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cleverman

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I suppose it depends on how you define "Asia," but Americans at least can get a 10-year multiple-entry visa for India permitting a half-year stay per entry, and they can stay in Georgia for up to a year -- yes, a year -- without a visa.

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As I said, India permits Americans with those visas to stay six months per entry. But since the weather in India is worse than miserable 4/5 months a year, I think a long break over the hot and monsoon seasons would be very welcome.

 

Tbilisi has a lot of character and seems quite welcoming to foreigners.

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On 11/12/2018 at 2:25 PM, watcharacters said:

 

This thread may be very disconcerting to some members of TVF.

It is. If you could sell your house as quick as you bought it I would be gone to one of those countries. I was in Indonesia a few years ago, they also opened the door for expats to live and buy property.

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14 minutes ago, Old Croc said:

Accommodation supplied with free steam heating:

homeless-in-toronto-winter.jpg

 

They have steam heat in Yakustk too and the girls there loooove foreigners! All you need to do is tell them you live in California!

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" They have steam heat in Yakustk too and the girls there loooove foreigners! All you need to do is tell them you live in California! "

Always a good idea to start off a new relationship with a lie.... if going this route, just say you're burned out on/in California... could use that lie to explain why you have nothing

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15 hours ago, robsamui said:

I've been living in Thailand full-time since 1997 but for the last 12 months have been looking closely at alternatives - the Thai admin has become positively hostile lately.

The requirements: good climate, tolerable monsoon/rainy season, cheaper than Thailand, and benign immigration policy. Plus a coastal region with beaches. I'm looking for somewhere to retire now and run down my days, so I'm not interested in travelling at all.

I looked VERY closely at Mexico for several months, joining a number of local forums and interacting with people on the spot. But all sorts of problems, including the same  kind of insane red tape with visas etc as Thailand. (And I'm not American or Canadian.)

 

Goa was another possibility - but 5 or 6 months of rain. Philippines? In the middle of the earthquake/hurricane/belt.

 

Cambodia - possible, and the visa rules are the easiest anywhere - go there and (if over 50) you can get unlimited 1-year repeats without having to show any income.  But not that much cheaper than Thailand and the coast around Sihanoukville not only has a long rainy season but is now over-run with Chinese investors and tourists.

Vietnam on the other hand is most attractive. Americans get a whole separate visa deal with this country. But for Commonwealth citizens it works like this. Before you come you hook up online with one of the many agents and they will authorise the letter of introduction that you need.

 

This letter essentially is a heads-up to the Immigration department, and requests that you be granted one of the various visa types. You pay the agent a fee that relates to the type of visa - only maybe $35 for a 90-day multi entry tourist visa or as much as $500 for a 6-month ME business visa (for which you don't need permits or documents, just cash in hand). You then pay extra for the actual stamp in your passport from Immigration ($25? I forget.) And that's it. People staying here long-term simply do border runs every several months - the repeats are unlimited.

 

The cost of living is effectively half that of beachside Thailand, even in nice little holiday towns like Nha Trang. Unfortunately that area is condo-crazy, but you only need to go 3 or 4 Km inland to find a big 2-bed semi/furnished house in its own grounds for around $300 US a month.

Motorbikes (scooters) are easy, too, requiring no registration or paperwork (as we know it) although it's advisable to buy your own insurance. Honda Click, Yam Nouveau or Airblade = $200 - $500 depending on age/condition - just hand the money over and drive away.

 

The roads are generally pretty poor, and most expats seem to fly in and out to renew visas (booking in advance to find cheap fares) and arrange with their agent to have their intro letter ready for immigration on the way back. It is possible to extend your visa without leaving the country, but it's a very silly price, so it seems that nobody does that.

The only downside that I can see is that the immigration officer is not obliged to give you the visa that you want, even though you have paid the agent's fee in advance. Reputable agents will advise you of the current visa climate, and what is safe to apply for - ie I've read reports of optimists going for a second end-to-end 6-month business visa and being given a 3-month stamp instead.

 

Overall I'm thinking this is going to be preferable to Thailand - but we'll have to wait and see how the new visa regs end up panning out over the next 4 or 5 months!

 

I recently (in the last month) visited Mexico. It has really changed. Very clean and friendly. No garbage laying everywhere like here. Very , very few street dogs. You can own land on a title as long as it is 50km from the seashore. You can own on the seashore with a 50 year renewable, sellable bank trust. Healthcare is equivalent to here, maybe even better. Very high on my alternative to here if things keeping getting worse.

On 11/6/2018 at 6:07 AM, HappyAndRich said:

That´s same like living long term on tourist visas here. We were talking retirement and requirements for doing that the right way.

 

 

 

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7 minutes ago, DavidB4 said:

I'm in Cambodia right now and would not recommend it. The food is at least 50% more than it was in Thailand and far less selection, minimal street food. If you have money to eat in a restaurant every night then you'd be OK. Also its getting more and more difficult to get longer visas here. I met a British pensioner who has a Cambodian wife, don't know about the legalities of the marriage...didn't ask, and he has to go home (which he does not want to do) after over 12 years here. 

I'd like to know the particulars of that person's problem - paying an agent $25 for another 1-year ME Visa is standard.  I heard they started requiring work-permits also be purchased, in some cases, whether actually working or not - but those were approx ~$325 a year at that time.

 

Street food "drives by" on some streets regularly (PP), but not much flavor in most local food.  Funny thing, I would go there for Thai visas years ago, and visit a Thai restaurant to get something tasty to eat.  But, if staying longer in a place with a kitchen, you can find all the ingredients for good food (including Thai style) in the open-air markets.

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