$3K, $5K, $10K Monthly Retirement Budgets in Sint Maarten (2026)

Three real budget scenarios, line by line. These aren’t averages. They’re specific snapshots of three couples I’ve worked with, anonymized, with numbers verified for May 2026 conditions.

Use these as templates, not gospel. Adjust for your own neighborhood, lifestyle, and health profile.

Key Takeaways

Couple A. The Frugal $3,000/month

The setup

The monthly

LINE $ NOTES
HOA + property maintenance $250 Older Cole Bay condo, basic HOA
Power (GEBE) $180 One unit AC at night, fans during day
Water $40 Conservative use
Internet + phone $90 Mid-tier fiber, basic phone plans
Property insurance $130 Spread monthly; annual ~$1,560
Groceries $600 Carrefour weekly, French side biweekly for vegetables
Dining out $150 One nice dinner every two weeks plus lolo lunches
Healthcare premiums (Medicare Part B kept + SZV + medevac) $280 $185 Part B + $80 SZV + $15 medevac
Out-of-pocket healthcare $80 Average; lumpy in reality
Car (gas, insurance, maintenance) $260 Older paid-off car
Travel + entertainment $250 One trip back to NY/year, occasional events
Misc + shipping $120 Online ordering + shipments
Hurricane reserve $570 Religiously banked
Total $3,000

What they give up

What they keep

Couple B. The Comfortable $5,000/month

The setup

The monthly

LINE $ NOTES
HOA + property maintenance $550 Pelican Key condo, includes pool & gym access
Power (GEBE) $450 Comfortable AC, two zones
Water $60 Pool-loft adds water; modest gardener service
Internet + phone $130 Premium fiber + two phone lines
Property insurance $180 $2,160/year
Groceries $850 Mix of Carrefour + Le Grand Marché + French side
Dining out $480 3-4 dinners/week, mix
Healthcare premiums (private intl + SZV + medevac) $470 $335 private (couple) + $115 SZV + $20 medevac
Out-of-pocket healthcare $120 Includes a private specialist visit/quarter
Car (gas, insurance, maintenance) $480 Newer car, full coverage
Travel + entertainment $580 2 home trips/year, club memberships, dining events
Misc + shipping $350 Online ordering, gifts, ad-hoc
Hurricane reserve $300 Lower reserve because their condo HOA carries strong building insurance
Total $5,000

What they get

Couple C. The Premium $10,000/month

The monthly

Line $ Notes
HOA + property maintenance $1,400 Cupecoy premium tower; includes pool, gym, valet
Power (GEBE) $750 Larger home, full central AC, multiple zones
Water $120 Larger home, plant beds, more guests
Internet + phone $200 Premium fiber, multiple devices, premium phone plans
Property insurance $400 Higher value coverage; $4,800/year
Groceries $1,200 Premium grocery, regular wine, French-side specialty
Dining out $1,300 Frequent dinners, both sides, premium when out
Healthcare premiums $850 Private intl premium + SZV + medevac + concierge GP
Out-of-pocket healthcare $300 Specialist visits, dental, some elective
Cars (gas, insurance, maintenance, two vehicles) $700 Two newer cars, premium coverage
Travel + entertainment $1,500 3-4 trips/year, mix home + premium destinations
Misc + shipping $580 Premium online ordering, household services
Hurricane reserve $700
Total $10,000

What this requires

What they get

How to build your own model

What changes the budget most

The three biggest variables I see:

Less impactful:

Common questions

What if my budget is $4,000/month?

You’re between A and B. Consider either Couple A’s setup with slightly more dining and one home trip per year, OR Couple B’s setup with more discipline on dining and travel. Both work.

 

What if I have $6,000/month?

You can do Couple B comfortably with margin, or you can stretch toward C with more selectivity (smaller home in Cupecoy or larger home in Cole Bay).

 

Can I retire here on $2,500/month?

Tight. You’d need outright ownership in a low-cost-of-ownership property (older Cole Bay or Pelican Key 1BR), absolute discipline on dining and travel, and minimal healthcare complexity. Doable but not for everyone.

 

How does the budget change if I rent instead of own?

Add $1,500–$3,000/month for rent (1BR–3BR). Subtract HOA + property insurance + maintenance reserves. Net usually adds $1,200–$2,300/month.

 

Does the Penshonado tax savings reduce the monthly budget?

Indirectly. The Penshonado lowers your effective tax rate, freeing more after-tax income, but it doesn’t reduce expenses. It expands your sustainable budget at the same gross income level.

 

What about inflation over a 20-year retirement?

Conservative planning: assume 3-4% real-terms inflation over a long retirement. A $5,000/month budget today might be $9,000/month in 20 years. Build that into your retirement-savings adequacy.

What to do next

01

Use the line items above to build your specific monthly model.

02

Run a 90-day stay testing actual numbers, not theoretical ones.

03

Read cost of living deep dive for category breakdowns.

04

Read grocery and utility costs for the volatile lines.

05

Pair your budget with the right neighborhood: see Cole Bay, Pelican Key, Cupecoy.

Past curiosity, into planning? Spend a day on the island with me. Four neighborhoods, eight hours, no fluff.

Continue reading

No. 01

The retirement guide hub

No. 02

Cupecoy for Retirees: A Local's Neighborhood Guide

No. 03

Simpson Bay for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guid

No. 04

Maho for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guide

No. 05

Cole Bay for Retirees: A Local's Honest Neighborhood Guide

No. 06

Oyster Pond for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guide

No. 07

Guana Bay for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guide

No. 08

Point Blanche for Retirees: The Hidden Hilltop Value

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