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- By Wei Landgraf
Real Monthly Cost to Retire in Sint Maarten (2026 Numbers)
Most cost-of-living posts about Sint Maarten are written by people who passed through, ate at one or two restaurants, and extrapolated. This isn’t that. I live here. These are the real numbers I see retirees actually spend.
The numbers below are accurate as I write this in May 2026. Build your own model around them; don’t trust a single source for budgeting decisions.
Key Takeaways
- A comfortable couple's retirement in Sint Maarten runs $5,000–$6,000/month owning outright.
- A lean version is $3,500–$4,000/month, doable but tight.
- A premium lifestyle runs $8,000–$12,000+/month.
- The hurricane reserve line is non-negotiable. Budget at least $700/month even on the lean plan.
- Imported groceries run 20–30% above mainland US, dining mid-range matches Florida prices, healthcare is genuinely cheaper than US-mainland costs for most retirees.
Three budget profiles
Lean: $3,500/month for a couple, owning outright
You’re frugal, you cook at home, you drive a paid-off used car, your home is paid off, you have one healthcare plan and you’re past 65 with Social Security/CPP doing most of the work.
| Category | Monthly | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Housing (HOA, maintenance, property fees) | $400 | Modest condo in Pelican Key or Cole Bay |
| Utilities (power, water, internet, phone) | $400 | Power is the big variable. Minimal AC use |
| Groceries | $700 | Carrefour weekly, occasional French side |
| Dining out | $200 | Once or twice a week, casual |
| Healthcare (premiums + out of pocket) | $300 | SZV + medevac, no premium private |
| Transport (1 car, gas, insurance) | $400 | Used car, modest gas |
| Travel + entertainment | $300 | One trip back home/year, occasional dinners |
| Shipping / pets / misc | $200 | Amazon shipping, basics |
| Hurricane / repair reserve | $600 | Build the fund. Non-negotiable. |
| Total | $3,500 |
Comfortable: $5,000/month for a couple, owning outright
The middle case. Most of my retired clients live here. You’re not pinching pennies, you eat out 3–4 times a week, you’re flying back to see family twice a year.
| Category | Monthly | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Housing | $700 | Cupecoy or Maho condo, nicer HOA |
| Utilities | $600 | Comfortable AC use, faster internet |
| Groceries | $900 | Mix of Carrefour, Le Grand Marché, occasional French side |
| Dining out | $500 | 3–4 dinners/week, mix mid + nice |
| Healthcare | $500 | SZV + private international + medevac |
| Transport | $500 | Slightly newer car, occasional rentals |
| Travel + entertainment | $700 | 2 trips home/year, regular activities |
| Shipping / pets / misc | $400 | More online ordering, pet costs |
| Hurricane reserve | $700 | |
| Total | $5,500 |
Premium: $8,000+/month
Larger waterfront home, upgraded car, frequent dining at SBYC and French side, regular travel, full private international + concierge medical.
| Category | Monthly | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Housing | $1,500 | Larger villa or premium condo, pool maintenance, gardener |
| Utilities | $900 | Heavy AC, premium internet, multiple devices |
| Groceries | $1,300 | Premium grocery, wine, imported specialty |
| Dining out | $1,200 | Frequent fine dining both sides |
| Healthcare | $900 | Comprehensive private + concierge GP |
| Transport | $700 | New SUV, full insurance |
| Travel + entertainment | $1,500 | Multiple home trips, charter days, theatre tickets in Miami/NYC |
| Shipping / pets / misc | $600 | |
| Hurricane reserve | $700 | |
| Total | $9,300 |
What's surprisingly cheap
- Restaurant local food. Lolos (BBQ shacks), beach grills, French-side bistros: $15–$30 per person for a real meal. Better value than Florida.
- Healthcare cash prices. GP visit $80–$120, specialist $120–$200, dentist cleaning $70–$100, common prescriptions a fraction of US prices.
- Boat-related anything. Boat slip rental, charter days, marine services. Florida has a 30-50% premium over equivalent SXM.
- Real estate maintenance labor. A handyman or housekeeper at $15–$25/hour rate makes life simpler.
What's surprisingly expensive
- Imported US/EU groceries. Cereal, branded snacks, mainland-quality dairy. 25–40% premium over Whole Foods or Loblaws.
- Power. GEBE rates run roughly $0.30–$0.40/kWh equivalent. A central-AC home easily runs $400–$700/month in summer. Solar pays back in 5–7 years and most retirees who plan to stay install it.
- Cars. Import duty makes a Toyota RAV4 $35K-$45K used. Depreciation curves are flatter. Used holds value better than mainland.
- Construction & contractors. Quality contractors are scarce; quotes are 30-50% above what an equivalent project would cost in Florida or Ontario, and timelines are slower.
- Internet (high tier). Fiber where available is $80–$130/month for fast plans.
What's roughly the same as North America
- Mid-market cars used (Honda, Hyundai, Kia)
- Mid-market dining (Italian, Asian, casual American)
- Liquor (some imports cheaper, US craft beer surcharged)
- Gym memberships ($60–$120/month)
- Phone plans ($30–$60/month with Chippie or TelEm)
The hurricane reserve, in plain English
Sint Maarten sits in the hurricane belt. Major storms: 1995 Luis (Cat 4), 2017 Irma (Cat 5+, near direct hit). Statistically, a major hit every 15–25 years; significant brushing storms more often.
What this means for budgeting:
- Insurance deductibles for hurricane damage are typically 2–5% of property value. On a $500K condo: $10K–$25K deductible. You'll be paying that yourself even if insured.
- Construction repairs post-hurricane can take 6–18 months due to labor scarcity.
- Temporary relocation post-event is a real cost. Flights, alternative housing.
- Lost rental income if you rent out part-time.
A $700/month reserve = $8,400/year. Over 7 hurricane-quiet years that’s $58,800 banked, which approximates a real Cat-3 damage event for a moderate property. It’s insurance against insurance.
How couples vs singles differ
A solo retiree doesn’t proportionally halve costs. Roughly:
- Housing: same (you still need a place).
- Utilities: 70-80% of couple's number.
- Food: 60% of couple's number.
- Healthcare: half (one person's premiums).
- Transport: 80–100% (you still need a car).
Net: solo lean is ~$2,800/month, solo comfortable is ~$3,800/month, solo premium is $6,000+/month.
Property holding costs (separate from monthly budget)
If you own a SXM property:
- No annual property tax in Sint Maarten the way US states have it.
- Transfer tax of 4% on property purchases (one-time).
- Notarial fees ~1.5–2% on purchase (one-time).
- Ground rent if your property is on long-lease land (some condos): a few thousand NAF/year.
- HOA fees for condos: included in the housing line above.
- Insurance (property): roughly 1–2.5% of insured value annually. A $500K condo: $5K–$12K/year.
- Hurricane shutters / generator / battery backup maintenance: $500–$2,000/year.
What about renting instead?
Renting a comparable condo:
- 1-bedroom in Pelican Key or Cole Bay: $1,500–$2,500/month furnished.
- 2-bedroom in Cupecoy or Simpson Bay: $2,500–$4,500/month furnished.
- 3-bedroom villa with pool: $5,000–$10,000/month.
So renting adds $1,500–$3,000/month to the budgets above (couples generally rent 2BR). Renting before buying is what I recommend for the first 6–12 months, even if it costs more.
Mistakes I see in budgeting
01
Underestimating power. Florida-style central AC use will surprise you.
02
Forgetting hurricane reserve. Then they have to draw it out of investment principal.
03
Not budgeting for return-home trips. Two trips a year for a couple = $3,000-$5,000 minimum.
04
Assuming dining-out savings from Florida. Mid-market is similar, premium is similar, and only local lolo/bistro food is cheaper.
05
Ignoring shipping. Anything ordered from Amazon or US retailers costs 30-100% more by the time it lands.
Common questions
Can I retire here on Social Security alone?
Yes if you’re frugal, own outright, and your benefit is at the higher end ($2,500+/month for a couple combined). It’s tight but doable. You’d be in the lean budget tier with thinner margins.
How much do I need in savings?
Beyond the property, I tell clients to plan for 5 years of expenses in liquid investable assets, plus the hurricane reserve, plus a healthcare inflation buffer for ages 75+.
Does the budget change much in different neighborhoods?
Yes. Cupecoy and Maho HOAs run higher than Cole Bay. Premium villa neighborhoods (parts of Guana Bay, Oyster Pond hilltops) trade higher house cost for lower neighborhood density costs. See neighborhood guides for breakdowns.
Is healthcare really cheaper than the US?
Out-of-pocket: yes, often dramatically so. Insurance: roughly comparable for retirees once Medicare and supplements are factored in. Net: most retirees report lower total healthcare spend in SXM than they’d projected.
What about inflation?
SXM inflation has tracked Caribbean-wide and US patterns. Moderate (2-4%) in normal years, higher (5-8%) post-pandemic. Imported goods feel inflation more than local services.
How does the cost compare to Florida?
Roughly: housing is comparable to mid-tier Florida coastal markets. Groceries 15-20% higher. Dining about the same. Healthcare cheaper out-of-pocket. Transport higher (cars more expensive). Net for a comfortable retirement: SXM is slightly more expensive than Tampa, slightly less expensive than Miami Beach, similar to Naples.
What’s the single biggest cost surprise?
For US retirees: power bills. For Canadian retirees: shipping personal items down.
What to do next
- Build your own monthly model using the template above. Adjust for your specific neighborhood and lifestyle.
- Read the budget tier breakdowns: $3K, $5K, $10K examples for line-by-line scenarios.
- Read grocery and utility costs in detail before you sign a lease.
- Run a 90-day stay before committing.
Disclaimer. Numbers reflect 2026 conditions. Costs change. Verify current rates with relevant providers.

