Greece’s Article 5B offers American retirees a flat 7% tax on all foreign-source income for 15 years, covering Social Security, IRA withdrawals, and dividends.
A couple retiring to coastal Greece spends roughly $61,000 a year, about $17,500 less than the average U.S. household.
Retirees must elect the 7% regime in year one and fully sever ties from high-tax states like California or face double taxation with no credit offset.
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Someone in their late 50s or early 60s has read one too many articles about the Algarve, run the numbers, and realized Portugal is not what it was five years ago. Rents in Lisbon have doubled, the old Non-Habitual Resident tax break for retirees is gone for new arrivals, and the golden visa route to residency has been narrowed. If not Portugal, then where? The answer, for a growing number of American retirees, is Greece.
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Why Greece Quietly Won the Argument
Greece introduced a retiree tax regime under Article 5B of its income tax code that Portugal used to offer and no longer does. If you move your tax residence to Greece and receive a pension from a country with a tax treaty with Greece (the United States qualifies), you can elect a flat 7% tax rate on all foreign-source income for 15 years. Social Security, IRA and 401(k) withdrawals, dividends, capital gains, rental income from your old house back home. All taxed at 7% in Greece, with the U.S. still taxing you as a citizen but with foreign tax credits and treaty relief smoothing the overlap.
That single provision is why this scenario works. Without it, Greek marginal rates climb past 40% and the math collapses.
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What a Year Actually Costs in Chania or Nafplio
Pick a real place, not “Greece.” A couple renting a two-bedroom apartment a few blocks from the water in Chania, Crete, or a stone house in Nafplio in the Peloponnese, is looking at roughly €900 to €1,300 a month in rent unfurnished. Buying is cheaper than most Americans expect: habitable homes in good coastal towns still trade in the €200,000 to €350,000 range, a fraction of the Case-Shiller national index sitting at 332.7 in April 2026, roughly 3.3 times its 2000 baseline.
A working annual budget for a couple, in current dollars:
Housing (rent, utilities, building fees, internet): $18,000
Groceries and household: $9,600, using the USDA Low-Cost Food Plan as a proxy since Greek supermarket and farmers-market prices track it closely
Private health insurance to satisfy residency, plus out-of-pocket care: $6,000 for a couple in their early 60s, dropping once Medicare kicks in and you keep Part B for U.S. trips
Dining, travel within Europe, entertainment: $9,000
Miscellaneous, home maintenance, gifts, replacement car reserve: $6,400
Greek 7% flat tax and U.S. federal tax on withdrawals: $6,000
That is roughly $61,000 a year, or about €53,000 at today’s rate of 0.87 euros per dollar. It is meaningfully below the $78,535 the average U.S. household spent in 2024, and it buys a life most of those households cannot buy at home.
The Portfolio Target
Assume a couple, both 62, waiting until 67 to claim Social Security. Combined benefit at full retirement age lands around $60,000 a year in today’s dollars, indexed by the 2.8% COLA in effect for 2026. A $3,000 monthly benefit today converts to €2,620 in Greece, which covers rent and groceries in Chania.
From 62 to 67, the portfolio funds everything. Call it $61,000 a year for five years, roughly $305,000 drawn during the bridge, held in short Treasury ladders yielding around 4.58% on the 10-year and a conservative dividend ETF sleeve. From 67 onward, Social Security covers the first $60,000, leaving essentially no gap in a normal year and a modest cushion for lumpy expenses.
Using a 3.5% withdrawal rate against the pre-Social Security gap, the portfolio needs to clear roughly $600,000 to $750,000 at retirement to fund the bridge and still have real assets working when benefits begin. Add a $250,000 housing reserve if you plan to buy rather than rent, and the working target is about $900,000 to $1 million in investable assets, plus whatever equity you extract from a U.S. home sale into a low-cost European life.
The Thing Most People Miss
The 7% regime is not automatic. You must affirmatively elect it in your first year of Greek tax residency, prove you were not Greek tax resident in five of the previous six years, and commit to actually moving your tax home. That means spending more than 183 days a year in Greece and letting go of state tax residency in high-tax U.S. states before you leave. Retirees who keep a California or New York domicile out of sentimentality can find themselves paying state income tax on the same withdrawals Greece is taxing at 7%, with no credit on the U.S. side to net it out. The move only works if you make it cleanly.
Do that, and the number is a portfolio near $1 million, a 3.5% withdrawal rate through the Social Security bridge, and a 7% Greek tax election filed in year one.
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