Pension Portability: Taking Your Retirement Benefits Abroad
Your pension doesn't always follow you. Some countries freeze payments; others reduce them.
Retirement abroad is increasingly popular as retirees discover that their pension or savings can provide a dramatically better lifestyle in another country. But successful international retirement requires more than just finding a sunny beach — it demands careful financial, legal, and personal planning.
The Financial Equation
The core appeal is simple arithmetic: a retirement income of USD 2,500/month provides a modest lifestyle in London or New York, but a comfortable, even luxurious lifestyle in Lisbon, Chiang Mai, Medellin, or Kuala Lumpur. Housing costs alone can be 50-70% lower, with food, healthcare, and entertainment similarly discounted.
Key Planning Areas
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- Pension portability: Verify that your pension will be paid in your new country of residence and understand any tax treaty implications
- Healthcare: Medicare (US) does not cover you abroad. NHS (UK) access is limited to emergency care during visits. Budget for private coverage
- Tax residency: Moving abroad changes where you pay tax. Some countries offer special retiree tax regimes (Greece 7%, Italy 7% for southern municipalities, Panama territorial system)
- Currency risk: If your pension is in GBP or USD but your expenses are in EUR or THB, exchange rate fluctuations directly affect your purchasing power
The Trial Run
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Before committing to an international retirement, spend 2-3 months in your target destination — preferably during the least favorable season. This tests the reality against the vacation experience and identifies potential deal-breakers before you've sold your home and shipped your belongings.
Plan your international retirement. Find local experiences worth trying. Explore housing markets worldwide
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