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Non-EU citizens can only spend a total of 90 days over an 180-day period in the whole of the European Union.
Non-EU citizens can only spend a total of 90 days over an 180-day period in the whole of the European Union.
Over here in the US, a bunch of Central American countries offer retirement visas, aiming at the American retiree market. Less-expensive, warm weather.
https://money.usnews.com/money/retirement/aging/articles/countries-that-offer-retirement-visas
Back when Brexit was being figured out, I remember seeing a lot of discussion about retired Brits living in Spain being unhappy about not knowing what the future held. I commented a few times on how if Spain didn’t run a retirement visa program, they might consider doing so; it sounded like a lot of elderly Brits liked living in Spain.
Yeah but the question is, did the Spaniards like a lot of elderly Brits living in Spain? I can see them not bending over backwards for a clientele that may well have had a bad influence on local housing and cost of living ;)
I do think that this is what happened in a lot of contexts. Decades of people traveling abroad and making a bad name for their country finally caught up.
For Argentina, you just need to earn at least $500/month from a government-funded retirement (i.e. Social Security) of any sort and they’ll pretty much just give you a pensioner’s visa.