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Mexico vs Vietnam for Retirement 2026: Cost, Visas & Healthcare Compared

An honest 2026 comparison of retiring in Mexico versus Vietnam: real monthly budgets in USD, pesos and dong, visa realities, healthcare quality, climate, taxes, safety, property ownership for foreigners, and flight distance — with a clear verdict for North American retirees.

2026-07-11

Cheapest on Earth vs Close to Home

Vietnam consistently ranks among the world’s cheapest places to live, drawing budget-minded expats to cities like Da Nang and Ho Chi Minh City. Mexico can’t quite match Vietnam’s ultra-low costs — but it counters with something Vietnam can’t: it’s a few hours from North America, not the other side of the planet. For most US and Canadian retirees, that trade-off is the whole story.

Here’s a straight 2026 comparison.

Cost of Living

Vietnam is one of the cheapest destinations anywhere.

  • Mexico: A comfortable couple’s budget: $1,900–$2,900 USD/month. Rent for a good 2-bedroom in Mérida or Guadalajara: $800–$1,400 USD (14,000–25,000 MXN).
  • Vietnam: A couple can live comfortably on $1,200–$2,000 USD/month. Rent for a nice apartment in Da Nang or Ho Chi Minh City: $400–$800 USD (10–20 million VND). Street food meals under $2; local costs are extraordinarily low.

Vietnam is the clear budget champion. Advantage: Vietnam.

Visas & Residency

This is Vietnam’s weak point for retirees.

  • Mexico: A clear residency path — Temporary Resident visa (income of about $4,300–$5,000 USD/month or $70,000–$80,000 USD savings), renewable, converting to Permanent Residency after 4 years.
  • Vietnam: Has no dedicated retirement visa. Expats typically string together tourist and business visas or temporary resident cards tied to work or investment. Rules shift, and long-term stability without a job or company is legally awkward.

Mexico offers a legitimate, stable, long-term residency; Vietnam does not. Advantage: Mexico, decisively.

Healthcare

  • Vietnam has improving healthcare, with good international hospitals in major cities (often used by expats) but weaker public facilities. Serious cases sometimes mean evacuation to Bangkok or Singapore. Costs are low.
  • Mexico offers excellent private care in major cities at 30–50% of US prices; specialist visits $30–$50 USD, with top hospitals that rarely require going abroad for care.

Mexico’s private healthcare is more consistently advanced and self-sufficient. Advantage: Mexico.

Climate & Lifestyle

  • Vietnam: Hot and humid, with regional variation — the north has a cool season, the south is tropical year-round, and typhoons hit the coast. Vibrant, fast-paced, deeply affordable street life.
  • Mexico: Climate variety — tropical coasts, eternal-spring highlands, dry north. You choose your ideal weather.

Both are exciting and rich in culture. Mexico offers more climate control and a cultural context closer to Western norms for North Americans. Advantage: Mexico on climate and familiarity; Vietnam on sheer energy and value.

Taxes

  • Mexico generally does not tax foreign pensions or Social Security and has no wealth tax.
  • Vietnam taxes residents on worldwide income with progressive rates, though enforcement on foreign pensions for retirees is inconsistent. The lack of a clear retiree tax framework adds uncertainty.

Mexico is clearer and lighter for pension-based retirees. Advantage: Mexico.

Safety

Both are generally safe day-to-day. Vietnam has very low violent crime but common petty theft and chaotic, dangerous traffic (motorbike accidents are a real risk). Mexico’s reputation is worse than the reality in retiree hubs like Mérida, San Miguel, and the Yucatán, which are among the safest in Latin America. Draw — each is safe with common sense, but traffic risk in Vietnam is notable.

Real Estate & Property Ownership

This is a major divider.

  • Mexico: Foreigners can own property and land freely, with coastal purchases via a secure fideicomiso trust. Quality Mérida home: $150,000–$300,000 USD — a real, ownable asset.
  • Vietnam: Foreigners cannot own land (the state owns all land) and may only buy apartments/condos on time-limited 50-year leaseholds, with caps on how many units foreigners can own in a building. True ownership is not available.

For retirees who want to own their home outright, this is decisive. Advantage: Mexico, decisively.

Getting There / Proximity

  • Mexico: 2–5 hours by air from most US cities, same or near time zones.
  • Vietnam: 18–24+ hours with connections and a 12+ hour time difference. Visits home are long, costly, and draining.

For North Americans with family back home, this seals it. Advantage: Mexico.

The Verdict

Choose Vietnam if your single biggest priority is the lowest possible cost of living and you’re comfortable with visa uncertainty, leasehold-only property, and being a full day’s travel from North America.

Choose Mexico for a stable residency path, real property ownership, advanced private healthcare, climate variety, and proximity to family. Vietnam wins on raw price — but Mexico wins on everything that makes a retirement secure and sustainable for a North American, at a cost that’s still a fraction of home.

The Bottom Line

Vietnam and Mexico both offer affordable, adventurous retirements — but they’re not equal on the things that matter most for stability: residency, property ownership, and staying close to family. If Mexico is the smarter fit for you, the Mexico Living team can help you compare cities, understand the visa process, and find a home you can truly own. Schedule a free call or reach out on WhatsApp, and we’ll share honest, on-the-ground advice from people who live here.

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