Twelve countries, five measures, one ranking — scored for Americans and Canadians aged 50–70. Reviewed monthly and re-scored whenever a government changes the rules. No vibes: every movement on this page traces to a dated law, fee, or threshold change.
Last reviewed: 8 July 2026 · Next review: early August 2026
The quiet winner. Category F permanent residence from €9,568/year of income, foreign pensions taxed at a flat 5%, non-dom status now extendable to 27 years — and the 2026 tax reform kept all of it. English everywhere, 300+ days of sun.
Open the Cyprus guide → 🔥 #2 — HotThe 7% flat tax for foreign pensioners (15 years, no location restriction) is still Europe's cleanest retiree tax deal. FIP visa costs more than it used to — €3,500/month since 2025 — but the package holds.
Open the Greece guide → ↑ Biggest moverApril 2026 expanded the 7% flat-tax regime to towns up to 30,000 people — 74 towns added, including Ostuni and Pompei. The elective residence visa is still discretionary, but the tax map just got a lot bigger.
Open the Italy guide →Weighted score out of 10: visa accessibility 25% · tax appeal 25% · cost of living 20% · healthcare access 15% · lifestyle & language 15%. Momentum shows the direction of recent rule changes, not popularity.
| # | Country | Score | Visa | Tax | Cost | Health | Lifestyle | Momentum | In one line |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cyprus 🔥 | 8.2 | 8 | 10 | 7 | 7 | 8 | ↑ | 5% pension tax + cheap PR entry + English; 2026 reform kept the goodies. |
| 2 | Greece 🔥 | 7.9 | 7 | 9 | 8 | 6 | 9 | → | 7% flat tax for 15 years; FIP threshold rose to €3,500/month but the deal holds. |
| 3 | Portugal | 7.7 | 9 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | ↓ | Easiest visa in Europe (D7, €920/month) — but citizenship doubled to 10 years in May 2026. |
| 4 | Italy | 7.3 | 6 | 8 | 7 | 7 | 9 | ↑ | 7% flat-tax zone expanded April 2026 (towns to 30,000 people); visa still discretionary. |
| 5 | France | 7.3 | 8 | 6 | 6 | 9 | 8 | → | Best healthcare on the list; the US treaty shields American retirement income. Fees crept up in 2026. |
| 6 | Malta | 7.2 | 7 | 8 | 6 | 7 | 8 | → | 15% remittance tax and everything in English — but MPRP fees now start around €99,000. |
| 7 | Spain | 6.7 | 7 | 4 | 7 | 8 | 9 | ↓ | Golden visa dead, NLV renewal now forces tax residency, no retiree tax regime. Lifestyle still 9/10. |
| 8 | Austria | 5.7 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | → | Beautiful and orderly, but the retiree permit is quota-capped and wants A1 German first. |
| 9 | Netherlands* | 5.6 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 7 | 7 | ↓ | *For American entrepreneurs DAFT lifts visa access to 8/10. Housing shortage and a rising health deductible drag everyone else. |
| 10 | United Kingdom | 5.4 | 3 | 6 | 5 | 7 | 7 | ↓ | No retirement visa, and the pending 10-year settlement reform would slow everything further. |
| 11 | Germany | 5.3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 5 | 7 | → | No retirement visa, and public health insurance is largely closed to newcomers over 55. |
| 12 | Ireland** | 4.8 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 6 | 7 | → | **Stamp 0 wants €50,000/person/year and Europe's worst housing market. But if you qualify for citizenship by descent, ignore this row — you're in. |
Every barometer movement traces to a rule change, verified against the official source and logged on the country's own pages. This month: Italy ↑ — the 7% pensioner flat-tax regime expanded to towns of up to 30,000 people (Law 34/2026, April 2026), adding 74 towns. Portugal ↓ — naturalisation now takes 10 years, doubled by the May 2026 nationality law. Spain ↓ — the NLV's 183-day renewal rule (in force since May 2025) now bites: renewal means Spanish tax residency; the golden visa is gone. Cyprus ↑ — the 2026 tax reform confirmed the 5% pension election and stretched non-dom benefits to a possible 27 years. Netherlands ↓ — the plan to halve the health deductible is dead; the live proposal raises it toward €495 by 2030. UK ↓ — the 10-year settlement reform remains on the table.
Each country is scored 1–10 on five pillars, weighted: visa accessibility for non-working Americans and Canadians (25%), tax appeal for retirement and passive income (25%), cost of living (20%), healthcare access for new arrivals (15%), and lifestyle — climate, English, day-to-day ease (15%). Scores use only figures verified on this site against official sources, each carrying its year and source on the country pages. The momentum arrow reflects the direction of rule changes in the last review window, not search trends or popularity. The ranking is reviewed monthly; it changes only when the facts do — a new law, a new threshold, a new fee. Scores are editorial judgements built on verified data, not financial or immigration advice.