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Best tropical place to live?

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unorthodox take, since business etc has not been mentioned as a requirement
Which business? The girls?

I think he has enough of everything.

go where you like the women most ;)
youtube and various apps help that decision process ;)
Revolut gold comes with tinder pro.

But you know what. Duck them. Just go where it is good and enjoy life!
 
that's not really a strong argument for a place.

I know, that's why I put first the strongest argument: being able to hang out with Martin.

But maybe I should dimensionalize more this benefit.

Imagine sitting in bar with Martin and ban random users on OCT by using his phone while he buys you a Bahamas Mama :p

If you don't care about banning randong users on OCT then the second best choice is KL so you can hang out with Andrew Henderson!
 
Imagine if you meet a big guy pretending to be @Martin Everson , you believe him, and he takes you into a back alley to show you how “happy” he is to see you…

Lol how dare you.

btw I wear tight shorts so he would see well in advance of reaching the alley if I am happy to see him smi(&%
 
I am wondering what would be a nice tropical place to live for someone looking for high quality of life - meaning real estate in decent quality, safety, nice restaurants, good flight connections, interesting people, OK healthcare (or short flight to better healthcare).
It seems like most tropical places have rather poor infrastructure outside of the tourist resorts, people are poor, real estate is mostly low quality.
Singapore and, if we include subtropical, Hong Kong. They tick all the boxes.

Panama and Costa Rica aren't bad but you'd be flying to the US for specialized, high-quality healthcare.
 
Hawaii also ticks some of the boxes although I'm guessing you probably don't want something in the US. Flights, building quality, healthcare, restaurants and safety all reasonably good.
 
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What are your other requirements?
I can list >50 places which would fulfill your requirements so far,
healthcare wise and weather wise, for example:

Japan: Okinawa, Fukuoka, Miyazaki, Hiroshima, healthcare cheap and ok
Taiwan: Taipei, Kaohsiung, and many others, healthcare cheap and ok
Mauritius (tax)
Malaysia, Labuan (tax)
Fiji (healthcare a flight away, land cheap, build your own house)
Sri Lanka (healthcare available for $$$, lots of resort properties for sale, you mentioned interesting people)
Cuba (healthcare top, interesting people)
Thailand (south for hotter, or just about anywhere, but north has burning season, building quality up to you)
Indonesia (Bali is overrated and overcrowded, but would fit your requirements so far, lots of better locations in country)
Vietnam: healthcare ok, Phú Quốc island should be tropical enough
the former French and Dutch colonies like Reunion, St. Kitts etc.
....
 
I was thinking a place that has good weather during the Northern-hemisphere winter. I would probably spend summers in different countries in Europe (Greece, Italy, France), and then towards the fall I could migrate to a warmer place to have as my main base. Would be great if there were beaches and lots of green.

I find Singapore quite small/boring - it always feels a bit claustrophobic to me. Always feels like people only live there to work. It's also very expensive.
Hong Kong - absolutely love that city, but it's cold in winter. And rents are extremely high as well.
Panama, Costa Rica - Haven't been, but to be honest, I'm not sure I would like it. So far, I haven't really been a fan of Central/South American countries. I just don't really click with the culture. I think I'll go check it out in the future, but I'm skeptical.
KL - I've always been a huge fan, love how green it is, but somehow during my latest visit I didn't love it as much as before. The air quality can also be very poor, there's often smog/haze.
Japan - Absolutely love it, one of my favorite countries. I've even been thinking about moving there despite colder weather in winter. But it does get quite cold, no? Even in Okinawa. And I have been to Naha, wasn't that impressed. Only tourists and US military.
Taiwan - not a fan. And not really warm in winter.
Mauritius - see above.
Labuan - haven't been, but I guess it will be poorer than KL. Also doubt that tax advantages would be that great, as many tax treaties explicitly exclude Labuan.
Fiji - would love to go, main issue is that it's so far away, annoying to travel to and not easy with the time zone.
Sri Lanka - haven't been, from what I have heard, it is similar to Mauritius, so subpar beaches, quite poor, not very developed.
Cuba - not interested.
Thailand - Definitely one of the top options. Bangkok is great and there's a lot of high-quality real estate, services are cheap etc. Biggest issue is that I don't like the noise and pollution and it's not very walkable. And as soon as you go to a smaller place, it would probably suffer from the same issues again (less developed etc.).
Indonesia - not developed enough. Jakarta is a bit better, but I'm not a fan, it's just a huge city without much soul. Lots of malls and apartment high-rises. Bandung was a bit nicer, but again too small and not that easy to get to.
Vietnam - from what I've heard, Phu Quoc is very underdeveloped outside the 2-3 resorts. Also lots of garbage in the sea/on the beaches. I've been to HCMC and I found it boring/soulless, just like Jakarta.
Hawaii - didn't like it. Very expensive and difficult to find healthy food (USA). Felt like what the Canary Islands are for Europeans - a place you go to when you want nice weather. Nice enough if it's a 4-6 hour flight from your home. Not worth it at all if you have to fly for longer than that.

I would like to live in an apartment that has the build quality of an international five-star hotel. Think Four Seasons (they actually have residences in many places, so it's a good example).
Thailand and the UAE both offer this. UAE is more expensive. Both would be OK options.
But I know next to nothing about the Carribean, so I'm wondering if that could be an alternative.
Another option would be to just spend the winters in Florida.

Tax benefits would be nice, but I'm not that worried, as I would expect to be able to set things up in a tax-efficient way regardless, and I would be OK with paying some tax for higher quality of life.
 
I really know next to nothing about the Carribean - how do those countries compare?
How are the Bahamas different from the Cayman Islands and the Dominican Republic?
St. Barts honestly sounds like the most interesting place (seems like it's much more developed than other islands), but I guess I'm too poor for that.

I have been to the USVI and didn't really like it. It wasn't very developed.
 
I really know next to nothing about the Carribean - how do those countries compare?

Depends what your comparing. Most are developing countries with developing country issues.

How are the Bahamas different from the Cayman Islands and the Dominican Republic?

Bahamas is an archipelago of over 2,000 islands and islets over a vast geographical area. The Cayman islands is not its just an absolute tax free island unlike Bahamas. People and culture is the same. Dominican Republic is same physical island as Haiti. Haiti has completely collapsed so keep that in mind that one side of island might be paradise (DR) but the other side (Haiti) is literal hell on earth run by drug crazed armed gangs and with severe unimaginable poverty.

Have you looked at Bermuda? Direct flight from UK, Canada and US. No personal income tax and its a British Overseas Territory. People are nice and the island functions. You can get residency with remote worker visa to try it out. But its expensive as hell that the prices there make no sense (coming from someone living in Bahamas) conf/(%
 
Probably I'll just have to go and see it for myself. I was just trying to gauge which island might be the best fit for me.
Meaning something that doesn't just feel very remote, underdeveloped etc.
I didn't like the USVI, for example, it just wasn't developed enough for me.
 
Probably I'll just have to go and see it for myself. I was just trying to gauge which island might be the best fit for me.
Meaning something that doesn't just feel very remote, underdeveloped etc.
I didn't like the USVI, for example, it just wasn't developed enough for me.
I’m afraid the only island that can look developed enough for you is the Palm Jumeirah.
 
I’m afraid the only island that can look developed enough for you is the Palm Jumeirah.

That's absolutely possible. No need to be sassy about it.
Saadiyat Island for example is really nice, I could imagine living there. They're also building some new stuff in RAK.
The UAE is nice, lots of entrepreneurs living there. Same with Bangkok, for example, but Bangkok lacks a beach.

My question was whether there is something similar in the Carribean or other places, just to check out alternatives, and I would prefer if i didn't have to visit every single Carribean island to see how they differ. I don't want to live in a place where everything is s**t outside of 2-3 nice hotels.

Probably Koh Samui or Phuket could fit the bill as well, though i found at least Koh Samui still to be rather underdeveloped.
 
I don’t know about you, but living on a Caribbean island must require being prepared for a completely different lifestyle compared to just coming from a small provincial town in the EU.
 
I don’t know about you, but living on a Caribbean island must require being prepared for a completely different lifestyle compared to just coming from a small provincial town in the EU.
Not that much. Only real difference is the lack of Amazon.
 
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Not that much. Only real difference is the lack of Amazon.
Why? Isn't that only in South America anyway? And besides that it is almost burned down. In a few years not much difference. ;)

Amazon_CIAT_(2).webp


I prefer mountains anyway. Maybe better the Caribbeans then!
 
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