Upgrade: ‘I hate going back to the U.S.’ This 69-year-old left Utah for Portugal, where you can ‘live well’ on $2,000 a month

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Tricia Pimental has lived in more than a dozen places, including New York, California, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada and Utah — but it’s Portugal that captures her heart these days.

Though when she first moved there in 2012, she wasn’t so sure.

Pimental says that she’d wanted to stay in Park City, Utah, where she and her husband, Keith, were living at the time, but agreed to give Portugal a shot since he’d always dreamed of living in Europe. (The couple considered France too — Tricia is fluent in French — but it was too expensive, as well as Spain, which didn’t pan out because none of their requests to rent a spot worked out.) But their first foray into Portugal — to a tiny village about a half-hour from Porto in northwest Portugal — didn’t quite go as planned.

“We lived in a 200-year-old cottage that we’d rented 10 years before. We had a six-month lease. After five months, we were done,” she tells MarketWatch with a laugh, noting that she was frequently freezing in the $650-a-month, charming-but-drafty cottage, even with many space heaters running. “They were happy to see us go because the electricity was included [in the rent].”

Tricia Pimental

Tricia Pimental

Not to mention that she briefly felt depressed and missed her family: “In quiet moments I grieved the loss of my life back home, lamenting the distance between me and my children and grandchildren,” she writes in her book about her traveling adventures, entitled “A Movable Marriage: A Memoir.”

But even as she was missing family and shivering, Portugal, and in particular the Portuguese people, were growing on her. “It’s all about family, food and fun,” she says, adding that people are friendly and up for helping one another. She shares a story of going to an equestrian show some years back and there being a parked car that was blocking a horse trailer from getting through to the stables. “The police enlisted six dudes — and they pick up the car and move it, the horse trailer goes by, and they put the car back. No ticket, no towing, no boot — just a let’s-take-care-of-it attitude,” she says.

Tricia Pimental

Fields in Alentejo region of Portugal.

Tricia, who is now a Portugal correspondent for International Living, and Keith have now lived in a few spots in Portugal — their most recent being on a quinta they bought for about $250,000 in the countryside of the Castelo Branco District of central Portugal. She highlights the weather (“four seasons, but no extremes”), the beautiful nearby villages lined with a smattering of castles, and the river beaches and reservoirs where locals swim. The five-bedroom, four-bath house — which is only about 10 years old — itself sits on about 5 acres, featuring the vineyard, as well as roughly 50 olive trees (last year, the couple made their own olive oil).

Here’s what their life is like — from costs to health care to the pros and cons

The cost: Tricia says that, in general in Portugal, you could spend about one-third to one-quarter of what you would in the U.S., depending on where you live. The cities like Lisbon are pricey, but in the countryside “you can easily get by on $2,000 a month,” she says.

She and Keith — who bought their current property for about $250,000 and just acquired another home across the street, too — spend more, she says, estimating that they drop about $3,500 a month. That’s because they often travel and recently bought a car, which she says is costly to do in Portugal — and fuel is expensive on top of that. Tricia says internet and phone cost them a little under $100 a month and groceries $400 to $500 a month. Wine is particularly inexpensive, she says, adding that for about $5 you can get a really good table wine that you might pay $15 for in the U.S. A fair budget for entertainment might be $200 to $300 a month, she says, and you can rent a small house for about $350 to $400 a month.

Tricia Pimental

Torre de Belem

Healthcare: Portugal is known for its high quality health care — in a study of health care quality and access in 191 countries published in The Lancet, both Portugal and the U.S. rank in the high 30s. But you may pay much less for health care in Portugal. Tricia says that she and Keith get their health insurance through a private company called Medis and pay about $100 a month for that policy. Paying out of pocket for a doctor’s visit might cost $20 to $70 even without insurance, she says. (Tricia points out that if you get your temporary residence card, you can use the public health system in Portugal, which is low cost.)

Residency: The couple are still not citizens of Portugal, and Tricia says the process to try to get to this point has been challenging. “If you could see my eyes roll,” Tricia tells me on our phone call when I ask her how the process is going. “It has been going on for a while…we are on our third lawyer.” Here are details on how you can become a permanent resident of Portugal.

The cons: “I’ve never been a big fish person, I don’t eat a lot of it,” says Tricia — and Portuguese food often features fish (bacalhau, which is salted cod, is a particularly popular local dish). “I would much rather be in Italy for pizza and pasta.” However, she says she likes that Portuguese food is fresh and simple. Another downside: Many of the homes in Portugal are much older and Tricia jokes that “you won’t find a single outlet in the bathroom, but then there will be like 15 in another room” and they can be very chilly in the winter. What’s more, electricity costs a lot in Portugal. Here are some other downsides.

Another possible hiccup for those looking to retire in Portugal is the language barrier. Tricia studied language in college, so it has been easier for her to learn Portuguese (when I ask her if she’s fluent she responds “Mais o menos,” which means ”more or less”), but others struggle.

The bottom line: Despite some drawbacks, Tricia says Portugal feels more like home to her now than America.

“It is more true than ever now that the U.S. doesn’t feel like home,” she says. “I hate going back to the U.S. because I feel it is busy, rushed, dangerous and unfriendly. I wonder: What is going to happen next?” Tricia, who goes two or three times a year to visit her children and grandchildren, says. “More and more I fly over Lisbon, I look at the beaches, I look out at the water, I just go ‘Ahhhhh, I am home’.”