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Compare 82 Countries for Americans Moving Abroad

Cost of living, safety, healthcare, visa requirements, and tax systems. All figures from public economic data, updated quarterly.

All 82 Countries

Sorted alphabetically

Albania
QoL 65/100 · Good destination
Argentina
QoL 69/100 · Good destination
Australia
QoL 84/100 · Excellent destination
Austria
QoL 84/100 · Excellent destination
Bahamas
QoL 54/100 · Moderate destination
Belgium
QoL 81/100 · Excellent destination
Belize
QoL 49/100 · Mixed destination
Bolivia
QoL 60/100 · Good destination
Brazil
QoL 63/100 · Good destination
Bulgaria
QoL 71/100 · Very good destination
Cambodia
QoL 52/100 · Moderate destination
Canada
QoL 82/100 · Excellent destination
Chile
QoL 71/100 · Very good destination
China
QoL 64/100 · Good destination
Colombia
QoL 58/100 · Moderate destination
Costa Rica
QoL 71/100 · Very good destination
Croatia
QoL 78/100 · Very good destination
Cyprus
QoL 71/100 · Very good destination
Czech Republic
QoL 82/100 · Excellent destination
Denmark
QoL 86/100 · Excellent destination
Dominican Republic
QoL 60/100 · Good destination
Ecuador
QoL 57/100 · Moderate destination
Egypt
QoL 53/100 · Moderate destination
El Salvador
QoL 61/100 · Good destination
Estonia
QoL 80/100 · Excellent destination
Finland
QoL 89/100 · Excellent destination
France
QoL 75/100 · Very good destination
Georgia
QoL 62/100 · Good destination
Germany
QoL 84/100 · Excellent destination
Ghana
QoL 54/100 · Moderate destination
Greece
QoL 73/100 · Very good destination
Honduras
QoL 58/100 · Moderate destination
Hungary
QoL 78/100 · Very good destination
Iceland
QoL 93/100 · Outstanding destination
India
QoL 52/100 · Moderate destination
Indonesia
QoL 59/100 · Moderate destination
Ireland
QoL 85/100 · Excellent destination
Italy
QoL 74/100 · Very good destination
Jamaica
QoL 59/100 · Moderate destination
Japan
QoL 85/100 · Excellent destination
Kazakhstan
QoL 71/100 · Very good destination
Kenya
QoL 47/100 · Mixed destination
Latvia
QoL 78/100 · Very good destination
Lithuania
QoL 80/100 · Excellent destination
Malaysia
QoL 70/100 · Very good destination
Malta
QoL 83/100 · Excellent destination
Mexico
QoL 60/100 · Good destination
Montenegro
QoL 72/100 · Very good destination
Morocco
QoL 57/100 · Moderate destination
Nepal
QoL 49/100 · Mixed destination
Netherlands
QoL 84/100 · Excellent destination
New Zealand
QoL 85/100 · Excellent destination
Nicaragua
QoL 58/100 · Moderate destination
North Macedonia
QoL 62/100 · Good destination
Norway
QoL 85/100 · Excellent destination
Panama
QoL 68/100 · Good destination
Paraguay
QoL 69/100 · Good destination
Peru
QoL 60/100 · Good destination
Philippines
QoL 61/100 · Good destination
Poland
QoL 80/100 · Excellent destination
Portugal
QoL 80/100 · Excellent destination
Qatar
QoL 75/100 · Very good destination
Romania
QoL 73/100 · Very good destination
Rwanda
QoL 44/100 · Mixed destination
Saudi Arabia
QoL 71/100 · Very good destination
Serbia
QoL 66/100 · Good destination
Singapore
QoL 89/100 · Excellent destination
Slovakia
QoL 76/100 · Very good destination
Slovenia
QoL 84/100 · Excellent destination
South Africa
QoL 49/100 · Mixed destination
South Korea
QoL 78/100 · Very good destination
Spain
QoL 80/100 · Excellent destination
Sri Lanka
QoL 57/100 · Moderate destination
Sweden
QoL 81/100 · Excellent destination
Switzerland
QoL 88/100 · Excellent destination
Taiwan
QoL 76/100 · Very good destination
Thailand
QoL 67/100 · Good destination
Turkey
QoL 56/100 · Moderate destination
UAE
QoL 75/100 · Very good destination
United Kingdom
QoL 80/100 · Excellent destination
Uruguay
QoL 74/100 · Very good destination
Vietnam
QoL 66/100 · Good destination

If you're seriously comparing countries for Americans moving abroad, you've already moved past the "wouldn't it be nice" phase. The question now is which country actually fits your financial situation, your health needs, your risk tolerance, and your real life. A decade ago, most people picked a destination based on a magazine article or a friend who spent a semester in Barcelona. Now the calculation is more disciplined. With remote work income, Social Security optimization, and early retirement strategies all on the table, Americans are treating this like the major financial decision it actually is, and demanding real data to back it up.

The numbers that matter most are not the ones that look most impressive in a brochure. A country's GDP or its Instagram aesthetic tells you nothing useful. What actually moves the needle is the cost index relative to the US baseline of 82, the FIRE number required to retire there, the healthcare system quality, and whether the visa structure lets you stay legally without becoming a bureaucratic project every 90 days. Plenty of countries score well on one metric and fall apart on another. Mexico scores around 37 on the cost index, which looks attractive until you factor in the patchwork public healthcare and the visa situation that has most Americans doing border runs indefinitely. The data only becomes useful when you read all four variables together.

At the macro level, the range across 82 countries is striking. Egypt, India, and Sri Lanka sit at cost index scores of 19, 21, and 21 respectively, meaning your dollar goes roughly four times further than it does in the US. The FIRE number drops accordingly: in Egypt you could theoretically retire on a portfolio of about $210,000 assuming a 4% withdrawal rate covers your expenses, compared to roughly $1,050,000 required if you stay stateside. Sri Lanka and India come in around $225,000. Those numbers are real, and they are not typos. But they come with trade-offs in infrastructure, air quality, healthcare accessibility, and political stability that the cost index alone does not capture, which is exactly why every country in this database is scored across multiple dimensions rather than ranked on cost alone.

What you'll find as you use this tool is that the "best" country is not the cheapest one or the safest one or the one with the easiest visa. It's the one where the full picture fits your specific profile. The data on each of the 82 countries for Americans moving abroad is meant to function as a starting point for your own analysis, not a conclusion handed to you. Run the numbers against your actual monthly spend, your healthcare history, and your income structure. The answers get a lot more specific very quickly.