avatarGreyson Ferguson

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2030

Abstract

and the possibility of developing cancer from the containers didn’t sit all that well either. Although at least that would take care of worrying about paying for retirement.</p><p id="6b47">Nothing added up.</p><p id="5b9d">At least nothing in the United States.</p><h1 id="5fc7">The Expensive Part</h1><p id="1ee6">The fact of the matter is, the United States is a great place to live, if you can afford it. And it’s becoming increasingly difficult to do just that.</p><p id="451a">I lived on protein powder, which I used as meal replacements. Regular meals consisted of PB&J and soups made from beans and lentils. That 3,000 gone before bills, which jumped close to 3,500 once utilities and other monthly bills were included, left little to spend on living expenses.</p><p id="5528">I made far too much to qualify for affordable healthcare. So I paid the no-insurance fine, and hopped down to Mexico from Tucson when I needed dental work.</p><p id="b0c0">And that was the answer. Sitting there in the waiting room of a Nogales, Mexico dental office, it finally dawned on me. I could barely survive in the United States, let alone live, but maybe if I left, things would be different.</p><p id="0aaf">So I started to look up external options. Places I could afford to live. Where I could actually enjoy life. Maybe even put money toward those student loans shackled to me.</p><p id="54dc">I needed an affordable country and one I could move to with my dogs.</p><h1 id="20ce">Destinations</h1><p id="11e9">Affordable didn’t prove difficult to find. Rent in nearly every city in the world would cost less than Tucson, Arizona. Funny how I could move to Paris or Madrid, if I wanted, and pay less than Tucson, or Lansing, Michigan. Or Morgantown, West Virginia.</p><p id="785a">No offense to the good folk of West Virginia, but when it comes down to Valencia or Charleston, there’s only one correct answer (especially when life in the Mediterranean coastal city costs less).</p><p id="345a">The biggest caveat was a country wi

Options

lling to accept my dogs, one of which was a pit bull. With countries around the globe imposing bully breed bans, as well as the United States having a “high rabies” list of countries that makes returning from those countries difficult, my options became far more limited.</p><p id="e881">With a desire to move to South America, those two mandates just about decided for me. We would move to Buenos Aires, Argentina.</p><p id="c86f">Living in one of the most metropolitan cities in the world, my total monthly living expenses run 1,000. For everything. Rent, utilities, food, cell phone, medical services, vet visits. Everything.</p><p id="4de9">It costs me more to maintain my U.S. cell phone number for one month than for an entire year of cellular service in Argentina. Medical services range from a quarter to a tenth of what it costs in the United States. For one prescription medication which runs 100 a month in the U.S., I pay 1.50. One of my dogs, whom I sadly said goodbye to after 12 years of loving service, needed an assortment of treatments. The vet visit, with blood work, ultrasound, cortisone shot, and a month of medication, cost under 30.</p><p id="6106">My dog lived an extra six months in Argentina because in the U.S. I wouldn’t have been able to afford everything she needed.</p><p id="bf55">After two years of calling South America home, I’ve truly lived more in the past 24 months than in the 15 years since graduating college. I’ve traveled more, experienced more, and connected me, all without feeling the weight of an over-expensed life in the United States.</p><p id="7529">I’ve paid off various loans, saved money toward a house (haven’t decided where that will be located), and have felt the stress of bills, politics, healthcare, and just daily life melt away.</p><p id="8c2a">Moving out of the United States has proven to be one of the most important decisions I’ve ever made.</p><p id="630d">If you’re in a similar boat, perhaps it’s a decision you should consider as well.</p></article></body>

I Couldn’t Afford the U.S., So I Left it. Maybe You Should Too

The United States is a fantastic place, if you can afford it. Thankfully, there are other options.

Author Photo

I’ve spent the last two years living in South America. Six of these months were in Lima, Peru, and the rest in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

I decided to make the move while the world sat shut down amid COVID. Lockdowns tend to give you time to think, analyze, and decide. I had $800 in private student loans, so those were not frozen or put on government backburners like its federal loan brethren. Rents were surging past $2,000 a month. Without paying anything toward food, regular bills, or basic survival a cool $36,000 a year would go poof, just like that.

My apartment in Tucson, Arizona, decided to increase rent by nearly 40%, in the middle of a pandemic, and I knew I couldn’t swing that unless I started to swing from stripper poles on a self-minted OnlyFans page. But after some research, it seemed like the demand for pale, mid-30-year-olds with an average body and less than stellar hairline wasn’t all that high.

So I needed an alternative.

Few Alternatives To Choose From

I searched for the most affordable rental cities in the country. Places very literally in the middle of nowhere Kansas and Iowa and West Virginia. Prices were better, but not to the point where I could actually begin to pay things down.

I searched out shipper container homes. If I could buy a slice of land, again in the middle of nowhere, and slowly build out a house made from shipping containers. The ones from China formerly used to move industrial waste were somewhat affordable.

But I didn’t trust myself cutting out windows in metal walls, and the possibility of developing cancer from the containers didn’t sit all that well either. Although at least that would take care of worrying about paying for retirement.

Nothing added up.

At least nothing in the United States.

The Expensive Part

The fact of the matter is, the United States is a great place to live, if you can afford it. And it’s becoming increasingly difficult to do just that.

I lived on protein powder, which I used as meal replacements. Regular meals consisted of PB&J and soups made from beans and lentils. That $3,000 gone before bills, which jumped close to $3,500 once utilities and other monthly bills were included, left little to spend on living expenses.

I made far too much to qualify for affordable healthcare. So I paid the no-insurance fine, and hopped down to Mexico from Tucson when I needed dental work.

And that was the answer. Sitting there in the waiting room of a Nogales, Mexico dental office, it finally dawned on me. I could barely survive in the United States, let alone live, but maybe if I left, things would be different.

So I started to look up external options. Places I could afford to live. Where I could actually enjoy life. Maybe even put money toward those student loans shackled to me.

I needed an affordable country and one I could move to with my dogs.

Destinations

Affordable didn’t prove difficult to find. Rent in nearly every city in the world would cost less than Tucson, Arizona. Funny how I could move to Paris or Madrid, if I wanted, and pay less than Tucson, or Lansing, Michigan. Or Morgantown, West Virginia.

No offense to the good folk of West Virginia, but when it comes down to Valencia or Charleston, there’s only one correct answer (especially when life in the Mediterranean coastal city costs less).

The biggest caveat was a country willing to accept my dogs, one of which was a pit bull. With countries around the globe imposing bully breed bans, as well as the United States having a “high rabies” list of countries that makes returning from those countries difficult, my options became far more limited.

With a desire to move to South America, those two mandates just about decided for me. We would move to Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Living in one of the most metropolitan cities in the world, my total monthly living expenses run $1,000. For everything. Rent, utilities, food, cell phone, medical services, vet visits. Everything.

It costs me more to maintain my U.S. cell phone number for one month than for an entire year of cellular service in Argentina. Medical services range from a quarter to a tenth of what it costs in the United States. For one prescription medication which runs $100 a month in the U.S., I pay $1.50. One of my dogs, whom I sadly said goodbye to after 12 years of loving service, needed an assortment of treatments. The vet visit, with blood work, ultrasound, cortisone shot, and a month of medication, cost under $30.

My dog lived an extra six months in Argentina because in the U.S. I wouldn’t have been able to afford everything she needed.

After two years of calling South America home, I’ve truly lived more in the past 24 months than in the 15 years since graduating college. I’ve traveled more, experienced more, and connected me, all without feeling the weight of an over-expensed life in the United States.

I’ve paid off various loans, saved money toward a house (haven’t decided where that will be located), and have felt the stress of bills, politics, healthcare, and just daily life melt away.

Moving out of the United States has proven to be one of the most important decisions I’ve ever made.

If you’re in a similar boat, perhaps it’s a decision you should consider as well.

Expat
Financial Planning
Moving Abroad
Argentina
Culture
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