Can I Retire Abroad on the UK State Pension Alone in 2026? — Country-by-Country
The full UK State Pension is £230.25/week (£998/month). In several countries this is genuinely enough to live on comfortably — and in a few, you'll have money left over. This guide analyses every popular retirement destination to see where the State Pension goes furthest.
The full new UK State Pension for 2026/27 is £230.25 per week — £998 per month or £11,973 per year. In the UK, this is nowhere near enough to live on comfortably. The average UK rent alone is £1,300/month; after housing there is almost nothing left.
Abroad, the picture is completely different. In several countries, the full State Pension covers not just rent but groceries, utilities, transport, eating out and healthcare — with £100–200 spare each month. In others, it covers basics but requires a drawdown from savings. In a few (Australia, Canada, Germany) it is genuinely not enough without supplementary income.
This guide goes country by country.
Key rule: frozen pension countries
Before we compare costs, the most important factor is whether your pension stays frozen at £230.25/week or whether it increases each year. Countries where the pension is not frozen (the good ones) include all EU/EEA countries, the USA, and 13 reciprocal-agreement countries. Countries where the pension freezes permanently include Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Thailand, Mexico, Panama, Costa Rica, and South Africa.
For a 20-year retirement, the difference between a frozen and uprated pension is approximately £50,000–70,000 in total income at a 3% average triple lock increase.
Full details: UK State Pension Frozen Countries — Complete List 2026
Can you really retire on £998/month abroad?
The answer is yes — in specific countries. Here is the honest analysis:
✅ Countries where £998/month is ENOUGH (comfortable retirement)
Turkey — £850–1,100/month ⚠️ PENSION FROZEN
Verdict: Just enough on state pension alone, but the freeze is a serious long-term risk.
Turkey is the cheapest Mediterranean retirement destination accessible to UK pensioners. In Fethiye, Bodrum or Alanya, a couple can live on £1,600/month — a single retiree can easily manage on £850–950/month.
The problem: Turkey freezes the UK State Pension at £230.25/week forever. In 10 years, at a 3% triple lock increase, a UK resident will receive £310/week. A Turkey resident will still receive £230.25. The 20-year gap is roughly £58,000 in lost income.
Recommended for: Retirees who have significant additional private pension income where the State Pension is a smaller proportion of income.
| Item | Monthly cost (single, Fethiye) |
|---|---|
| 1-bed apartment | £350–500 |
| Groceries | £150–200 |
| Utilities | £60–80 |
| Transport | £40–60 |
| Eating out (3x/week) | £80–120 |
| Healthcare (private) | £50–100 |
| Total | £730–1,060 |
Cyprus — £1,200–1,600/month ✅ NOT FROZEN
Verdict: On the edge — most retirees on state pension alone will be tight, but it works in rural areas.
Cyprus is one of the few countries where the UK pension is fully uprated AND costs are manageable on the state pension. The 5% flat pension tax rate (optional for the first 5 years) means you keep more of your pension.
In Paphos, Limassol or the Troodos mountain villages, living costs for a single retiree are £1,100–1,400/month. The State Pension of £998 doesn't quite cover this — but with a small private pension of £200–300/month, Cyprus becomes very comfortable.
Recommended for: Retirees with state pension + small private/occupational pension.
| Item | Monthly cost (single, Paphos) |
|---|---|
| 1-bed apartment | £450–650 |
| Groceries | £180–220 |
| Utilities | £80–100 |
| Transport | £50–70 |
| Eating out (3x/week) | £100–150 |
| Healthcare (private or S1) | £50–80 |
| Total | £910–1,270 |
Portugal — £1,400–1,800/month ✅ NOT FROZEN
Verdict: State pension alone is NOT enough in popular areas. Interior Portugal or Madeira is borderline.
Portugal is excellent but no longer cheap. The Algarve averages £1,600–1,800/month for a single retiree — above the state pension. However, inland areas (Évora, Castelo Branco, interior Alentejo) can be done on £1,200–1,400, which is borderline manageable on the state pension.
In Madeira, costs are similar to the Algarve. In the Azores (São Miguel), a single retiree can manage on £1,100–1,300/month.
Recommended for: Retirees who choose interior Portugal or Madeira, or who have an additional £200–500/month from savings, rental income or a small private pension.
Spain — £1,500–2,000/month ✅ NOT FROZEN
Verdict: Probably not on state pension alone except in inland Spain.
The Spanish costa communities (Costa del Sol, Costa Blanca) cost £1,700–2,200/month for a single retiree — well above the state pension. Inland Spain — Valencia region interior, Murcia, Extremadura, Castile-La Mancha — is significantly cheaper at £1,100–1,500/month and is manageable on the state pension with discipline.
Recommended for: Retirees with additional income, or those choosing inland Spain over the coast.
Greece — £1,200–1,600/month ✅ NOT FROZEN
Verdict: Borderline. Greek islands and mainland coastal areas are affordable; Athens is not.
The Greek islands (Crete, Rhodes, Corfu, Lefkada) outside peak tourist season are surprisingly affordable. A single retiree can live on £1,100–1,400/month in smaller island towns. The 7% flat pension tax rate (under Greece's FIP retirement scheme) is very attractive.
The state pension of £998/month is slightly below comfortable living costs on most Greek islands. With €100–200 in savings income, Greece becomes excellent value.
Recommended for: Retirees with state pension + small private pension (£150–250/month), choosing the Greek islands or rural mainland Greece.
Malta — £1,400–1,700/month ✅ NOT FROZEN
Verdict: Not quite enough on state pension alone; you need ~£300–400 supplementary.
Malta is one of the few places where everyone speaks English (it's an official language), left-hand traffic (familiar to Britons), and the S1 form gives you access to the Maltese public healthcare system. Costs are moderate — roughly equivalent to provincial Portugal.
✅ Countries where £998/month is MORE than enough
Thailand — £1,000–1,400/month ⚠️ PENSION FROZEN
Verdict: Comfortable on state pension alone, but the pension freeze is permanent and devastating long-term.
Chiang Mai is one of the cheapest cities in the world for British expats to live comfortably. £1,000/month in Chiang Mai is an excellent lifestyle. £998/month covers rent, food, utilities, healthcare, and regular restaurant meals.
BUT Thailand freezes the UK State Pension. By year 10 of retirement (at 3% triple lock), you will be losing ~£70/week compared to a UK resident. By year 20, the gap is ~£120/week. This makes Thailand suitable mainly for those with significant additional pension income where the State Pension is secondary.
Mexico — £1,000–1,500/month ⚠️ PENSION FROZEN
Similar situation to Thailand: affordable on the state pension, but frozen permanently.
Panama — £1,200–1,600/month ⚠️ PENSION FROZEN
Panama City is expensive; rural areas and the Pacific coast are affordable. Pension frozen.
Costa Rica — £1,000–1,400/month ⚠️ PENSION FROZEN
Affordable but pension frozen.
❌ Countries where £998/month is NOT enough
| Country | Typical cost (single) | State pension covers |
|---|---|---|
| Germany | £2,000–2,600 | 38–50% |
| France | £1,600–2,200 | 45–62% |
| Italy (north/centre) | £1,400–2,000 | 50–71% |
| Ireland | £1,600–2,400 | 42–62% |
| Switzerland | £2,500–3,500 | 29–40% |
| Australia | £2,000–2,800 | 36–50% ⚠️ |
| Canada | £1,800–2,500 | 40–55% ⚠️ |
Note: Ireland is interesting — the Common Travel Area means no visa, and costs in rural Ireland are closer to the lower end (£1,400–1,800), which is borderline. Many British retirees supplement with Irish pension credits.
Where should I retire if the state pension is my only income?
Best options on state pension alone (in order):
- Inland Turkey (£850/month) — state pension gives 117% coverage, excellent lifestyle. Major risk: frozen pension long-term.
- Chiang Mai, Thailand (£1,000/month) — state pension gives 100% coverage. Major risk: frozen pension.
- Greece (islands/rural mainland) (£1,100–1,300/month) — state pension gives 77–91% coverage; WITH uprating so the gap closes over time.
- Cyprus (rural/Paphos) (£1,100–1,300/month) — similar to Greece, 5% flat tax makes it even better after year 1.
- Interior Portugal (£1,200–1,400/month) — state pension gives 71–83% coverage; pension uprated.
- Costa Rica/Panama/Mexico (£1,000–1,500/month) — affordable but frozen pension permanently.
My recommendation if state pension is your only income: Choose between Cyprus (pension uprated, low tax, English-speaking, British-familiar left-hand driving) and the Greek islands (pension uprated, 7% flat rate for new residents, spectacular lifestyle). Both are borderline affordable on the state pension and will improve each year as your pension uprates.
If you are comfortable with the frozen pension risk AND have good health that means you may not need the S1 form for healthcare, Turkey's inland regions offer the best value in the Mediterranean world.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is £230 per week enough to retire abroad?
A: Yes, in the right country. Turkey (inland), Chiang Mai (Thailand), rural Greece, Cyprus and rural Portugal all have realistic monthly costs of £950–1,300 for a single retiree — within reach of the full State Pension of £998/month. The EU options (Greece, Cyprus, Portugal) have the advantage that your pension increases each April.
Q: What is the minimum UK pension to retire abroad?
A: It depends entirely on the country. In Turkey, retirees manage on £800/month. In Cyprus or rural Greece, £1,000 is realistic. In Spain or France, you typically need £1,400–1,800. In Germany or Ireland, £2,000+ is needed for a comfortable lifestyle.
Q: Can a UK pensioner survive in Portugal on state pension?
A: In the Algarve or Lisbon — probably not, without supplements. In interior Portugal (Alentejo, Beiras), it is borderline. The Azores (São Miguel) and rural areas are more realistic. Most UK retirees in Portugal supplement with private pension, rental income from a UK property, or savings drawdown.
Q: How do I make my UK state pension go further abroad?
A: Choose countries with low living costs, favourable pension tax rates (Cyprus 5%, Greece 7%, Malta 15%), and where the pension is NOT frozen (EEA countries). Consider living in lower-cost inland or island areas rather than popular coastal resorts. Use Wise or a multi-currency account to receive the pension in GBP and convert efficiently to local currency.
Q: What is the best country for UK retirees with state pension only in 2026?
A: For pension uprating AND reasonable costs: Cyprus is the best combination — 5% flat pension tax, pension not frozen, English-speaking, British-familiar, and costs of £1,100–1,400/month in mid-range areas. Rural Greece (7% flat rate, pension uprated) is a close second. If cost is the absolute priority and the frozen pension long-term risk is acceptable: inland Turkey at £850/month.
*Last reviewed: June 2026. Cost of living figures are indicative averages for a single retiree in mid-range accommodation. Always research current local costs before committing.*
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