I'm new here. Can I live well on $1800 a month in Cebu
So much useful and clear information!
I am also relocating to the Philippines, possibly late this year, in december or early next year in january. There are some factors at play, but I am definately moving.
Like many others who seek out a new life in Phili, I am retired, albeit at an early age, I am only 37! My reason for the early retirement is mostly medical, but it is not something life-threatening or needs special meds. Does not require medication or treatment by professionals at all actually, just freedom and ability to control my own days and life.
My monthly income will be around *** with todays exchange rates, looks like that should be enough to take a big load off my shoulders. Here in Norway I'm almost considered poor!!
Anywhooooo.... Long enough text, don't want to be a bore!
Just sharing some thoughts

Looking forward to going, and hope the months fly by quickly!
Sincerely,
Arnold
I lived for two years in Manila with my wife and her family.
Cost about $1,200 a month for transportation, groceries, eating in fast food restaurants often, and occasional visits to hospitals.
It should be easy to live on $1,800 a month in Cebu.
Have been to Cebu.
Read more advice at my blog at: timotraveling.blogspot.com
Start with the last article on the page (that was actually my first blog entry). The most recent is at the top left.
Most important advice is DO NOT live near Pig or Poultry farms.
You can get very sick from airborne bacteria from pig farms and you will be surrounded by flies often if living near poulty or pig farms. Been there done that while living in Magalang, Pampange, Luzon. Was diagnosed with bacteria in a lung.
mugtech wrote:Being a chef it should be easy on $1,800/month. You will be able to make your own baluts.
I lived in CEBU with 1300 Eur ,,,, that's great enough if a part of your living is a little .... filipino .
Otherwise this is anyway enough , if you rent , fix and avoid hotels ,, in this case , 1800 Usd is very very very very enough .
Just consider average income is around 200 Eur / month , ok ?
Kd rgds
jak123 wrote:Hi. R u now in philippines? Why don't u try to live in manila?
Domestic electricity in the Philippines is among the highest rates in the world - medical is awful but much more expensive than Thailand
Philippines is much more 3rd world than Thailand and they will continue to fall behind because of the simply terrible political system
The people are friendly when they think they can get something from you but that's as far as it goes
Hope this helps
petehuk wrote:You'll be tight - rents to foreigners are going up - I reckon you need US$2000.00 plus housing plus car to be comfortable
Domestic electricity in the Philippines is among the highest rates in the world - medical is awful but much more expensive than Thailand
Philippines is much more 3rd world than Thailand and they will continue to fall behind because of the simply terrible political system
The people are friendly when they think they can get something from you but that's as far as it goes
Hope this helps
petehuk wrote:You'll be tight - rents to foreigners are going up - I reckon you need US$2000.00 plus housing plus car to be comfortable
Domestic electricity in the Philippines is among the highest rates in the world - medical is awful but much more expensive than Thailand
Philippines is much more 3rd world than Thailand and they will continue to fall behind because of the simply terrible political system
The people are friendly when they think they can get something from you but that's as far as it goes
Hope this helps
And you still live in Cebu because......?
petehuk wrote:You'll be tight - rents to foreigners are going up - I reckon you need US$2000.00 plus housing plus car to be comfortable
Not even close to being true. I'm living quite pleasantly in an overpriced apartment and spending under PHP50k/month. I have more than that available, but I don't need it.
I realize it's possible to spend almost any amount, here as elsewhere, but it's certainly not necessary to spend anything close to "US$2000.00 plus housing plus car to be comfortable."
Figure on $1100-$1200/month including housing. A car is not necessary (depending on where you live).
seriously i could not leave my easy good job there in france , but really 1800 usd is far enough , seriously ? and really twice , i would love to fix there ...
The island of Cebu is probably the best option as one can drive to Cebu City when required.
Leyte Island has become another expat hotspot. Dwellers in Ormoc can get the supercat to Cebu in a time of 2hrs. Ormoc is a nice clean city. Tacloban is another choice, but I find the city centre a bit 'old'.
Further south in Southern Leyte is the City of Maasin and the town of Sogod. There is a large expat population between these areas and most of the diving resorts are owned and managed by expats. In Maasin, a modern two-bedroomed townhouse costs between 4k and 6k per month. one bedroomed appartments start at about P2k. A beer in a proper restaurant is about 60 pesos going up to 70p or so in some hotels.
With $1,800? Sure! You can live like a king.
Ok.. I know everyone cant help but to throw in their two cents to your exponentially growing post,
but, I would like to throw you a small differently colored bone here !
You posted ( I didn't want to fly into Manila and Cebu is about the only other choice.From there I plan
on looking around to find a place that is a good fit for me. ) and my reply / advice on this goes...
Manila and Cebu are NOT Your only choices for inbound travel to the Phils. You can catch a OW or RT
from Bangkok direct non stop into Clark International Airport "CRK " (Formerly a US Air Base which is
located 3 miles from Angeles City, 20 miles from Subic Bay and about 40 miles NW of Manila ) on
Tiger Air for approximately $65 -$75 OW.
This can be a gateway for You to many other locales and options.. For instance, there is Zambales
Province ( in the Central Luzon Region of the main island ) which has a couple hundred miles of
coastline facing the So. China Sea. There is Mt. Pinatubo in the area and I believe something like
upwards of 30+ beach resorts, there are small towns and mid sized cities to visit as well..
I just thought I would take a minute or two to add to your available options... I have spent a good amount
of time since 2002 off an on wandering that coastline... Beautiful area..
Good luck on your trip to the Phils... It is a great place.. ( YES.. In my opinion !! )
As in life.. It is what You make it !
JB
Uhh ohh... I guess my posting was a bit too late for the Chef... Ohh well ! I suppose I should have read
Pg. 4 of the thread B4 posting.. Still.. I hope I added at least a small amount of good info !
Cheers
I've read this topic from start to end and have found lots of yeah's and no's and great infor for living in what I'd call southern Luzon, but have read no mention of northern. (Unless my map reading skills have deteriorated that badly
)I'm over the materialistic thing and just want to live a 'reasonably comfortable' life when I call it quits with work and was after advice about living in the 'northern' parts of Luzon.
I've got the usual questions that everyone else does, so feel free to enlighten me on the pro's and con's of living further to the north.
Cheers from DownUnda
Senutyenool wrote:G'day folks,
I've read this topic from start to end and have found lots of yeah's and no's and great infor for living in what I'd call southern Luzon, but have read no mention of northern. (Unless my map reading skills have deteriorated that badly)
I'm over the materialistic thing and just want to live a 'reasonably comfortable' life when I call it quits with work and was after advice about living in the 'northern' parts of Luzon.
I've got the usual questions that everyone else does, so feel free to enlighten me on the pro's and con's of living further to the north.
Cheers from DownUnda
The topic is Cebu, but I can tell you about Ilocos Sur and Norte. There are few westerners around, I need to go to Vigan usually to see Americanos. The beaches are not as good as down south, with the surf almost non-existant and many stony beaches. Vigan is a beautiful old Spanish city with all the modern touches, including frequent electric brown outs. The beaches further north up past Laoag, the closet airport, are quite undeveloped and land was cheap last I looked a few years ago. What else do you want to know?

I'm more after the cultural aspects as I believe that if you want to fit in you need to reasonably act like a local and to do that you need to meet them. And they're usually not in 'popular' cities.
Oh, and point me to the right topic so that this thread doesn't get hijacked.
Cheers
Oh, and typhoon's don't really worry me, not much different than our cyclones, just named differently

Cheers
At the beginning of this post , i reminded average income was around 200/250 USD/Month
Peter1965 wrote:$1K is more than enough to live VERY comfortably in Cebu, some expats live on just $500 a month including rental.
garyww wrote:SInce you have lived in Thailand, you will be familiar with everyone trying and successfully cheating you. All the girls you meet will have family emergencies and need to borrow money. All. You will find if you hang around many Pinoy's, they will also need money. And you will have the pleasure of paying the bill when you have a few drinks with them. Hotels are very expensive. Groceries are very expensive. Electricity is very expensive. Restaurants with good food are very expensive. I have lived in Vietnam, Cambodia and China and the Philippines is the most expensive. Good luck but always be suspicious.
Am I missing something?
Mike Wei wrote:I don't even spent $1800 a month here in the U.S. With rent as low as $150 a month I would think that you could live on $500 a month or less. Most people there make less than $5000 a year and they get by ok.
Am I missing something?
What you may be missing is the word 'well' in the heading: "Can I live well on $1800 a month in Cebu". The definition of living well is subjective, of course, but I don't think most westerners would consider the lifestyle of the average Filipino to fit into their definition.
So yes, certainly one can live here on very, very little. Most Filipinos, as you note, do so. But the sort of place you could rent for $150 in Cebu City would horrify most Americans.
I've been spending about $1100 or so and been happy.
Thanks.
As in most places, the location is very important in the pricing. One reason I'm paying so much is because I'm centrally located (near Fuente Osmena). That saves me some money/time because I can walk to most anything. Housing is much cheaper on Mactan or other outer areas.
I posted my monthly budget on this thread. It was several months ago, bu not much has changed.
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