Europe is one of the easier regions in the world to retire to with passive income. Several countries offer visas explicitly aimed at “financially independent” residents — no job offer required, no business to start, just proof of stable passive income and (usually) the willingness to actually live there at least 6 months a year.

The realistic options

Portugal — D7 (Passive Income) Visa

The most popular path among non-EU retirees. The D7 requires:

  • ~€820/month in passive income for a single applicant (can be rent, dividends, interest, or portfolio withdrawals)
  • Proof of accommodation in Portugal
  • Clean criminal record
  • Spending at least 6 months/year in Portugal for PR/citizenship track

Timeline: D7 → 5 years → permanent residency → citizenship (with a basic Portuguese test). One of the easier EU citizenship paths in the world.

Cost of living for a single retiree:

  • Small city / town, comfortable: €1,500–2,000/month (~USD 1,600–2,200)
  • Premium location (central Lisbon, Algarve coast), upper lifestyle: €3,000–4,000+/month

Strong English in Lisbon and Porto. Public healthcare is good; private insurance for older residents typically €50–200/month.

Spain — Non-Lucrative Visa

Similar to Portugal’s D7. Requirements:

  • ~€28,000/year in passive income or equivalent savings
  • Private health insurance
  • No work allowed

Timeline: 1-year visa → renew twice → PR in 5 years → citizenship in 10 years. The longer citizenship timeline is the main downside vs Portugal.

Strong lifestyle in Barcelona, Valencia, Málaga. Bureaucracy is significant. Spanish helps a lot.

Italy — Elective Residency Visa

For those who can show stable passive income of roughly €31,000/year for singles (more for couples), plus proof of accommodation. Importantly, the income must be passive — savings withdrawals don’t count the way they do in Portugal.

Bureaucracy is heavy and tax structures are complex. A tax advisor is almost essential. Best for those drawn by the lifestyle and willing to put up with the paperwork.

Greece — Golden Visa / Financially Independent Visa

The Golden Visa requires a €250,000 property investment (or higher in some zones). The Financially Independent Visa is a passive-income path with modest income thresholds. Both reach PR in 5 years.

Warmer climate, low cost of living, EU access. Healthcare is acceptable but a step below Northern Europe.

Malta — Global Residence Programme

For higher-net-worth retirees. Requires €500,000+ net worth and an annual income threshold (~€100,000) or a tax payment commitment. English-speaking, Mediterranean, EU Schengen access.

Tax-friendly structure attracts professionals planning ahead, but the property market is small and pricey relative to island size.

Summary

CountryVisaThresholdPR / Citizenship
PortugalD7~€820/mo income5 yrs PR
SpainNon-Lucrative~€28k/yr income5 yrs PR, 10 yrs citizen
ItalyElective Residency~€31k/yr passive5 yrs PR
GreeceGolden Visa€250k property5 yrs PR
MaltaGRP€500k NW + €100k income5 yrs PR

What about non-European first-world countries

The picture in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States is different — they generally do not have a dedicated retirement visa.

  • Canada requires PR via Express Entry, provincial nominee, or business/investor routes. Not viable post-retirement; must start before.
  • United States offers EB-5 (USD 800,000+ investment) as the most realistic path. Expensive but feasible with sufficient assets.
  • Australia closed its investor/retirement visa to new applicants. PR via investor/skilled routes only.
  • New Zealand has a Temporary Retirement Category visa: NZD 750k investment + NZD 500k living funds + NZD 60k/year income. 2-year renewable. Most achievable of the four for someone with sufficient assets.

See also