A lot of Americans are retiring in Ecuador and other countries in Central and South America - stretching their retirement dollars and enhancing their quality of life. Why? How hard is this? Is this something anyone can do? What’s the down side? Where’s the catch?
Here’s the problem:
A lot of Americans who weren’t able to save a handsome nest egg or worked for a company that didn’t supply a pension, or didn’t sock away enough of their pay checks into a 401k are finding they can’t afford to quit work and pursue that retirement dream of life and leisure. They’ll have to keep working till they’re 70 to get full social security benefits or work as long as they possibly can, take whatever social security benefits they have and keep working part time supplementing that S.S. check.
And when they can work no longer? Move into their kid’s basement? Living solely on social security requires serious budgeting, down-sizing, belt-tightening and many find they can’t resign themselves to living on noodles and rice and beans as the government suggests.
There are also a lot of retirees who have more than a couple nickels to rub together and feel ready to retire early - in their 50’s - while they can still enjoy - as the Italians say - being a free citizen. But how?
And there are a lot of countries in Central and South America courting American retirees to come on down, put your feet up and stay a while: Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama and Ecuador are the most popular.
They offer residency programs for foreign resident retirees, who can show they have a $1,000 a month in income. These residency permits are the equivalent of a green card in the U.S. . In addition they’ll throw in government health insurance for around $60- $80 a month, attractive foreign ownership laws, 10%-20% discounts on restaurants, hotels and domestic flights.
On top of these discounts everything else is already so inexpensive in Ecuador: good hotel rooms for $10 - $25 a night, simple meals everywhere for $2 - $10-$15 in their best restaurants, taxi rides for $1 across town, beer $.50 a bottle, coffee $.25 a cup and furnished apartments for rent for $400 - $600 a month.
Foreign retirees don’t work, they don’t have kids in school, they build houses, spend on recreation, they might get bored, open small businesses, bring in more investment dollars all the while providing more local jobs. It’s a win/win for them.
City councils in the States - rural towns in need of more revenue and taxes - are asleep at the wheel. Launching a program to court retirees to resettle - bringing in more tax dollars and disposable income - makes total fiscal sense. America is losing its baby boomer retirees to these warm, attractive, third world countries who are capitalizing on an opportunity.
Expats have access to fresh meat and seafood, tropical fruits and fresh vegetables for pennies on the dollar. They even have enough left over to hire a gardener and a maid to come in once a week to do the yard work around the house, clean, do the wash and cook a couple meals. There’s Wi-Fi internet all over, cable television with English channels and all the comforts of home.
Nothing backwater about these places anymore. All medical and aesthetic procedures cost a third of what they cost back home. All this on a social security check? Yes, and if a couple have two S.S. checks they’re living really well, banking the rest or paying the bills on the condo back home.
Today, the magazine sells subscribers seats at conferences in the host countries and organizes tours to specific countries south of the border.
This offers retirees, or soon to be retirees, the opportunity to consult with government officials on the bureaucracy of moving to their country while exploring the different communities and environments the country is trying to develop. They stay at the best hotels, are shown the sunny side of the street and meet with builders and other providers of services they may soon be needing.
Sometimes the magazine makes it look way too easy. But it’s not all that hard to do on one's own. One might have to hire a local English speaking lawyer to help with the paper work, but these countries have made it simple.
Before making the plunge one should do some research before selecting a country and make a few extended, exploratory visits before ultimately deciding on a city or village to settle in.
Then again a lot of American expats don’t want to live in the midst of other Americans. As one American expat told me: “When I see gringos it’s like the game 'you’re getting warmer getting colder'. I go other way. It’s the old Woody Allen joke: I wouldn’t belong to a club that would have me as a member. I didn’t leave America to be in the middle of a bunch of Americans. I’d rather go native and live with the locals.” And there are thousands of towns in these countries that rarely see a foreigner.
Yes, down south all foreigners are called gringos sometimes affectionately sometimes not so much. There are a lot of Europeans who don’t like the term and think it should be reserved for ugly Americans. But down here they are all inclusive. If one never lived abroad before it’s challenging and takes some getting used to - constantly being the foreigner, constantly the outsider. But it can be done. It’s not always easy living in a country as a visitor. But it's always going to be much easier than working in that country as a foreigner.
In these Ecuadorian villages, Americans are building a lot of houses. Bricks are going up all over these towns and local builders are busy - they import plumbing fixtures, drywall from North America and Italian marble and tile for those aesthetics American’s just can’t live without. They have craftsmen and custom cabinet makers. Currently, the gringos are building bigger and better houses than what the locals have.
One criticism coming from the Ecuadorians is that a lot of these expat Americans have an exaggerated sense of insecurity. Many are worried about being robbed, raped, kidnapped and/or having their organs harvested.
So they’ll live in American-only gated communities, put up a ten foot cinder block walls around their houses, run a few strands of electric wire on top of wall with remote controlled opening steel gates with intercoms, alarm systems and snarling German Shepard guard dogs roaming the yard. Makes one half expect to see moats and gun turrets around the next corner. For some there are always more walls to be built.
But for most it’s a quiet, peaceful, relaxing existence that gets easier with passing time. Ecuadorians are peaceful, friendly, congenial people. It’s their turf - their lifestyle; so when in Rome. It’s up to the expats to make it work. And they seem to be doing just that.
*Cotacachi is a small village 20 minutes north of Ortovalo with a sizeable American expat population.There's a nice food court in Palazzo di Ponco. But the town rolls up its sidewalks at 8 p.m.
Banos is a mid-size mountain village known for its thermal baths, waterfalls, raging rivers and extreme sports.
Cuenca is a big, little city, the third biggest city in Ecuador after Quito and Guayaquil and it's famous for the Panama hat. It’s a Spanish colonial town, considered the most beautiful in Ecuador with numerous universities and an estimated 7,500 foreign residents retiring here – half of them are Americans.
All of these towns are in the Andes Mountains, are bug free, cool – in the 60s and boast a climate of eternal spring
Travel Tena - Gateway to the Amazon
Travel Ecuador's Pacific Coast and Beaches
Travel - the market of Otavalo
Why is the Panama hat made in Ecuador?
For retirement in Panama see:
Retiring in Panama - Pros and Cons
see also -
Retire in Colombia - Pros and Cons