low. Whether you are tax-resident turns on your centre of vital interests, so take advice.

Uruguay: A resident retiree's foreign pension is generally not taxed in Uruguay, whose income tax is largely territorial. New tax residents can also claim a multi-year holiday on foreign investment income before reduced and then a standard 12% rate applies; the rules were tightened in 2026, so take advice.

Climate & everyday life

Mexico: Hugely varied by altitude: the central highlands around Lake Chapala and San Miguel enjoy a spring-like climate year-round, while the coasts are hot and humid with a May-October rainy season. The dry winter months are the most comfortable. Safety varies sharply by region, so the settled expat towns are calm while some areas are best avoided; they drive on the right, and English is widely spoken in expat hubs though Spanish helps everywhere else.

Uruguay: Temperate with four distinct seasons; summers (December-March) are warm around 28C and winters (June-August) cool and damp near 10-14C. Spring and autumn are mild, and the beach season runs October to April. Widely rated the safest country in South America with strong rule of law; Spanish is the language and English is limited outside tourism, and driving is on the right.

Cost of buying

Mexico: On the coast or near a border, foreign buyers hold property through a bank trust (fideicomiso), which adds a setup fee and annual charge. Expect total closing costs of about 5-8% inland and 7-12% where a trust is needed, including acquisition tax (ISAI) of 2-4% plus notary and registration; completion often takes one to two months.

Uruguay: Budget roughly 9-10% of the price in one-off costs — a 2% transfer tax (ITP, charged on a lower cadastral value), notary fees of about 3% plus VAT, agent commission near 3% plus VAT, and registry costs, all handled by an escribano. Foreigners buy on the same terms as locals with no residency needed, and a straightforward deal completes in a few weeks.

Where expats settle

Mexico: Lake Chapala and Ajijic for a large, established lakeside expat community; San Miguel de Allende for colonial charm; Merida for a safe, cultured city in the Yucatan; and Puerto Vallarta for beach living.

Uruguay: Punta del Este for chic beaches and a marina set, Montevideo's leafy Pocitos and Carrasco barrios for city amenities and healthcare, Colonia del Sacramento for cobbled colonial calm, and Atlantida for a quieter coast near the capital.

Thinking seriously about Mexico or Uruguay?

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