Dear expat community,
Thanks for being here. I have been reading your posts to learn about living in Argentina.
My situation is this: Argentine-born but living abroad since a teenager. Never worked or paid taxes in Argentina. Now, I am approaching retirement age and anticipating a small retirement income, in dollars. I am considering a slow life in the provinces but have many questions by the prospects of moving here, baffled by the red tape and illogical regulations. (Note that I have been doing a lot of research lately and feel encouraged by the many new immigrants who are choosing the country at this time.)
1) Money: how do you bring a few dollars into the country? Obviously, the country does not bank in dollars. So…? No dollar bank account? A small account in pesos? How do you even purchase a little plot of land?
2) Belonging in the system: I have researched work and minimum salaries and they do not seem possible to me. So, if I am retired, what would be the benefit of becoming part of the bank system at that stage? Is it possible to remain outside of it? Is it better to rent or to buy property? (Again, a little plot of land in the country.) I’ve heard that taxes are ridiculous. Currently, I do not belong to this jurisdiction. I guess that by moving here, I would? (Double-nationality?)
3) Would it be better to rent? How do people use their monthly retirement money? Transfer into pesos? Keep elsewhere? There is also the chance that a couple of years from now I would rather pick up and go away. How easy would this transition be? I know people stuck unable to sell their properties. How much more expensive is renting?
4) I’ve been looking online and everything is either listed in dollars or in crypto (DAI, USDT, etc.). I am baffled as to how people can come up with the huge sums of dollars when the country does not allow people to keep dollars? Can someone explain? How do you buy a vehicle or a little plot of land? Or a house? (I’ve already given up hope of moving my little Honda or my campervan to Argentina as it seems ridiculously expensive.)
5) I have family in Argentina and the hope that it is still safe enough to live here and that it would give me a better life than growing old in the US, where I am right now. Is this realistic? Are there better options? (Chile? Uruguay?)
Any thoughts and tips are appreciated. -- Longtime away
Thanks for being here. I have been reading your posts to learn about living in Argentina.
My situation is this: Argentine-born but living abroad since a teenager. Never worked or paid taxes in Argentina. Now, I am approaching retirement age and anticipating a small retirement income, in dollars. I am considering a slow life in the provinces but have many questions by the prospects of moving here, baffled by the red tape and illogical regulations. (Note that I have been doing a lot of research lately and feel encouraged by the many new immigrants who are choosing the country at this time.)
1) Money: how do you bring a few dollars into the country? Obviously, the country does not bank in dollars. So…? No dollar bank account? A small account in pesos? How do you even purchase a little plot of land?
2) Belonging in the system: I have researched work and minimum salaries and they do not seem possible to me. So, if I am retired, what would be the benefit of becoming part of the bank system at that stage? Is it possible to remain outside of it? Is it better to rent or to buy property? (Again, a little plot of land in the country.) I’ve heard that taxes are ridiculous. Currently, I do not belong to this jurisdiction. I guess that by moving here, I would? (Double-nationality?)
3) Would it be better to rent? How do people use their monthly retirement money? Transfer into pesos? Keep elsewhere? There is also the chance that a couple of years from now I would rather pick up and go away. How easy would this transition be? I know people stuck unable to sell their properties. How much more expensive is renting?
4) I’ve been looking online and everything is either listed in dollars or in crypto (DAI, USDT, etc.). I am baffled as to how people can come up with the huge sums of dollars when the country does not allow people to keep dollars? Can someone explain? How do you buy a vehicle or a little plot of land? Or a house? (I’ve already given up hope of moving my little Honda or my campervan to Argentina as it seems ridiculously expensive.)
5) I have family in Argentina and the hope that it is still safe enough to live here and that it would give me a better life than growing old in the US, where I am right now. Is this realistic? Are there better options? (Chile? Uruguay?)
Any thoughts and tips are appreciated. -- Longtime away