- RETIREMENT GUIDE
- By Wei Landgraf
Retire in Sint Maarten: The 2026 Guide for US & Canadian Citizens
I live on Sint Maarten full-time and I work with North American buyers who are weighing this island as a retirement base. Most of what’s online about retiring here is written by people who’ve never lived through a hurricane season, never argued with the SZV office, and never sat with a doctor at SMMC at 11pm. This guide is different.
If you’re 50+, US or Canadian, and trying to figure out whether Sint Maarten makes sense for the next 20 years. Not just the next 20 days. Read this end to end. Then book a call.
Key Takeaways
- Sint Maarten has a real retirement tax program (the Penshonado) that caps qualifying foreign income at roughly 10% for retirees 50+ who buy a property of at least NAF 450,000 (~USD 250,000) within 18 months of registration.
- Medicare does not cover you in Sint Maarten. You will need either a private international plan, SZV (the local system), or a hybrid. Plan on $2,800–$5,000/year for ages 60–70 with solid coverage.
- A comfortable retirement budget here is $3,500–$6,000 per month for a couple, depending on whether you own outright, rent, or carry a mortgage.
- Cole Bay, Cupecoy, Pelican Key, Simpson Bay, Maho, Oyster Pond, Guana Bay, and Point Blanche each suit very different retirees. The choice matters more than the country choice.
- The biggest mistake North Americans make: treating SXM like a long vacation. The second biggest: underestimating hurricane risk and shipping costs.
Who this guide is for
You’re somewhere on this list:
- The early retiree (50–60). Pension, investment income, maybe still doing some remote consulting. Penshonado is built for you.
- The traditional retiree (60–75). Social Security or CPP/OAS, a paid-off house in the US or Canada, looking to sell and downsize to the Caribbean.
- The snowbird (any age). Keeping the home base in Toronto or Boston, wintering down here 4–6 months a year.
- The legacy buyer. Multi-generational wealth, looking for a holding asset and a part-time residence.
If you’re none of these, the rest of the island can still work. But the pages I link below are calibrated for you specifically.
The 90-day reality check
I tell every new client the same thing: spend 90 days on the island before you list your house in Connecticut or Calgary. Not a week at a resort. Ninety days. Rent a real apartment in a real neighborhood. Drive the back roads. Get a tooth filled at a local dentist. Shop at Carrefour on a Tuesday afternoon, not Sunday.
That’s how you find out whether the island fits you, or whether you fit a brochure of the island.
The clients who skip this step are the ones who flip the property in 18 months. The clients who do it stay 15 years.
The Penshonado: Sint Maarten's retiree tax program
The Penshonado regime is the single most important reason a North American with foreign pension income, brokerage income, or rental income from back home should look hard at SXM. The summary:
- Age: 50 or older at registration.
- Residency requirement before applying: lived outside Sint Maarten for at least 60 consecutive months (you almost certainly qualify).
- Filing window: register with the tax authority within 2 months of registering with the population registry.
- Property requirement: acquire a property valued at minimum NAF 450,000 (~USD 250,000) within 18 months of registration, for personal use only.
- Tax rate: approximately 10% on qualifying foreign income. Pensions, investment income, rental income from foreign properties.
- Alternative election: a fixed taxable base of NAF 500,000. Useful for very high earners.
What this means in practice: if your retirement income is $120,000/year mostly from a 401(k), an IRA, and some dividends, your Sint Maarten tax bill on that income is roughly $12,000 instead of the ~$20,000–$30,000 the same income would attract in the US (federal + state). The math works.
What it does not do:
- Eliminate your US tax obligations (US citizens are taxed on worldwide income. You may use the Foreign Tax Credit but you still file the 1040).
- Apply automatically. You file. You document. You bring receipts.
- Cover Sint Maarten-source income, which is taxed normally.
Full breakdown: Penshonado Program: 10% Tax for Retirees Over 50 · US tax rules when you retire here · Canadian tax rules
Healthcare on a small island
This is where most North American retirements either work or fail.
SXM has two hospitals you’ll actually use: – Sint Maarten Medical Center (SMMC). Cay Hill, Dutch side. Modern, recently expanded, OK for 80% of what you’ll need. – Centre Hospitalier Louis-Constant Fleming (CHLCF). Marigot, French side. Also solid, especially for emergencies near the north of the island.
For complex care. Major cardiac, oncology requiring radiation, complex orthopedic. You fly. Most expats route to Miami, San Juan, or back to a US/Canadian center where they have a relationship.
What this means for your insurance setup: 1. Have medical evacuation cover ($300–$700/year for a couple) regardless of any other plan. 2. Either enroll in SZV (the local mandatory system) or carry a private international plan (~$2,800–$5,000/year for ages 60–70). Most retirees I work with carry private international + SZV as a backup. 3. Medicare does not cover you here. Period. There is one exception. If you’re admitted to a hospital in the US or Puerto Rico after a medevac, that hospitalization is covered.
Deep dives: Will Medicare cover me? · SZV explained ·
Residency: the legal piece
There are three paths a North American retiree typically takes:
- The 90-day rotation. Visa-free entry as a US or Canadian, leave before 90 days, come back. Legal but exhausting. Works for early-stage exploration, not long-term.
- Penshonado residency. Tied to the tax program above. Property + age + paperwork = a permit.
- DAFT (Dutch-American Friendship Treaty). US citizens only. Self-employment-based residency, requires a small business + capital deposit. More complex but flexible if you want to keep working.
The DIY residence permit path is real but slow. Bring patience. We have a separate post that walks the residency permit process step by step: Sint Maarten Residency for Retirees.
What it actually costs
Round numbers for a couple, owning outright (no mortgage):
| Category | Lean ($3,500/mo) | Comfortable ($5,000/mo) | Premium ($8,000+/mo) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Property maintenance/HOA | $400 | $700 | $1,500 |
| Utilities (power, water, internet) | $400 | $600 | $900 |
| Groceries | $700 | $900 | $1,300 |
| Dining out | $200 | $500 | $1,200 |
| Healthcare (premiums + out of pocket) | $300 | $500 | $900 |
| Transport (1 car, gas, insurance) | $400 | $500 | $700 |
| Travel + entertainment | $300 | $700 | $1,500 |
| Misc / shipping / pets | $200 | $400 | $600 |
| Reserve for hurricane / repairs | $600 | $700 | $700 |
The reserve line is non-negotiable. The 2017 hurricane lesson is permanent: if you can’t absorb a $20,000 deductible hit on a hurricane year without selling assets, you’re undercapitalized for this island.
Full numbers: Real cost of retirement in SXM (2026) · $3K, $5K, $10K monthly budget examples · Grocery and utility costsGrocery and utility costs
The neighborhood decision
This matters more than the island decision. The neighborhoods feel like different countries. A snapshot:
- Cupecoy. Luxury condos, secure, close to Maho amenities. The “polished retirement” choice. Good for retirees who want walkable amenities and don’t want to drive much.
- Simpson Bay. Lagoon, marina, restaurants, social. Active retirees and snowbirds love it.
- Pelican Key. Quieter than Simpson Bay, good views, mid-range condos. Popular with Canadian buyers.
- Maho. Busy, dining, the airport plane-watching crowd. Loud parts and quiet parts.
- Cole Bay. Central, residential, where I live. Authentic, mixed-use, more local.
- Oyster Pond. Quiet, marina, sits on the French border. Best for retirees who want calm.
- Guana Bay. Surf-adjacent, residential, more space, more wind.
- Point Blanche. Hilltop views above Philipsburg, value buy, hidden gem.
Pick wrong and you’ll move within 18 months. Pick right and the island becomes home. I always recommend renting in your top two before you buy.
If you’re past neighborhood scouting and into the property hunt, the three pillars to read are: the full St Maarten real estate guide, homes for sale by price band and type, and the foreign buyer’s step-by-step process guide.
Snowbirds: the part-time path
A meaningful share of my Canadian and US clients aren’t retiring full-time. They want December–April here, summers in Muskoka or Maine. That’s an entirely different financial and tax setup.
For Canadians specifically: provincial healthcare residency rules matter. Ontario, BC, and Quebec each have their own absence thresholds (typically 153–212 days you can be out of province per year before losing OHIP/MSP/RAMQ). Time it wrong and your Canadian healthcare lapses.
Snowbird-specific guides: Canadian Snowbird’s Guide to SXM · Snowbird rent vs buy · Snowbird-friendly condos · Canadian 180-day rule
How Sint Maarten compares to the alternatives
If you’re shopping retirement destinations, you’re probably also looking at:
- Portugal. D7 visa is generous, healthcare is strong, but humidity, language, and a 9-hour flight from East Coast.
- Costa Rica. Pensionado program, mainland healthcare, but Spanish, distance from family.
- Panama. Strongest pensioner discount program, but heat, humidity, infrastructure varies.
- USVI (St. Thomas, St. John, St. Croix). US territory means Medicare works and dollars stay simple, but real estate is much more expensive and the tax picture is different.
- Aruba & Curaçao. Dutch-Caribbean cousins. Drier (less hurricane risk), more conservative housing markets, less cosmopolitan.
The single comparison worth reading on this site: St Maarten vs St Martin. Which side to live on. Cross-country comparisons (Portugal, Panama, USVI) come up but rarely change anyone’s mind. Happy to talk them through on a call if they’re blocking you.
The practical stuff nobody tells you
These are the questions I get on call number two, never call number one:
- Banking: opening an account here as a retiree is paperwork-heavy. Bring your tax filings.
- Shipping your belongings: a 20-foot container runs $4,000–$7,000 from East Coast US. Customs is paperwork.
- Pets: USDA APHIS health certificate, vaccines, airline rules. It’s doable, plan 6 weeks.
- Doctors: the network is small and word-of-mouth. I keep a current list.
- Community: the expat retiree community is real and active. Friday at SBYC, Tuesday yoga, Wednesday bridge.
FAQ
Can a US citizen really retire in Sint Maarten with the Penshonado tax rate?
Yes. Provided you’re 50+, lived outside SXM for 5+ years, register with the population registry, register with the tax authority within 2 months, and acquire a property of at least NAF 450,000 (~USD 250,000) within 18 months. You’re still subject to US worldwide income tax. The Penshonado is the SXM-side tax, not the US-side.
Will Medicare cover my care in Sint Maarten?
No. Original Medicare and most Medicare Advantage plans do not provide coverage outside the US. Plan on private international health insurance and/or SZV enrollment, plus a medical evacuation policy. The exception is if you medevac back to a US hospital. That admission is generally covered.
How much do I need to retire comfortably in Sint Maarten?
A couple owning outright with modest dining-out and one car can run a comfortable retirement around $5,000/month. Lean is $3,500/month, premium is $8,000+/month. Add a hurricane reserve of at least $700/month even on the lean budget.
Is Sint Maarten safe for retirees?
Generally yes, especially in residential expat areas like Cupecoy, Pelican Key, Oyster Pond, and Point Blanche. Avoid leaving valuables in vehicles. Most retirees report feeling as safe or safer than their previous mainland city.
What about hurricanes?
2017’s Irma reset every assumption. Modern construction is built or retrofitted to category-5 standards. Expect a 5–10% chance of a hit any given year. Insurance is real-money expensive but available. Build a reserve, choose construction wisely, and don’t buy below 30 feet of elevation in flood zones.
Can Canadian retirees access healthcare here?
Yes through SZV (mandatory if you’re a resident) or private plans. Be careful about your provincial healthcare residency. Ontario, BC, Quebec each have absence rules that can void your OHIP/MSP/RAMQ if you’re gone too long.
Do I need to speak Dutch?
No. English is the working language across the Dutch side, including in government, healthcare, and banking. Spanish, French, and Papiamento are also widely spoken. Dutch helps with paperwork but isn’t required.
Should I rent first or buy?
Rent. Always rent first. I tell clients to rent for at least 6 months before they sign a property contract. The neighborhoods feel different than they look online.
Is the Penshonado property requirement waived if I rent?
No. The Penshonado tax regime requires you to acquire qualifying real estate (~USD 250,000+ value) within 18 months of registration. If you don’t buy, you don’t get the rate.
What’s the worst part of retiring here?
Two things. First, things take longer than they would in the US or Canada. The bank, the permit, the contractor, the shipment. Second, you’re far from family. If your kids are in Vancouver, you’re a 12-hour multi-leg flight away most days. If they’re in Florida, you’re 3 hours.
What to do next
01
Pick the cluster that’s blocking you. If it’s tax, start with Penshonado. If it’s healthcare, start with Medicare in SXM. If it’s neighborhood, start with the Cole Bay guide or whichever name you’ve heard before.Pick the cluster that’s blocking you. If it’s tax, start with Penshonado. If it’s healthcare, start with Medicare in SXM. If it’s neighborhood, start with the Cole Bay guide or whichever name you’ve heard before.
02
03
Look at HOA financials carefully on older buildings.

