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Retire abroad · compared

Montenegro vs Turkey: where should you retire?

Costs are broadly similar — roughly £1,800/month for a couple in Montenegro and £1,800 in Turkey.

Cost of living, side by side

MontenegroTurkey
Modest (couple/mo)£1,300£1,150
Comfortable (couple/mo)£1,800£1,800
Premium (couple/mo)£2,750£2,900

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

Can a foreigner buy property?

Montenegro: Foreigners can own residential and commercial property freehold on the same terms as citizens; the principal exception is agricultural and forest land, which must be held through a locally registered company.

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

Montenegro: A temporary residence permit can be based on property ownership (since 2026 the home generally needs a tax-assessed value of at least €150,000), employment or family ties; permits run for a year, are renewable, and require health insurance.

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

Montenegro: Public healthcare is modest, so most expats use private clinics locally or travel to nearby Croatia or Serbia for bigger procedures; private insurance and treatment are relatively inexpensive. Facilities are best around Podgorica and the coast.

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

Montenegro: Montenegro taxes residents' income, including foreign pensions, on a low progressive scale, nothing on roughly the first EUR 700 a month, then 9% and 15% above that, so a typical pension faces only a modest effective rate. It uses the euro despite being outside the EU.

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

Montenegro: A warm Mediterranean coast with hot summers and mild winters, backed by mountains that are cold and snowy in winter. Late spring and early autumn are ideal on the coast. Montenegro is safe and laid-back; they drive on the right, English is widely spoken among younger people and in the tourist towns, and its small size makes it easy to get around.

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

Montenegro: Buyers pay a 3% property transfer tax on resale homes (new-builds include 21% VAT instead), plus legal and agency fees of a few percent, and the process is fairly quick. Note that residence can be based on owning a home assessed at EUR 150,000 or more.

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

Montenegro: Kotor and its dramatic bay for scenery and history; Tivat for the smart Porto Montenegro marina; Budva for beaches and buzz; and Herceg Novi for a sunny, greener setting near the Croatian border.

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.

Thinking seriously about Montenegro or Turkey?

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