Greece · Retire Abroad Guide for Americans

Retire in Greece as an American: What It Actually Costs, Who Does It, and How to Start

What It Actually Costs to Live in Greece Greece offers one of the most affordable Mediterranean lifestyles in Western Europe. Steeped in history, surrounded by crystal-clear waters, and boasting a world-renowned diet, it is a premier destination for American retirees. A couple can live very comfortably in mid-sized cities, the Peloponnese, or larger islands like […]

Rent — 2BR furnished: $600 – $1,200 Private health insurance: $150 – $300 The 7% Flat Tax Heaven
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What It Actually Costs to Live in Greece

Greece offers one of the most affordable Mediterranean lifestyles in Western Europe. Steeped in history, surrounded by crystal-clear waters, and boasting a world-renowned diet, it is a premier destination for American retirees. A couple can live very comfortably in mid-sized cities, the Peloponnese, or larger islands like Crete for $1,600 to $2,500 a month. In central Athens or highly sought-after islands like Mykonos or Santorini, expect a baseline closer to $3,000 to $4,500.

The table below reflects realistic monthly costs for a couple living in a furnished 2-bedroom home in a mid-range expat destination (such as Crete or the outskirts of Athens).

ExpenseMonthly (USD)Notes
Rent — 2BR furnished$600 – $1,200Athens center and premium islands carry a heavy premium.
Utilities (electricity, water, heating)$100 – $180Electricity is relatively expensive; winter heating costs can spike.
Internet + mobile$30 – $50Fiber is expanding; mobile data packages are highly affordable.
Groceries$300 – $500Local farmers’ markets (laiki) offer incredible value on fresh produce.
Dining out (2–3×/week, couple)$150 – $300Taverna meals with house wine are routinely under $30 for two people.
Private health insurance (couple, 60–70)$150 – $300Required for residency visas. See healthcare section.
Transportation$50 – $100Public transit is cheap. Owning a car adds significant gas and toll costs.
Entertainment, leisure, travel$150 – $300Island hopping via ferries, museum passes, and historical sites.
Realistic Total — Comfortable Couple$1,530 – $2,930Highly dependent on location and housing choices.

The lower end ($1,500–$1,800) is easily achievable if you settle on the mainland or less touristy islands, shop at local markets, and limit heavy air conditioning use. The upper end allows for premium sea-view living, regular dining out, and comprehensive international health coverage.

Residency and Visa: Your Path to Greece in 2026

For American retirees, Greece offers two primary pathways to residency. Both have seen highly significant legislative updates for the 2026 calendar year.

1. The Financially Independent Person (FIP) Visa

This is the standard “Retirement Visa” for non-EU citizens who have a reliable, passive income (like pensions, Social Security, or dividends) and do not intend to work in Greece.

  • New 2026 Income Requirements: The minimum passive income required has increased significantly. The main applicant must now prove a guaranteed passive income of €3,500 per month (approx. $3,800 USD).
  • Spouse & Dependents: Including a spouse increases the requirement by 20% (€700), bringing the total for a couple to €4,200 per month. Dependent children add 15% (€525) each.
  • The Savings Alternative: If you do not have the required monthly passive income, you can qualify by depositing two years’ worth of the requirement into a Greek bank account (e.g., €84,000 for a single applicant or €100,800 for a couple).
  • Stay Requirement: You must physically reside in Greece for at least 183 days a year to maintain this visa, which makes you a Greek tax resident.

2. The Golden Visa (Real Estate Investment)

The Greek Golden Visa grants a 5-year renewable residency with no minimum stay requirement, but the real estate investment rules underwent a massive overhaul in recent years to combat local housing shortages.

  • Tier 1 (€800,000): To buy in high-demand areas like Athens, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini, or any island with a population over 3,100, you must invest at least €800,000 in a single property of at least 120 square meters.
  • Tier 2 (€400,000): For all other regions in Greece, the minimum investment is €400,000 (also restricted to a single property of at least 120 square meters).
  • Tier 3 (€250,000 Exception): The old €250,000 threshold is now only available if you are purchasing a commercial property and fully converting it to residential use, or if you are fully restoring a registered historic building.
  • The Airbnb Ban: Under the 2026 rules, Golden Visa properties are strictly prohibited from being rented out on short-term rental platforms like Airbnb. Violating this results in a revoked visa and a €50,000 fine.

Buying Property in Greece as an American

Americans can freely buy property in most of Greece. You hold the freehold title directly in your own name.

LocationPrice Range (EUR per sqm)Typical 2BR Apartment/Home (EUR)
Athens (Central / Riviera)€3,000 – €6,000+€250,000 – €600,000+
Crete (Chania / Rethymno)€2,000 – €3,500€160,000 – €300,000
Peloponnese (Mainland Coast)€1,500 – €2,500€120,000 – €220,000
Premium Islands (Mykonos/Santorini)€5,000 – €10,000+€450,000 – €1,000,000+

Border Area Restrictions: As a non-EU citizen, you must apply for special permission from the Ministry of Defense to buy property in designated “border areas.” This includes places like Rhodes, Kos, Lesvos, and regions in northern Greece near Turkey and the Balkans. The process is a formality but adds a few months and extra legal fees to the closing timeline.

Transaction Costs: Closing costs in Greece typically add 8% to 10% to the purchase price. This includes the Property Transfer Tax (around 3.09%), notary fees, land registry fees, and mandatory legal representation.

Healthcare in Greece: What Americans Need to Know

Greece ranks highly in global health indexes, driven largely by the Mediterranean diet, active lifestyle, and access to excellent medical professionals. However, U.S. Medicare is not accepted in Europe.

Private Health Insurance

To obtain either the FIP Visa or the Golden Visa, you are legally required to carry private Greek health insurance. Fortunately, this is exceptionally affordable. Most expats use private hospitals (like the Hygeia or Euroclinic networks in Athens), which feature modern technology, short wait times, and English-speaking, Western-trained doctors.

Coverage LevelMonthly Cost (Couple)Notes
Basic Greek Policy (Visa Compliant)$100 – $200Covers emergencies and basic inpatient care only.
Comprehensive Local/Regional Plan$200 – $400Broader coverage, higher limits, and specialist access.

The Public System (EFKA)

Once you are a legal resident and obtain a social security number (AMKA), you can theoretically access the Greek public healthcare system (EFKA). While the doctors are highly skilled, the public system is chronically underfunded, resulting in long wait times, older facilities, and a heavy reliance on bringing your own basic supplies to the hospital. Nearly all American retirees stick exclusively to the private sector.

Taxes: The 7% Flat Tax Heaven

Greece has recently positioned itself as one of Europe’s premier tax havens for foreign retirees. This section is strictly informational. You must consult a cross-border CPA before moving.

The 7% Foreign Pensioner Flat Tax

If you transfer your tax residency to Greece and have not been a Greek tax resident in 5 of the last 6 years, you can apply for the Foreign Pensioner Tax Regime. Under this program, all your foreign-sourced income—including U.S. Social Security, pensions, IRAs, dividends, and rental income—is taxed at a flat rate of just 7% for 15 years.

This replaces Greece’s standard progressive income tax system, which scales up to 44%. The 7% tax is paid in a single lump sum every July.

You Still File U.S. Taxes

American citizens are taxed on worldwide income. Moving to Greece does not change your U.S. filing obligation (Form 1040) or FBAR reporting. However, the U.S. and Greece have a Double Taxation Treaty. You will use the Foreign Tax Credit to offset the 7% you pay to Greece against your U.S. tax bill, entirely avoiding double taxation on your retirement funds.

Working in Greece

If you earn income locally within Greece (such as renting out a Greek property or taking a local job), that specific income is excluded from the 7% flat rate and is taxed at standard progressive Greek rates.

Where Americans Actually Live in Greece

Athens & The Athenian Riviera

A bustling, historic metropolis. Central neighborhoods like Kolonaki or Plaka offer urban energy, while the southern suburbs of the “Athenian Riviera” (Glyfada, Voula) offer luxury coastal living, excellent private hospitals, and a massive international community. The drawback: heavy summer heat, traffic, and higher costs.

Crete

Greece’s largest island functions like its own mini-country. Areas around Chania and Apokoronas in the west have huge, established expat communities. It offers spectacular beaches, dramatic mountains, a longer warm season than the mainland, and enough infrastructure (hospitals, airports) to be comfortable year-round.

The Peloponnese

The southern peninsula of the mainland. Towns like Nafplio, Kalamata, and the Mani region offer incredibly authentic Greek living. It is far more affordable than the islands, wildly beautiful, and you can drive to Athens without relying on a ferry schedule.

Corfu & The Ionian Islands

Located on the western side of Greece, these islands are greener, wetter, and heavily influenced by Venetian architecture. Corfu has a massive British expat presence, making English nearly universal, but the winters here are notably damper and cooler than in Crete or the Aegean islands.

Practical Details Before You Decide

Language

Greek uses a different alphabet and is notoriously difficult for English speakers to master. Fortunately, Greece relies heavily on tourism, and English proficiency is exceptionally high—especially among the younger generations and in urban/coastal areas. You can navigate healthcare and daily commerce easily in English, though government offices usually require a translator or lawyer.

Getting There

Athens International Airport (ATH) is a major hub. During the peak summer season (May to October), Delta, American, and United Airlines run direct flights from U.S. cities like New York, Boston, Atlanta, and Chicago. In the winter, you will need to connect through a major European hub like London, Frankfurt, or Paris.

Bureaucracy & Banking

Be prepared for a culture shock regarding bureaucracy. Greek administrative processes are famously complex, paper-heavy, and slow. Opening a bank account requires reams of apostilled documents (tax returns, utility bills, proof of phone numbers). Hiring a competent local “fixer” or lawyer to handle your AFM (tax number) and banking setup is not a luxury; it is a necessity.

Climate

Greece has a classic Mediterranean climate. Summers are intensely hot, dry, and sunny (routinely exceeding 90°F / 32°C). Winters are mild but can be shockingly damp and chilly, especially since traditional Greek homes are built to stay cool in the summer and often lack central heating.

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Greece FAQ

In 2026, the main applicant must prove a guaranteed passive income of €3,500 per month. A spouse adds 20% (€700) to this requirement, bringing the total for a married couple to €4,200 per month. You can also qualify using savings equivalent to 24 months of the required income.

Under the new 2026 rules, the €250,000 tier is severely restricted. You can only qualify at this price point if you purchase a commercial property and fully convert it to residential use, or if you purchase and fully restore a registered historical/cultural building. Otherwise, the minimums are €400,000 or €800,000 depending on the location.

If you transfer your tax residency to Greece and have not lived there in the last 5 out of 6 years, you can apply for the Foreign Pensioner regime. If approved, all your foreign-sourced income (Social Security, pensions, dividends, etc.) is taxed at a flat rate of 7% for a period of up to 15 years, instead of Greece’s standard progressive rates.

No. Under the updated 2026 Golden Visa regulations, investors are strictly prohibited from renting out their qualifying properties as short-term holiday rentals (like Airbnb or Booking.com). Breaking this rule will result in the revocation of your residence permit and a €50,000 fine. You may only rent the property out on a long-term lease.

No, U.S. Medicare does not provide coverage outside the United States. You will need to purchase private Greek health insurance, which is very affordable and is a strict requirement for obtaining your residency visa.

It depends on the visa. The FIP (Retirement) Visa requires you to live in Greece for at least 183 days a year. The Golden Visa (Real Estate Investment) has no minimum stay requirement; you can hold the residency even if you never visit Greece, provided you maintain the property investment.

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