How to Read This Shortlist
Credibility note: this page compares 8 destinations across 6 countries using a consistent 10-dimension model. It is research-grade destination intelligence, not financial, legal, tax, immigration, or transaction advice.
The right answer for best countries for expats to buy property is rarely the market with the prettiest photos or the highest advertised yield. A global buyer needs a place that can survive legal review, repeated use, currency shifts, maintenance surprises, and a future resale process. Global Home Atlas ranks markets through ten decision dimensions: lifestyle magnetism, global access, ownership clarity, regulatory safety, rental profit, capital upside, retirement fit, exit liquidity, foreigner fit, and value entry.
That weighting is designed for affluent global citizens who may use one property for several jobs over time. A home can begin as a vacation base, become a semi-retirement address, then eventually need to rent or sell. The best markets on this page are therefore not selected only for near-term excitement. They are selected because the evidence points to a more durable combination of livability, practicality, and investment defensibility.
Use this page as a first-pass filter. It narrows the research field, highlights where each market is strong, and shows which tradeoffs need professional verification. Before buying, confirm title, taxes, foreign-buyer rules, visa status, insurance, building condition, local rental permits, manager quality, and resale comparables with independent local advisers.
Best Markets to Compare First
For this search, the strongest candidates are Fukuoka / Itoshima and Valencia because they balance high decision scores with practical ownership and lifestyle use. The table below keeps the comparison deliberately concrete: entry benchmark, yield context, ownership clarity, retirement fit, and the committee read. These are the variables most likely to change a real buy/no-buy decision.
| Destination | Score | Entry | Yield | Ownership | Retirement | Committee read |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fukuoka / Itoshima Japan |
4.27 | $2,620/m2 | 3–4.8% est. net | 5.0/5 | 4.6/5 | Keep as a top-tier shortlist candidate. It is the “highest probability of working” option rather than the most romantic one. |
| Valencia Spain |
4.09 | $3,840/m2 | 3–4.8% est. net | 4.6/5 | 4.7/5 | Keep near the top. Best suited for retirement optionality and long-stay demand, not ultra-luxury holiday yield. |
| Algarve / Cascais Portugal |
4.06 | $4,600/m2 | 3–4.5% est. net | 4.7/5 | 4.7/5 | Keep as a core European benchmark. Strong for retirement and lifestyle, only average for development yield. |
| Málaga / Costa del Sol Spain |
4.03 | $5,600/m2 | 3–5% est. net | 4.5/5 | 4.6/5 | Keep, but require strict entry-price discipline. Good destination; not necessarily good at any price. |
| Madeira Portugal |
3.91 | $4,000/m2 | 3–5% est. net | 4.7/5 | 4.5/5 | Keep as a differentiated Europe water/nature candidate. Attractive, but size positions conservatively because liquidity is thinner. |
| Crete Greece |
3.81 | $2,960/m2 | 3–4.8% est. net | 4.4/5 | 4.2/5 | Keep as a value-oriented Europe candidate. Strong for lifestyle, but underwrite conservatively for exit and operations. |
| Da Nang / Hoi An Vietnam |
3.56 | $1,700/m2 | 2.5–4.5% est. net for foreign-accessible units/projects | 2.3/5 | 3.8/5 | Watchlist. Cheap is not enough; only proceed with a very clean title/project and strong operator. |
| Phuket / Koh Samui Thailand |
3.67 | $2,900/m2 | 3–6% est. net; leasehold risk should require higher hurdle rate | 2.0/5 | 4.0/5 | Keep as a yield candidate only with conservative legal structuring. Not a clean core holding. |
Market Notes for Serious Buyers
Fukuoka / Itoshima
The panel would treat this as the most practical “use it, rent it, live in it” candidate: not the most dramatic scenery, but the combination of airport access, food, safety, healthcare and clean ownership is unusually strong.
- Decision score
- 4.27/5
- Entry benchmark
- $2,620/m2
- Ownership
- 5.0/5
- Exit liquidity
- 4.1/5
Valencia
This is one of the cleanest European retirement/liveability candidates. It wins on food, healthcare, cost, culture and year-round demand, but it is more lifestyle city than trophy holiday resort.
- Decision score
- 4.09/5
- Entry benchmark
- $3,840/m2
- Ownership
- 4.6/5
- Exit liquidity
- 4.4/5
Algarve / Cascais
A proven retirement and second-home market with clean ownership and strong lifestyle appeal. The panel would like the risk-adjusted case, but would separate Cascais from Algarve in deeper diligence because economics and liquidity differ.
- Decision score
- 4.06/5
- Entry benchmark
- $4,600/m2
- Ownership
- 4.7/5
- Exit liquidity
- 4.2/5
Málaga / Costa del Sol
This is a high-conviction lifestyle/retirement market because it has airport scale, healthcare, beach, food and a large expat ecosystem. The issue is whether you are buying after too much price appreciation.
- Decision score
- 4.03/5
- Entry benchmark
- $5,600/m2
- Ownership
- 4.5/5
- Exit liquidity
- 4.5/5
Madeira
Madeira deserves a place because it has year-round climate, scenery and improving remote-work/retirement demand. The panel would like the lifestyle story but mark down island liquidity and healthcare depth versus mainland cities.
- Decision score
- 3.91/5
- Entry benchmark
- $4,000/m2
- Ownership
- 4.7/5
- Exit liquidity
- 3.5/5
Crete
Crete is attractive because it combines affordability, food, beaches, history and a real local population. The panel would like the value angle but question liquidity and seasonality outside the best towns.
- Decision score
- 3.81/5
- Entry benchmark
- $2,960/m2
- Ownership
- 4.4/5
- Exit liquidity
- 3.4/5
Decision Framework
1. Start with ownership clarity
Foreign buyers should eliminate markets where the legal structure is hard to explain, hard to finance, or heavily dependent on informal assumptions. A beautiful asset can become a poor decision if land rights, permits, taxes, or resale procedures are unclear. The ownership score in this guide is therefore intentionally prominent.
2. Underwrite lifestyle as demand
Lifestyle is not decoration. Food, healthcare, airport access, safety, climate, and year-round activity are the forces that make a place usable by the owner and attractive to future buyers or tenants. A market with repeated lifestyle demand has more ways to work if the original plan changes.
3. Treat yield as a stress test
Rental income should offset risk, not justify ignoring it. Net yield estimates need to survive management fees, vacancy, repairs, taxes, furnishing, platform costs, insurance, and regulatory changes. A lower but cleaner yield in a liquid market can be superior to a headline yield that depends on aggressive occupancy or fragile short-term-rental permissions.
4. Plan the exit before entry
Affluent buyers often focus on acquisition quality and underweight future liquidity. Exit matters because family plans, residency rules, tax regimes, health needs, and currency preferences can change. Markets with local, regional, and international buyer demand usually deserve a premium over thin markets with one buyer profile.
FAQ
Which countries are easiest for expats to buy in?
Ease depends on title structure, local counsel quality, banking, taxes, and residency rules, not only whether foreign ownership is technically allowed.
Should expats buy before moving?
Usually only after validating healthcare, transport, language friction, taxes, and the specific neighborhood through extended stays.
How should foreign buyers manage legal risk?
Use independent local counsel, verify title and permits, model taxes, and avoid structures you cannot explain clearly.