expat-life

Updated for 2026-04-27: A thought experiment on my Expat + Barista FIRE plan

April 28, 2026 · 10 min read

In early 2026, a Reddit user posted a detailed scenario: retiring at 58 with $32,000 annual Social Security and $200,000 in savings, targeting three countries (Portugal, Mexico, Thailand) and modeling 15 hours/week of remote consulting work to bridge the income gap. The comment thread revealed something unexpected: the math worked in two countries, broke down in a third, and the person had underestimated Year 1 transition costs by nearly 40%.

This is the barista FIRE model for expats—and it's significantly more nuanced than most relocation blogs admit.

Barista FIRE (financial independence, retire early) traditionally means leaving full-time work but maintaining a part-time job to cover living expenses while your portfolio grows. Abroad, the model mutates: retirees lean on fixed income (Social Security, pension) as the baseline, supplement with 10–20 hours/week of remote work, and aim for geographic arbitrage to stretch purchasing power. The appeal is obvious. But for Americans considering relocation on a fixed income, the operational reality—visa restrictions, tax complexity, healthcare continuity, currency risk—often overwhelms the cost-of-living savings.

Not sure where to start? Take the 2-minute relocation quiz and get a personalized country shortlist based on your budget, lifestyle, and visa eligibility.

Take the Quiz | Compare Countries

This article walks through the numbers, the legal constraints, and the three countries where the model actually sustains long-term.

The Core Math: Fixed Income + Part-Time Work

Person writing math equations on a whiteboard, focusing on integrals and formulas.

What Barista FIRE Actually Requires

The baseline scenario is straightforward: you need monthly expenses to fall below your guaranteed income (Social Security, pension, portfolio withdrawal) by enough that a modest remote gig closes the gap without becoming a second full-time job.

Average US Social Security benefit (2026): $1,907/month.
Modest portfolio withdrawal (4% rule on $200k–$300k): $667–$1,000/month.
Combined baseline: ~$2,574–$2,907/month.

In the continental US, that covers basic expenses in lower-cost regions (rural Midwest, parts of the South) but leaves little margin. Abroad, in the right location, it's workable—if you account for the friction costs.

The Reddit scenario assumed $2,500/month baseline spending across all three countries. That's realistic for secondary cities in Portugal or Mexico but optimistic for Thailand's expat infrastructure. More importantly, it assumed Year 3 costs. Year 1 runs 35–40% higher.

Year 1 vs. Year 3: The Hidden Cost Differential

Most expat cost-of-living guides show steady-state budgets. They omit what actually happens in your first year:

Year 1 one-time and inflated costs:

Year 1 monthly baseline: Add ~$500–$800 to steady-state for the first 6–12 months.

Year 3 monthly baseline: Apartment secured, healthcare routine established, part-time income stable, no visa re-processing for another 1–2 years.

Real-world example:

The difference isn't trivial for someone relying on fixed income. It means Year 1 requires either higher savings buffer, delayed relocation, or willingness to tap portfolio more aggressively.


Compare your fixed income against real 2026 budgets. Take our free relocation assessment to model your scenario across Portugal, Spain, Mexico, and other destinations—factoring in visa costs, Year 1 transitions, and healthcare. Start the assessment


Visa Stability: The Overlooked Pillar of Barista FIRE

A Visa XP black credit card displayed on a dark background, emphasizing finance and security.

Part-time work abroad isn't just a lifestyle choice; it's operationally dependent on visa status. Unlike full-time remote workers for a US employer (who often maintain a US visa), barista FIRE retirees are typically on long-term resident visas designed for retirees—and the work-permission landscape varies dramatically.

Which Visas Allow Part-Time Work?

Portugal (D7 Passive Income Visa):

Spain (Digital Nomad Visa / Long-Term Resident Visa):

Mexico (Temporary Resident Visa + Freelancer/Self-Employed):

Thailand (Elite Visa / Non-Immigrant B):

Colombia (V Visa / Resident Visa):

Takeaway: Portugal, Spain, and Colombia offer clearest legal pathways for supplementary remote work on retiree visas. Mexico works operationally but carries compliance gray zones. Thailand, despite cost-of-living appeal, is risky for deliberate barista FIRE strategies.


The Three Best Countries for Expats on Fixed Income + Part-Time Work

Collection of three modern smartphones displayed on a wooden table surface.

Portugal: The Balanced Option

Why it leads: Combination of visa clarity (D7 explicitly permits remote work), manageable cost of living, mature expat infrastructure, and EU healthcare access.

Year 1 monthly budget (inclusive of part-time work setup):

Year 3 monthly budget (stabilized):

Fixed income gap (Year 1): Social Security ($1,907) + portfolio withdrawal ($700) = $2,607. Budget shortfall in Year 1 is approximately $0–$200/month depending on spending discipline and exchange rate.

Part-time income requirement: 10–12 hours/week at $25–$30/hour (typical for remote consulting, writing, freelance software work) = $1,000–$1,440/month. This fully covers the gap and builds additional buffer.

Tax consideration: As Portuguese tax resident, you'll owe Portuguese income tax on worldwide income, but FEIE applies to income earned before establishing tax residency (first ~180 days). After that, file as Portuguese self-employed with social contributions (~29.6% self-employment tax). This is higher than US-only filing but manageable for part-time income.

Visa pathway: D7 requires €1,080–€1,440/month guaranteed income. Social Security alone won't qualify; you need bank statements showing combined income (Social Security plus modest part-time income or portfolio). Once approved, you can continue working; visa doesn't restrict it.

Healthcare: EU residency permits access to Portuguese public healthcare (SNS) after registration; private options (Lusitania, Médis, Allianz Portugal) run €80–€200/month and offer faster specialist access.

Secondary cities for lower costs: Covilhã, Guarda, Viseu, Faro, and Portimão all cost 30–45% less than Lisbon but trade walkability, expat infrastructure, and specialist healthcare access. Faro and Portimão retain resort-town feel with lower rent; Covilhã and Guarda require willingness for smaller-town life.

Verdict: Best for retirees seeking visa stability, healthcare confidence, and established social infrastructure. Part-time work is an explicit bonus, not a gray-zone necessity.


Spain: The High-Regulation Path

Why it competes: Digital Nomad Visa offers explicit work permission; cost of living in secondary cities rivals Portugal; EU healthcare access.

Year 1 monthly budget (Madrid or Barcelona):

Secondary cities (Valencia, Seville, Bilbao, Granada):

Year 3 budget (Madrid, stabilized):

Fixed income gap: Same as Portugal ($2,607 baseline). Year 1 shortfall approximately $0–$400/month depending on city and spending.

Part-time income requirement: 12–15 hours/week at $25–$30/hour = $1,200–$1,800/month. Covers gap plus buffer.

Tax and compliance friction: This is the critical difference from Portugal. Spain requires self-employed ("autónomo") registration even for part-time freelancers. Monthly contributions are €230–€300 (2026 rates); accountant fees add €50–€100/month. You're paying Spanish self-employment tax (~45% effective rate on part-time income after deductions) plus US tax on foreign income (though FEIE applies to income earned before establishing residency).

Real friction example:
You earn €1,500/month remotely. Spanish government sees you as autónomo and charges €250 in contributions plus accountant (€80). Net to you: €1,170. Then you file US taxes; FEIE exempts $120,000/year ($10k/month), so Spanish-source income is covered. But if you have other income or portfolio withdrawals above FEIE threshold, US taxation applies. Total tax burden: 30–45% on part-time earnings, split between Spain and US.

Visa pathway: Digital Nomad Visa (2 years, renewable) requires €2,300/month guaranteed income or €27,600/year savings. This is higher than Portugal; many retirees on Social Security alone don't qualify. The alternative Long-Term Resident Visa (non-lucrative) requires €1,440/month but explicitly doesn't permit work—you'd operate in a gray zone.

Healthcare: Public healthcare (INSALUD) is excellent and free after registration (2–3 months process). Private options (Axa, Mapfre, Sanitas) run €100–€200/month.

Verdict: Best for retirees who can afford higher baseline income to qualify for Digital Nomad Visa and who are comfortable with stricter tax compliance. Not ideal for those leaning heavily on part-time work to supplement fixed income.


Mexico: The Cost-of-Living Champion (With Asterisks)

Why it appears attractive: Lowest cost of living in the trio; proximity to US; large English-speaking expat communities.

Year 1 monthly budget (Mexico City, Playa del Carmen, Puerto Vallarta):

Secondary cities (Oaxaca, San Miguel de Allende, Ajijic):

Year 3 budget (CDMX, stabilized):

Fixed income gap: Social Security ($1,907) covers baseline in most scenarios. Part-time work is optional, not required.

The asterisk: This is where barista FIRE in Mexico becomes less about necessity and more about choice. Your fixed income alone often sustains the lifestyle—the question is whether part

Related reading:


Planning your move abroad? Get weekly insider tips on visas, costs, healthcare, and daily life.

Start Your Expat Plan | Financial Calculator | Pricing

Planning your move abroad?

Take our free relocation quiz and get personalized country recommendations in 3 minutes.

Take the Free Quiz →

Related Articles

Stay in the Loop

Get weekly insights on the best countries for American expats, visa changes, and cost-of-living updates.

No spam. We respect your inbox.

SUBSCRIBE