Looking for the best places to live around the world? There’s no better source than expats, who have a unique POV on what it’s like to live in a foreign country—and in the U.S.
For the 10th year in a row, InterNations has polled nearly 12,000 expats around the globe to come up with a definitive ranking of the best places to live.
The Expat Insider 2023 culls the opinions of expats representing 177 nationalities and living in 181 countries or territories. The report ranks 53 countries by analyzing factors such as quality of life, ease of settling in, personal finance and more.
The Highest Ranked Place To Live
The best destination to live as an expat in 2023? Mexico is the winner for the second year in a row, with 90% of expats saying they are happy with their life south of the border.
This country has long been an expat favorite. “Mexico has actually received excellent results since our very first Expat Insider survey ten years ago. It has always made it into the top five worldwide,” InterNations founder Malte Zeeck told me in an interview.
According to Zeeck, Mexico’s continued popularity among expats is largely due to its outstanding performance regarding both personal finance and the ease of settling in. “For instance, it’s where expats worldwide find it easiest to get used to the local culture, where they feel most welcome and where they describe the local residents as the friendliest population worldwide,” says Zeeck. “Together with the relatively low cost of living and the attractive climate, this turns Mexico into an expat magnet.”
But there are some drawbacks. “Personal safety remains one of Mexico’s biggest issues—for locals and expats alike,” says Zeeck. In 2022, Mexico ranked 49 out of 52 destinations for safety; this year, it comes in 49 out of 53 countries. Among the 2023 respondents, 18% of expats report not feeling safe in Mexico (vs. 8% globally).
More Top Places to Live
Second on the list this year is another expat magnet: Spain, which moved up a few notches from the number five spot in 2022.
What makes Spain an expat favorite? According to Zeeck, Spain has always ranked in the top 10 for quality of life since the company did the first Expat Insider survey. Expats are also happy with the leisure options: Spain is the global winner in that category in 2023. Culture and nightlife are also hits (88% of expats are happy with the offerings), along with recreational sports (91% of expats are happy). Rounding things out: Spain ranks third globally for climate and weather, which makes it easy to get out and enjoy all these activities.
The third-ranked country on this year’s Expat Insider list: Panama. “Panama’s performance in third place came as a bit of a surprise to us,” says Zeeck. “It hadn’t featured in the survey at all in 2022, due to a lack of local respondents that year, and now it has made quite a spectacular reentry with its best Expat Insider result ever.”
Some of Panama’s strengths are similar to Mexico’s. The country comes in fourth when it comes to the ease of settling in and eighth for personal finance. It also has high scores for housing, coming in fifth worldwide.
What Expats Think of the United States
When it comes to the United States, expats aren’t as happy. The U.S. dropped considerably in this year’s Expat Insider survey to number 30. Last year, it was number 14. What contributed to the decline?
“In areas where the U.S. has never done well before, it gets even worse,” says Zeeck. “For example, it has moved from 47th to 51st place for the affordability of public transportation. And with regard to topics where it usually gets average to good results, its performance is still okay, but slightly worse. For example, it came 18th for general friendliness last year and now ends up in a mediocre 26th place. All of this adds up to impact the overall ranking.”
There are a few areas in the U.S. where the changes in the results are especially noticeable, and most of them are related to finances or work. “Expats report markedly lower satisfaction with the general cost of living and the affordability of housing, as well as factors such as the local job market, the state of the economy and their own job security,” says Zeeck.
The Nordic Paradox
Interestingly Norway is consistently named one of the happiest places on earth, but in this list, it is close to the bottom of the list—coming in at number 52 out of 53 countries. What is the disconnect?
“We’re well aware of what we like to call the ‘Nordic paradox.’ Norway, but also the other Nordic countries featured in the Expat Insider survey, do very well in other rankings such as the World Happiness Index—but that is usually not reflected in our results,” says Zeeck.
Why is that? “For starters, the World Happiness Index is based on a variety of hard facts, i.e., statistical data from official sources,” says Zeeck, who points out that the data in the World Happiness Index covers dimensions like peacefulness, democracy, human rights and internet accessa.
“It’s based on the implicit assumption that a good performance in these areas will automatically make the country’s local population happier,” says Zeeck.
The Expat Insider survey, on the other hand, doesn’t measure data from external sources. “We simply ask people about their personal satisfaction with selected aspects of everyday life abroad,” says Zeeck. Some of these factors are quite similar to some covered in the World Happiness Index, such as air quality, the ease of getting high-speed internet access and personal safety. “So, expats’ subjective opinions often agree with objective third-party statistics,” says Zeeck.
But according to Zeeck, the one reason for expats’ unhappiness in Norway and other Nordic countries might be something that’s not measured in the World Happiness Index—the ease of settling in. “Trying to make friends as adults and building a personal support network as an outsider in a society that’s often described as introverted, aloof or closed off can be extremely difficult,” says Zeeck. “And if you’re feeling socially isolated and lonely, you probably won’t appreciate a country’s local air quality or the high GDP per capita.”
Making Friends Abroad
The Expat Insider 2023 also looks at where it is easiest and hardest to make friends abroad—an important subject, with so many digital nomads and retirees moving to other countries.
Zeek says he believes that the ease of making friends abroad is connected with a population’s general friendliness and their openness toward foreign residents. The top five countries ifor finding friends are Panama, Mexico, Kenya, Brazil and the Philippines. According to Zeeck, these countries are also in the top 10 for general friendliness of their residents and friendliness towards foreign residents.
The bottom five countries for making friends are Denmark, Austria, Kuwait, Norway and Germany. “When it comes to the population’s general friendliness, they all rank among the bottom ten, which might explain the difficulty for expats to make friends there,” says Zeeck.
Is it a coincidence that the friendliest places are southern countries with warmer climates and that most of the unfriendliest countries are northern countries with cooler clients? Do people tend to be friendlier where it’s warm? “We can’t really say. We can only speculate that a mild climate probably allows people to go out more and, therefore, to socialize more,” says Zeeck.
Another reason: “Less individualistic societies like the ones mentioned in our top five ranking for making friends tend to still have more tightly knit communities where people spend more time with each other and help out each other more,” says Zeeck. “They might therefore also naturally be more open-minded towards new arrivals, such as foreign residents, and embrace them. But again, this is mere speculation and is not based on our actual survey data.”
So how does the United States do when it comes to making friends? “The USA ranks pretty much midfield in our survey,” says Zeeck. “They come 24th for local friendliness and 28th for finding friends.”
The Lowest Ranked Country
Coming in at the bottom of the Expat Insider list is Kuwait, which ranks 53 out of 53 countries for the second year in a row. “Kuwait is the polar opposite of Mexico,” says Zeeck. “This means that it has not only placed last in both 2022 and 2023, but it has consistently ranked among the worst-rated countries for the past decade.”
According to Zeeck, Kuwait performs poorly in most areas. “The overall Expat Insider survey ranking is based on up to 56 different rating factors, and in 2023, Kuwait ends up in the bottom five for more than 30 of them,” he says. “So, it’s no wonder that only 43% of expats are happy with their life in Kuwait, compared to a global average of 72%, with the low level of general satisfaction also impacting Kuwait’s final ranking overall.”
Read on for the expat ranking of 53 countries around the world.
Ranked: The 15 Best Places to Live
- Mexico
- Spain
- Panama
- Malaysia
- Taiwan
- Thailand
- Costa Rica
- Philippines
- Bahrain
- Portugal
- UAE
- Oman
- Indonesia
- Vietnam
- Brazil
- Finland
- Colombia
- Kenya
- Luxembourg
- Australia
- Czech Republic
- Netherlands
- Switzerland
- Sweden
- Greece
- China
- Canada
- Saudi Arabia
- Estonia
- United States
- Qatar
- Cyprus
- France
- Hungary
- Poland
- India
- Singapore
- Belgium
- Ireland
- Hong Kong
- Denmark
- Austria
- United Kingdom
- Japan
- New Zealand
- Malta
- Italy
- South Africa
- Germany
- South Korea
- Turkey
- Norway
- Kuwait
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