Greece Financially Independent Person Visa: Island Retirement for €24K/Year
How retirees use Greece's FIP visa to retire on the Greek islands with just €24,000/year in passive income and full EU residency.
Greece Financially Independent Person Visa: Island Retirement for €24K/Year
Greece’s Financially Independent Person (FIP) visa is the retirement entry point for non-EU nationals who want to live in Greece without working. The income requirement is approximately €24,000/year (~$26,000 USD) in passive income — among the lowest in the EU.
With 6,000+ islands, a Mediterranean climate, and a cost of living that rivals Southeast Asia (outside Athens), Greece is the slow-lifer’s European dream.
The Requirements
- Passive income of at least €24,000/year (pension, investments, rental income)
- Additional €20% per spouse and 15% per child
- Private health insurance valid in Greece
- Clean criminal record
- No intention to work in Greece
The Visa Process
- Apply at the Greek consulate in your home country for a National (D) Visa
- Enter Greece and apply for a Residence Permit at the local Decentralized Administration
- Initial permit: 2 years, renewable
- After 5 years: eligible for long-term EU resident status
- After 7 years: eligible for Greek citizenship (requires Greek language proficiency)
The Tax Structure
Greek tax residents (183+ days) face progressive rates up to 44%. However, Greece introduced a Non-Domicile Regime (alternative flat tax):
- Available to new residents investing €500,000 in Greece
- Flat tax of €100,000/year on worldwide income
- Not practical for FIP visa holders (designed for HNW)
For FIP holders on moderate incomes, the standard rates apply but are partially offset by:
- Tax-free threshold of approximately €8,636 for pension income
- Double taxation treaty exemptions (US-Greece treaty covers Social Security)
The Cost of Living (Islands)
| Location | Monthly Total (USD) |
|---|---|
| Crete (Chania, Heraklion) | $900-1,400 |
| Corfu | $800-1,200 |
| Rhodes | $800-1,300 |
| Peloponnese (Kalamata) | $700-1,100 |
| Athens (Plaka, Monastiraki) | $1,200-1,800 |
The Healthcare
Greece’s public healthcare (ESY) is available to all legal residents. Quality varies — islands have limited specialist care. Private insurance (Interamerican, Eurolife) costs €100-200/month and provides faster, higher-quality access.
Serious medical cases on smaller islands may require evacuation to Athens by ferry or helicopter.
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