Your City Is Stealing Years From Your Life
How geographic arbitrage can move your retirement up by a decade and the exact math behind it.
We talk about retirement in dollars. How much do I need to save? What’s my number? Can I hit $1.5 million by 55?
But dollars aren’t what you actually lose when you work too long. You lose years. Years of travel, years with your kids, years of doing whatever you want on a Tuesday morning.
And here’s the part nobody talks about: where you live is the single biggest lever you have over how many years you work.
Not your salary. Not your savings rate. Not the stock market. Your zip code.
The Math That Changed How I Think About Retirement
Let’s say you’re a software engineer in San Francisco making $150,000 a year. You save 30% of your income, invest in index funds earning a historical average of 7%, and you’re targeting financial independence — the point where your investments can cover your annual expenses indefinitely.
In San Francisco, your cost of living index is 179 (that’s 79% more expensive than the US average). Between California state income tax, federal tax, and the sheer cost of existing in the Bay Area, you’re burning through cash at an extraordinary rate.
Now let’s run the same scenario in Lisbon, Portugal.
Lisbon’s cost index is 65 — that’s 35% cheaper than the US average, and roughly a third of San Francisco’s cost. Portugal offers a Non-Habitual Resident (NHR) tax regime that can dramatically reduce your tax burden. Your rent drops. Your groceries drop. Your healthcare drops. Your daily coffee drops from $7 to $1.50.
The result? You could reach financial independence 8 to 12 years earlier. Same person, same skills, same income potential through remote work — just a different city.
That gap? That’s your Freedom Delta.
Five Cities That Could Buy Back Your Twenties (or Thirties, or Forties)
Here’s how popular destinations compare to expensive US cities, using real cost-of-living data:
San Francisco (179) vs. Bangkok (42)
Bangkok’s cost of living is roughly 77% cheaper than San Francisco. A comfortable apartment in central Bangkok runs $600–900/month. The same apartment in SF is $3,500+. Thailand’s territorial tax system means foreign-sourced income often isn’t taxed locally.
Potential Freedom Delta: 10–15 years gained.
That’s not a rounding error. That’s your entire thirties.
New York City (187) vs. Valencia, Spain (58)
NYC is the most expensive city in the database at a cost index of 187. Valencia — a Mediterranean city with world-class food, beaches, and architecture — sits at 58. That’s 69% cheaper.
Spain’s non-lucrative visa and Beckham Law offer favorable tax treatment for new residents. Your money stretches nearly three times further.
Potential Freedom Delta: 8–12 years gained.
Austin (122) vs. Medellin, Colombia (38)
Austin has gotten expensive. At a cost index of 122, it’s no longer the affordable tech hub it was a decade ago. Medellin, consistently ranked one of the best cities for digital nomads, sits at just 38 — 69% cheaper than Austin.
Colombia’s territorial tax system means income earned outside Colombia isn’t taxed. The climate is 72 degrees year-round. The coffee is better.
Potential Freedom Delta: 6–9 years gained.
Chicago (118) vs. Budapest, Hungary (48)
Budapest is one of Europe’s most underrated cities — stunning architecture, thermal baths, a thriving tech scene, and a cost of living that’s 59% lower than Chicago. Hungary offers a flat 15% income tax rate.
Potential Freedom Delta: 5–8 years gained.
Denver (128) vs. Buenos Aires, Argentina (35)
Buenos Aires has one of the lowest cost indices of any major cosmopolitan city in the world at just 35. That’s 73% cheaper than Denver and 65% cheaper than the US average. The food scene alone is worth the move.
Potential Freedom Delta: 8–13 years gained.
Why Time Framing Matters More Than Dollar Framing
Traditional financial planning tells you to “save $1.2 million” or “build a $2M portfolio.” These are abstract numbers. They don’t change your behavior because they don’t feel real.
But when I tell you that Valencia could give you back 10 years, these are years where you’re healthy, energetic, and free. This changes the conversation entirely.
Suddenly it’s not about spreadsheets. It’s about whether you’ll be 42 or 52 when you stop trading your time for money.
This is what we call time framing: measuring financial decisions in years of life, not dollars in a portfolio. And it’s the core philosophy behind everything we build at Exityear.
“But I Can’t Just Move to Another Country”
You’re right that it’s not as simple as booking a one-way flight. There are visas, healthcare considerations, language barriers, and the very real emotional weight of leaving your community.
But geographic arbitrage isn’t all-or-nothing:
Partial arbitrage: Spend 6 months in a low-cost country, 6 months at home. Even half a year in Bangkok shifts your numbers dramatically.
Domestic arbitrage: Moving from SF (179) to Atlanta (95) — same country, 47% lower costs. That alone could buy back 3–5 years.
Slow travel: Spend a year in Southeast Asia, then a year in Eastern Europe, then settle somewhere in Southern Europe. Each phase accelerates your timeline.
Post-FI arbitrage: Stay in your high-cost city while earning. Then relocate once you hit FI, making your money last decades longer.
The point isn’t that everyone should move to Chiang Mai tomorrow. The point is that you should know what your options are — and most people have never run the numbers.
What’s Your Freedom Delta?
Every person’s Freedom Delta is different. It depends on your income, savings rate, current cost of living, investment returns, tax situation, and target destination.
I built Exityear to calculate this automatically. Plug in your numbers, pick a destination from 128 cities across 8 regions, and see exactly how many years you could buy back.
It’s free to use. No bank account linking. No data selling. Just math.
Find your Freedom Delta at exityear.com
Exityear is a free FIRE calculator and geographic arbitrage planner. Model relocations, run Monte Carlo simulations, and compare life branches side by side. Try it free.

