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Cyprus and Ireland top list of best places to retire—as boomers are forced to ‘unretire’, the only real solution is to move abroad

The dream of a slow, sun-soaked retirement is colliding with a harsher reality: rising living costs, stretched pensions, and a growing sense that the “golden years” aren’t quite so golden anymore. In the U.K. and U.S., many retirees are having to dust their suits off and go back to work as they realise their nest eggs don’t quite make ends meet. Even wealthy boomers who have retired with at least six figures in savings are feeling the pinch.

For a growing number, the solution isn’t to cut back. It’s to move.

A fresh ranking of the world’s best retirement destinations suggests Cyprus and Ireland are the best places to kick up your feet. Meanwhile, the United States and the United Kingdom don’t even crack the top 15.

The 10 best places to retire right now

According to Hoxton Wealth’s “Retirement Destinations Attractiveness Report” 2026 rankings, these are the destinations offering the best mix of affordability, lifestyle, and long-term security:

1. Cyprus 
=1. Republic of Ireland 
3. Malta 
4. Portugal
5. Panama 
6. Mauritius 
7. Spain 
8. Uruguay 
9. Malaysia 
=9. Italy 

Why Cyprus and Ireland are winning

Hoxton Wealth scored 20 popular retirement destinations on everything that actually matters once the leaving party is over: visa access, cost of living, tax, healthcare, stability, safety, climate, and even how easy it is to plug into local life.

Cyprus tops the charts for sun-soaked tax hacks and an outdoor lifestyle that looks like a pensioner’s Instagram fever dream: 3,388 hours of annual sunshine in Nicosia, generous pension tax treatment, no wealth or inheritance taxes, and English widely spoken. 

“Lower overall living costs can support a more manageable retirement budget, particularly outside main urban areas,” the report notes, adding that Paphos and Limassol have already established expat communities. 

Ireland, meanwhile, quietly ties for first thanks to its zero wealth tax, a booming economy, shared language, low crime rates, and a public health service that is largely free or at a reduced cost. For Brits, retiring there is visa-free under the Common Travel Area (CTA) scheme, and it still feels close enough to “home” for regular grandkid visits.

The brutal reality of retirement in the U.K. and the U.S.

The United States has long marketed itself as the land where hard work pays off, and the United Kingdom as a place of long-term security. But when it comes to retirement, that promise is starting to fray.

Now, countries like Malta, Malaysia, Uruguay, and Turkey outrank them as more attractive places to grow old, offering a stronger mix of value for money, stability, and quality of life. A shift that underscores just how dramatically retirement economics have changed.

The problem isn’t just that people haven’t saved “enough”—it’s that the bar for “enough” keeps moving. In both countries, the cost of living has climbed faster than wages and pensions, eroding the spending power of even relatively healthy nest eggs. 

Retirees who don’t own their homes outright are finding themselves exposed to soaring rents. And even those who do own their own home aren’t immune—taxes, energy bills ans groceries have all surged, quietly eroding the financial cushion many assumed would last decades. In the U.S. specifically, healthcare remains one of the biggest wildcards in retirement planning.

Even well-prepared retirees with at least six figures saved are so worried about running out of money that they’re living well below their means, withdrawing just 2.1% of their assets a year—about half of the classic 4% rule, according to the Fortune 500 investment firm Prudential Financial

According to the Federal Reserve’s data, roughly 1 in 4 Americans aged 55 to 64 retirement age don’t have a retirement account or a traditional pension, leaving them dangerously exposed as they approach retirement.

For boomers who feel priced out of the retirement they were promised at home, moving abroad is no longer a lifestyle fantasy—it’s fast becoming the only way the maths adds up.

Read more about retirement from Fortune’s Orianna Rosa Royle:

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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