I keep asking Mike to do a Vid on the nuts and bolts of banking in the Philippines, getting money monthly from USA and he keeps ignoring my question. How come Mike?
@@billblane7725Mike and many many other TH-camrs show how to transfer money and about banking.. if you use TH-cam like Google and Google banking and transferring money in the Philippines you will probably get a lot of videos to pop up from different TH-camrs.. I am interested the same as you are but I remember seeing a lot of videos and I have learned a lot from them.. we all have that fear of getting to the Philippines and not being able to access our money in the USA.. I know because I have them also.. I also have my American bank account with Chase and my sister is on my bank account with me in case I get in a bind she can access my bank account and send me money however she has to do it.. it is good the way you are thinking because it is always good to have many backups to get our money from the USA to live the Philippines.. I do understand and respect your concern😮😮😊
Me and GF live well on $1,300 (73,500 pesos) - My Basic Nut is 31,500 pesos - and we budget 5,000 pesos a week on food. That gives us 20,000/month pocket money for taxi - eating out - and Robust. Some months we'd spend it all - some months had 5K left over. The best part is not having a care in the world - and a warm body next to me at night.
@@mikesphilippineretirement - Rent is under the umbrella of "Basic Nut." - My rent at 8 Newtown - in a corner studio is 22,000 pesos a month - electric 6,500 - Internet 1699 - water 750. Robinson's grocery is downstairs - pool and gym on the 5th floor - and McDonalds is 3 minute walk. Ask for the senior discount - it's 25% off.
Here’s an idea that you and others might like. After you have set your budget. Have a donation fund, or piggy bank. Whatever you don’t use for your monthly expenses. Put it in the donation fund. Then if your wife or girlfriend’s relative has some sort of emergency, you can donate from the donation fund. You can give a little to someone on the street. Give it to your church. Use the money to make some special treats to give to the neighbors. It’s totally up to you.
I never get tired of the budget blogs........From personal experience having been there, and listening to expats, I've come to the realization that $3500 usd a month is a good, safe amount to truly live nice, with everything covered and do some travel, including returning home once in awhile.
I want to see a 6 month review and recap of what you actually spend between now and October. Making a budget is easy. Living within the budget is another story.
What I have learned is if a guy has reached retirement and still struggles with money, he most likely won’t change his ways. Old habits are difficult to break!
one thing nobody puts in these budget videos is inflation over the time you will spend here. 20 years here in PI . what you can live on today is not what it will cost in like 10 years and your fixed income will not expand as fast as prices. prices have more than doubled on food in the last few years and are not slowing down. your lifestyle will deteriorate as prices rise. just keep that in mind gentlemen.
Not really. one knows the numbers lives by them. some months higher it averages out. But if you saved invested then whats a budget? i dont really have one and yet Ilive like one
There are cooking tips to get your food bill down probably. Can of chicken something as a base 30 something pesos maybe one package of flavoring. Mixed veggies from the market or grocery and maybe some rice for a soup. I am coming up with a high estimate of $160 but I don't have that mucheat in my budget it includes 200 pesos a couple times a week at jolybees .. $40 a week is a high estimate based on bad exchange rates.
We own a house in the Philippines, we brew our own coffee, doesn't go to bars or eat out (we both love to cook), we get our drinking water from the mountain spring and we have a washer and hang out clothes out to dry. Therefore our electricity, internet, groceries, gas for two vehicles, occasional trips here and there, kid's education, ACR-I card renewal is where our expenditures will be most likely. We will be self insured when we get there. Having said that we will only be tapping into my SS money which is a little under $1,000 a month and we will bank my husband's SS money for the rainy day. We have learned to comfortably live below our means here in the States and there's no reason why we can't do that there. Your content, I'm sure will be a big help to those who are contemplating to move to the Philippines Mike. I would like to add this though, make sure you are debt-free when you come to the Philippines.
Dept Free - right, this is one of the most important things. And, try to stay away from borrowing money (vehicle loan) in the Philippines. They don't do early pay offs the same way as in the states, and it could cost you way more than you planned.
@@ScottMurphy-x3t mountain spring is good water and clean with minerals. I grew up in PI drinking natural spring mountain water in Pampanga Philippines, and never got sick.
Great Job Mike, thanks to you and Janet sitting down and doing the work. I turn 62 in May and your channel and honesty are causing me to seriously follow in your footsteps. Knowledge is not power, Applied knowledge is true power, so thankyou for showing me the way forward!!!
For those who are married to a Filipina. I have a wife and 3 young kids there already and I plan to retire with them next year. I will be filing the marriage visa or 13A Visa and it initially cost 8,620.00 PHP or $153.00 . The ACR card attached is $50.00. My info says it takes 2-3 months to process. Thanks Mike for the detailed budget info! 😎👍
@leemwppd571. Thanks for the 13A Visa and ACR card costs - I was going to ask Mike about that, since he had savings toward the ACR card included in his budget.
My biggest expense here is groceries. At this point in life the last thing Im going to deprive myself is something that we like to eat. My GF always used to say can I get this, I finally got her to the point of just putting it in the cart. Now I tease her and say can I get this. We really don't spend on anything else. Other than eating out and groceries. My rent is only 200 US a month. I have a brand new 1 bedroom. In a nice building.
@@mikesphilippineretirement There's a ton of challenges here, I usually go home 3 times during the course of the year. Believe me I need that. We met at the red table one morning. I was with Monty Crew and my GF.
Same way for me it's really crazy! She's never in 2 years have me go out to a $50 dinar yet and I have no problem for me. And she wants me to buy from the clothes donations here can you believe this a quarter for a shirt and 30 cents for a pants. I got three pairs of new balance shoes for american us dollars $9. They are new i don't know if they're knock offs they feel good but she's got some deals.
One smart move is to bake in a 20-25% drop in the currency. You might not thing it will happen, but it will. Peso was at 40 in 2013 and 2008. Personal experience - we moved to Thailand when the baht was 34 vs USD, but a couple years later it was 28. Wise to plan for currency fluctuations, whether building into your budget or transferring $ when the $ is strong.
fantasic comprehensive breakdown with the on screen figures. And the bonus of the three most common situations. Best budget video seen of all those out there. Very thoroughly thought-out. Great job sharing w us.
I love the Philippines and lived there for nearly 3 years, but as a retiree, it’s become too expensive for me. Why? Going by your figures, it’s 2-3 times more expensive than what I’m paying for now in a different southeast Asian country. My rent for a new, fully-furnished, 1-bdrm. Apt. with split-level Aircon in each room and free water and Internet, plus a 45-inch Smart TV and a washing machine with a balcony is only $200 a month. Drinking water is 62 cents for a 5-gallon jug. The only other bill I pay is electricity which runs between $40-$70 a month. English is spoken and understood here in this other Asian country and the US dollar is used. A 12-month retirement visa is only $290 with no bank deposit required. For as long as you renew every year, you NEVER have to leave the country. The weather is the same here as in the Philippines.
@@wesgraham2262 I plan on visiting there in 2026, along with Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia. Good for you! My wife was born and raised in the Philippines and it's family reasons we will live here. She's been away since she was 23, and this April will be her 10th trip home to visit. But, in November, we will be moving there for retirement.
I think your assessment of the numbers are spot on Mike, thanks for sharing. My wife always tells me “Let’s leave the US, as long as we have $2,000 (USD) passive income per month tera let’s go” lol. And I agree with her that 2k usd per month is a good life in the PH. But for many years I’ve lived by the mantra “live on less than you make”. That said I want to save as well, which means I will want more than 2k per month coming in. We will hit our passive goal number in a few more yrs then we can come over and live the dream like you 🤙🏻 Take care/amping there bud! Jake
I believe you can live comfortably on 800 if you plan ahead and build a home and buy your transportation like a multi cab or motorcycle. I am married to a Filipino and we bought a lot and have our home being built now. I’m trying to eliminate a big part of our monthly expenses before we move there next year.
That's what we did. I'm moving into our home in November. We built it back in 2019, but the Pandemic kept me from my plans of Early Retirement (Pre 62) .. so my wife will hit 62 this year and we will both be home soon.
I am single and live in Bacong, if I stay home and just go to the beach and market, I can get by on 50k a month. Rent, electric and internet 28k, own my scooter and I eat at home. I get my food from the wet market and eat like a filipino. I don't smoke or drink and I am lucky to get a good seabreeze and my apartment is nicely shaded. I have a good savings that grows every month.
That sounds like a good base budget, adjust as needed. I don’t understand what the attraction is to Duma. What’s the weather like? I want to be close to at least one good sized mall, a good hospital, and nice walking paths. I want to walk at least one mile a day, plus walk around in the mall. I want to be near a good church but not catholic, maybe Baptist or something a little bit upbeat. I’ll have to do some exploring to find the right place. Right now I’m thinking Iloilo city, but there’s so many options. I might die of old age before I find the right place for me. I plan to enjoy the journey. Most importantly is, Colossians 3:17
Thank for the good numbers, we are working on our plans for retiring to the Philipines and using a figure of $800 p/m for rent and utilities x 15 years = $144k for housing. Based on thus number we are going to buy/build a small off grid house house there for ourselves, then when we go back to the US, just give the property to my wifes nieces. Your numbers helped validate this for us. Thank you much! another GREAT video!
Just wanted to say that in my opinion if you are going to live in a province (out in the country) if you take a little time looking it is best to buy a house that is already built or under construction BUT learn as much as possible about the way it was constructed before you jump. I'm glad we built and will never sell our home or property but there are many, many, many, many, many lessons you WILL learn if you do build. Good advice is hire someone before you start that has already been down that road to help you from BEFORE you start and no matter what they charge you, their advice WILL save you probably at least a quarter of the total price without their help. Plus buying property is usually, almost always a nightmare even if it is legitimate. Keep in mind a friend of mine is renting a nice house in the mountains near Dauin about 8 kilometers up in cooler weather for less than 90 USA dollars a month and has been there for 4 years plus I'm not sure how long before I knew him. Again take your time while looking. Rent at a really nice place in a smaller town on a highway is 3-4 hundred dollars a month usually with a pool to tell you what kind of place we are talking about. Anyways your estimated cost for rent is more than double what you will pay if you do it half way right 😉. Good luck.
This video is fantastic. Thank you! I'm 40 y/o. One year in Thailand so far. Budgeting $2,200 monthly here in Thailand with my Thai girlfriend. When I was single here I was averaging $1,500 monthly, living large. Could've done it for much less. Sounds like a single life in the Phillipines would be a great life, too, with that same money. Not much of a drinker/partier, occasional beers, but definately a foodie. Disabled US Army Veteran, so medical would be easier in the VA clinic there, too. Something to think about now.
Hey Mike nice budget video. I hope everything works well for you. I see some comments for yes budget and nope just spend and spend. Well spend spend will get you broke broke. I've made several trips to the Philippines and its very easy to go thru the $$$$ once you are there. Like you mentioned keep your receipts and what I do is record my spending in the notes part on my phone so I have that record. Budgets will always change as emergences will pop up and everyone has to be prepared for that. I think you and Janet covered everything really well, The difference is Canadian rate is roughly 40 - 1. Thanks again Mike for a informative video.
So I'm going to put this to the test as I will be Living in Dumaguete as of Mid July joining my Girlfriend there and will be getting a New Honda PCX and Multicab with small apartment as i have some contacts and friends but life is flexible and fluid. Don't rely on just Social Security and have some passive income in case and have a big buffer zone. It all depends on what your want and lifestyle and enough trips there to know the difference as vacation mode and hotels or Airbnb are much different as last time i stayed in apt and condos. Plus the more you like local food vs western is a Big savings as I'm a Big fish eater and was a vegan so salads are tougher to find; but worked a deal with local farmer buying his produce direct. As the "Learning curve" is the most expense so girlfriend saved me a bunch as i'd rather spend difference on her.. haha win-win
Hi Mike great video, moved here to CDO from New Zealand about 2 months ago, met my partner on LTR about 10 months ago, was here in March to finally met her, now living together and every thing is great , rented 2 bedroom house uptown , filled it with furniture and have been doing our budget since after moving in, I'm a kiwi so I'm a little bit tighter lol but we don't miss out on most luxuries, $1700 nzd seems to work for us and that includes savings from what we don't use, great info from you 😀 cheers 👍
Sounds good to me finding a furnished Apartment don't drink much Coffee i will see when i get there June. 5 th i have to find. Out how to transfer money from my. Bank to PI
One thing you might have to do is even if you get a furnished apartment you might have to buy a mattress as some places might have thin hard mattresses
Thank you Mike as always. My budget similar to yours probably around $2,000 U. s. Hot season is coming of this is the first month my bills gone over 5,000 pesos in the last year. Very hot up here i forgot to mention i have three here. And two most nights that are her brother's kids. The brothers wife is a foreign worker in saudi arabia under two year contract so we help with the kids. Thanks Mike
Great point on having start up money. Plan on buying quite a few things when you get there. Coffee like making at home, if I was out and about then yes would buy coffee out. Good video, thanks for making this, Janet and Mike...Jim
Mike your budget there is now the exact same as mine here in East Lansing, Michigan. the only difference is you pay rent. i own my house with no debt. i travel around to places i want to go by car, train and plain. i dont stay in 5star resorts. i do some homework and shop and find the travel deals. i find deals on everything. i have full Medicare. it saved me about $150K when i was diagnosed with prostate cancer. i needed 20 radiation treatments and meds. im doing good now. i will travel to the Phils for vacations and fun, if and when i can get a deal. and the deals are out there if you know where and how to look. my house is a modest 5bdrm 2bath home in East Lansing. worth about $300K. i have plenty of retirement savings. my adult kids are here, young grand kids too. i go to the gym every day. i have friends there. it satisfies my social needs too. no hanging out at coffee houses, bars and restaurants for me. keeps me out of trouble and healthier😂
We looked at our budget, now that we’re settled into the condo. P75K looks about right. We’ll see how it pans out over the next 2 months, and see how much of the P100-P110K income, we are putting away. Thanks Mike, great itemization and breakdown 👍
I do appreciate your information extremely precise I thought around 1500 I plan on having around 5000 start up money thanks for your help i really appreciate it 🙏
Your budget is what suits you within your means. What works works for you as an individual and family your dynamics. Yes I think you spend a lot but you get what You want. I think one could “get by” on $900 to 1.200 per month but that means a different location and lifestyle. Probably gambling on health issues, no health coverage, while a bomb could hit any older person at any time. Food well do you garden? Do you have an area to garden? Do you want to garden? Is local food good enough or do you need western food types? Hey I love fish and seafood but maybe you don’t. Scooters are not overly expensive add fees plus fuel and maybe that works. Perhaps you’re not comfortable playing bumper tag on Philippine streets… What works for anyone works for them. I Hate coffee you don’t that just a little difference but $ spent or not spent adds up either way.
Hi Mike, thanks for taking the time to do a budget amount for the common single guy. I am your age and those numbers you came up with are very helpful to understand what my costs would be.you always give helpful information. Anyone thinking about moving to the Philippines should watch your channel for great information.keep up the good work.
A budget is a spending plan based on income and expenses. In other words, it’s an estimate of how much money you’ll make and spend over a certain period of time, such as a month or year. (Or, if you're accounting for the incoming and outgoing money of everyone in your household, that's a family budget.) Pulling money from another account for traveling is not a budget. Also for a single guy, where are the numbers for dating?
@@mikesphilippineretirement It actually happened while I was in the Phils on holiday. Look up "Edsa 2", The exchange rate went from over USD 50 -1 to 39 - 1... literally overnight.
Hi Mike, Excellent, Great budget summary! Makes me want to go live in the Philippines❤I live in Fort Lauderdale Fl. Our house expenses with everything included…is over $6,000.00 /per month. Our mortgage alone for our home is $3,000/per month. Florida USA 🇺🇸 is so over priced. I do have family in Manila. Thank you for the great video! I Love that you put the figures up for us to see, not all TH-camrs do that.
Yes! It's crazy! I had a house in Tampa, Florida paying $2,400. I've been living in Thailand now for just over a year. Phillipines next! No turning back! Living like a King on an average spend of $2,000. Can do for much less if I wanted to!
Mike, I think this is the most accurate break-down I've seen on TH-cam so far. My budget would probably be closer to yours than to the common budget, because I would hire a live-in maid (at least until I have a girlfriend) and I don't drive motorbikes, so I would get myself a car. Nothing fancy, but it would cost more than a motorbike for fuel consumption, maintenance and insurance. I guess I would need about $2K. Thanks for your very detailed analysis.
@homebasebelgium359. Don’t drive cars and trucks in the philippines. Only drive a motorbike. Many vehicles drive on the road without adequate lights, drive without regard to traffic rules, tons of homeless people, kids and everyday people walking in the road….you hit a filipino with your car or truck and they are get seriously injured or die you as a foreigner are going to prison. Also you will be extorted out of a large amount of money even if your involved in a minor traffic accident. The police will always side with filipinos….so its always foreigner fault regardless the facts and circumstances
@@Imold774 Thanks for your advice, but I have driven cars in the Philippines many times before. I adapted to the Filipino driving style and never had a problem. With a motorbike you can have an accident too and that will almost certainly put you in hospital if you survive.
I make my own coffee using an aero press. That’s all you need is a pot to heat water, a grinder and some coffee beans. The aero press uses a small paper filter. You can carry 1000 of them with you in a small area. It makes the best cup of coffee. It’s truly an incredible money saver. That habit of going out for expensive coffees with a bunch of cream and sugar than the temptation of brownies and donuts, and all that is just a waste of money. I have to have my cup of coffee. It’s an addiction I guess. I’d like to kick the habit but I just enjoy my cup of coffee in the morning. I only do 12-14 ounces a day. So that’s not too bad.
I built, literally built from nothing since we bought the land and then constructed, a coffee shop/cafe in a town near where we live. We use beans sourced from the Philippines and Vietnam. These are ground on demand - nothing pre-prepared because that undermines the freshness. There is also an array of pastries, as well as Filipino snacks, for the customers to enjoy with their coffee. We employ 6 Filipinos. During the Covid lockdown we continued paying their wages. It is not a particularly profitable enterprise in that I don't make much from it, but we don't make a loss, and we provide employment for our staff.
I use a French press that I purchased from a SM store. It’s made of glass and stainless steel with a wood handle. Whatever you use, it’s best to grind the beans just before you brew your coffee.
Hi 👋 U2. I would think that $2200 a month is a comfortable budget for single person or for your family. It’s about self discipline & control with your finances. We all must decide how far our $$ goes not trying to exceed the budget if possible. Thanks 🙏. Blessings 🙏🌸🌺🌼
Gee Id think living as an expat one would have savings etc. I lived 2xs as an expat in asia but on the crazy rich side of corporate paid housing. you would not believe me..
That seems like a reasonable budget. If anything I'd say a little high. You can do it for less but you could also do it for more. It all depends on the money you have and your comfort level. I was recently in Cebu City and did 1 month easily under $2000. Stayed in a lower cost hotel, about $750 for the month and ate out every meal. Living there I could do both for less. I did have a free breakfast but it was nothing special, more like a snack. I did eat breakfast out every day after eating the snack. I think where you are high is the food. About 10 days ago I just added up my expenses for food in the US and it was over $100 less then you have for the common budget. I don't see how that is possible since I buy nothing but the very best in-class ingredients with no bad preservatives which I'm quite sure your budget is not. For example I only drink 100% grass fed cow's milk. Only 100% grass fed yogurts. I only eat pasture raised eggs and mostly organic I only eat organic nuts as well as organic fruits and veggies. I only eat sprouted bread with no bad high inflammatory oils like canola oil, sunflower or safe flower oils. I only eat chips or popcorn made with extra virgin olive or avocado oil. I only eat 100% grass fed beef, some is pre-cooked and cost $14 a pd. I only drink pure leave tea not these highly processed low qualities teas or drinks like soda you are most likely using in your budget. And many other products as well, I pay quite a bit more for these products then if I bought the lower priced products that you are likely including in the common budget. There is no way you could be spending more then I am. You have the food budget at $697, mine was $586. I spent $484 on just groceries, you have $365, ok you are lower, however I spent only $103 on eating out and coffee shops. You have $270 for common budget eating out alone plus additional for coffee shops. If I eliminate the $37 for coffee shops I spent I'd only spent $66 eating out. I eat at places like Texas Roadhouse, Chili's, I did get a few double patty smashburgers which were on special and once at subway getting the higher priced footlong. Coffee shops was $37 , I don't go often, only if I leave for some reason early then I get a coffee or breaky sandwhich. What that tells me Mike Is I am not eating out as often as your budget, not even close Mike, I am paying more per meal many times when I do eat out then you are when eating out and I spent far less. Therefore I am buying way more groceries and eating at home alot more then you have it, and considering I pay far more per each item and only payed $119 more doesn't seem right. If I bought the lower priced products I would be spending less then your common budget for groceries Mike and I would be buying far more groceries and still spending less. On top of all that Mike, I am a very big eater, I eat more then the average guy my age or any age really. I am not a big guy or over-weight just a big eater. It seems high to me. But I'd rather see you give a higher budget then lower, people can always come in under and feel good about it.
Thank you, Mike for all the work you did for this video. The only answer I still need to find is how much its going to cost in Health insurance for an expat family of two expat adults and two children. I'm in contact with Michael Onstad now, so I should have an idea soon. -Steve
30 Mbps (Megabits per second) is adequate for 2 people watching TH-cam in HD (1080P) simultaneously. 150 Mbps is overkill unless you have three or four people watching 4K video simultaneously.
200M here is only a 6-700 pesos more than 60M service. When i first came here 2 years ago you couldn't get 50M. Now i see they got 1G available. They're building that internet fast here. Chinese have been coming in
I'm still focused on the 2-week Millionaire video, heck with the budget, LOL. I had my eyes on one girl, but she is scarred from her past relationship with an expat, so I refuse to put my life on hold while she is healing. This is why the 2-week Millionaire fits my style for now.
@@mikesphilippineretirement Mike, may I ask what it is that you don't like about Cambodia? I'm trying to weigh the pros/cons of Cambodia vs Philippines. (I realize it can be personal choice.) Was interested in Vietnam too, but those 90 day Visa runs are deterring me... One thing that draws me to Philippines is the Phil Health. I know it doesn't cover a lot, but at least you have some assurance you will at least be seen in an emergency & not left in a hallway to die. 😉 I do realize you need to have savings & open credit card(s) to help with potential hospitalization costs. Hopefully, in most cases, I would be able to return to the States & utilize my Medicare for anything serious or needing lengthy treatment if needed.
Im here in the Philippines vacationing Alona Beach Bohol " research " for the 2nd time in past 5 months.. Retired, but still 4 years left with younger kids in USA school..Great budget video. To anyone thinking of the move, you should vacation here a few times. This is a great option but not the only one. However, Philpina people are excellent people.. Pretty warming. yes your over charged with a smile😂
Budgets look good, yours and common. For me personally, I'd add in something for traveling since I plan to travel each month for a 1 or 2 week trip someplace and would want to set aside the money for all the costs involved with that (resorts are typically more expensive).
@@mikesphilippineretirement If someone is spending too much and not saving, then they'll need to earn more from side-hustle income like TH-cam or something else that can be done online. Another option for saving travel money is to find a cheaper place to live, like Cavite province where some other vloggers live very inexpensively.
You need to have medical insurance eveb if you dont use it. Ive heard people have an emergency and end up in the hospital and cant get care because no money. Horrible stories. Its better to have then not have. Its not america where you can make payment plans or not have insuranxe
Thanks for the video, my monthly budget or pension is $1500 and I live in Tunasan, Muntinlupa City plus don't rely living pension to pension, you need extra savings and emergency funds. I'm very happy enough not paying any mortgage or rent. I know 5 farangs living there and all military veterans.
First off, love the video. Thanks for all the great info. My main concern is medical. I have tricare and also VA. All of my ailments are covered. How does this work if at all in Dumaguete? I am married 10 years to a Filipina living in Florida. I am 50 and am retired and we are looking to live part time in the Phils. I don't want to live in her province because it is small and not much to do. She can go visit there if she wants lol! I have a decent budget for living, but not like $10,000 a month guy. $3000 is my high estimate but I like my Aircon and amenities. Plus I still have Oh Shit money I can save each month as well.
Your budget is going to be your budget(good one). Think you did a pretty good job for those guys coming to the Philippines on the monthly budget for them(somewhere pretty close). I'm just glad you didn't say you can live like a king on 600 dollars, ha ha. Did you cancel your Pacific Cross policy, if you did, why? I saw in a video about another vlogger who canceled his Pacific Cross policy too. Good video Mike.
You look great Mike and younger. i don't see entertainment cost in there which is $250 to $1,000 a month for that, and double all cost if dating. I cannot do it for less than 3k-4k myself.
for us an old married couple we are in by 3 pm each day and going out to eat, taking a joy ride someplace and meeting friends is the only entertainment we have.
Your budget would be closer to our budget. I think about the exchange rate dropping to 40 pesos to the dollar and that scares me a little. Thanks...hope to see you in April
I agree with Philhealth, you can get that but I advice is for you to pay the lowest amount possible and just get a prepaid medical insurance/coverage. These prepaid medical policies can help you with emergency situation and some even have unlimited physical and dental checkup. I am not an agent for these policies, this is what I have been doing for years. Philhealth is helpful but mostly they only cover terminal cases.
Mike, IMO ya nailed it on this one. Start with the Baseline Budget you provided and then add lifestyle to it. I didn't see any unaccounted for items/issues. I personally would double the Misc. just because... but that's a small item. Great job, now go take a break my brother and Pretend your Retired hahahahha. Peace and Love, B Goat
Budget? What budget? I don’t need no stinking budget ☺️. I am extremely blessed and fortunate 🙏. Hard, if not impossible to spend my monthly income? That’s One reason We travel soo much. I guess I could save? 🤔 Nahhh! I believe we should spend and enjoy NOW! One never knows? Tomorrow is not promised 🙏. Also have loads of credit cards in case of emergency. Living the dream 😎 Good luck Mike and Janet , wishing you the best. ❤️
This is a nice budget ... the fact you cover over misc. and savings is SOOO important, because this is where most budgets fall short. And, like you said .. if I am going to go island hopping, that money should come out of the money I manage to save. Only thing I have to add is, my wife is a "shopaholic", and my house is paid for so it's a wash. lol ... Good video.
I keep asking Mike to do a Vid on the nuts and bolts of banking in the Philippines, getting money monthly from USA and he keeps ignoring my question. How come Mike?
what do you want to know. I have done banking videos and money transfer videos
@@mikesphilippineretirement Do you have a link to your Vids on banking? I must have missed them, when I looked for them.
@@billblane7725Mike and many many other TH-camrs show how to transfer money and about banking.. if you use TH-cam like Google and Google banking and transferring money in the Philippines you will probably get a lot of videos to pop up from different TH-camrs.. I am interested the same as you are but I remember seeing a lot of videos and I have learned a lot from them.. we all have that fear of getting to the Philippines and not being able to access our money in the USA.. I know because I have them also.. I also have my American bank account with Chase and my sister is on my bank account with me in case I get in a bind she can access my bank account and send me money however she has to do it.. it is good the way you are thinking because it is always good to have many backups to get our money from the USA to live the Philippines.. I do understand and respect your concern😮😮😊
Hi Mike welcome to Philippines, I live in Looc Romblon 13a visa 14 year's and all is perfect 😊
Me and GF live well on $1,300 (73,500 pesos) - My Basic Nut is 31,500 pesos - and we budget 5,000 pesos a week on food. That gives us 20,000/month pocket money for taxi - eating out - and Robust. Some months we'd spend it all - some months had 5K left over. The best part is not having a care in the world - and a warm body next to me at night.
no rent?
@@mikesphilippineretirement - Rent is under the umbrella of "Basic Nut." - My rent at 8 Newtown - in a corner studio is 22,000 pesos a month - electric 6,500 - Internet 1699 - water 750. Robinson's grocery is downstairs - pool and gym on the 5th floor - and McDonalds is 3 minute walk. Ask for the senior discount - it's 25% off.
I take it, that "basic nut" means Cost of Dwelling? Home, Power, Water, Internet?
Just dont need medical care..
My Girlfriend and I
Here’s an idea that you and others might like. After you have set your budget. Have a donation fund, or piggy bank. Whatever you don’t use for your monthly expenses. Put it in the donation fund. Then if your wife or girlfriend’s relative has some sort of emergency, you can donate from the donation fund. You can give a little to someone on the street. Give it to your church. Use the money to make some special treats to give to the neighbors. It’s totally up to you.
I donate a lot but do not share it with the viewers. I stopped having a piggy bank 60 years ago
@@mikesphilippineretirement Tithing and donations are a personal matter and meant to be kept private. Good for you.🙂
Good idea to have some to help others.
I never get tired of the budget blogs........From personal experience having been there, and listening to expats, I've come to the realization that $3500 usd a month is a good, safe amount to truly live nice, with everything covered and do some travel, including returning home once in awhile.
it is a great number trouble is most guys do not have that income
I want to see a 6 month review and recap of what you actually spend between now and October.
Making a budget is easy. Living within the budget is another story.
Yes it is hard
haha, so true
What I have learned is if a guy has reached retirement and still struggles with money, he most likely won’t change his ways. Old habits are difficult to break!
one thing nobody puts in these budget videos is inflation over the time you will spend here. 20 years here in PI . what you can live on today is not what it will cost in like 10 years and your fixed income will not expand as fast as prices. prices have more than doubled on food in the last few years and are not slowing down. your lifestyle will deteriorate as prices rise. just keep that in mind gentlemen.
Not really. one knows the numbers lives by them. some months higher it averages out. But if you saved invested then whats a budget? i dont really have one and yet Ilive like one
There are cooking tips to get your food bill down probably. Can of chicken something as a base 30 something pesos maybe one package of flavoring. Mixed veggies from the market or grocery and maybe some rice for a soup. I am coming up with a high estimate of $160 but I don't have that mucheat in my budget it includes 200 pesos a couple times a week at jolybees .. $40 a week is a high estimate based on bad exchange rates.
Sorry my friend that is not what I call Living
We own a house in the Philippines, we brew our own coffee, doesn't go to bars or eat out (we both love to cook), we get our drinking water from the mountain spring and we have a washer and hang out clothes out to dry. Therefore our electricity, internet, groceries, gas for two vehicles, occasional trips here and there, kid's education, ACR-I card renewal is where our expenditures will be most likely. We will be self insured when we get there. Having said that we will only be tapping into my SS money which is a little under $1,000 a month and we will bank my husband's SS money for the rainy day. We have learned to comfortably live below our means here in the States and there's no reason why we can't do that there. Your content, I'm sure will be a big help to those who are contemplating to move to the Philippines Mike. I would like to add this though, make sure you are debt-free when you come to the Philippines.
enjoy your life in the philippines
Dept Free - right, this is one of the most important things. And, try to stay away from borrowing money (vehicle loan) in the Philippines. They don't do early pay offs the same way as in the states, and it could cost you way more than you planned.
Save some extra money for the dysentery from the mountain spring.
@@ScottMurphy-x3t mountain spring is good water and clean with minerals. I grew up in PI drinking natural spring mountain water in Pampanga Philippines, and never got sick.
Great Job Mike, thanks to you and Janet sitting down and doing the work. I turn 62 in May and your channel and honesty are causing me to seriously follow in your footsteps. Knowledge is not power, Applied knowledge is true power, so thankyou for showing me the way forward!!!
That is awesome! Thank you for the nice comment
For those who are married to a Filipina. I have a wife and 3 young kids there already and I plan to retire with them next year. I will be filing the marriage visa or 13A Visa and it initially cost 8,620.00 PHP or $153.00 . The ACR card attached is $50.00. My info says it takes 2-3 months to process. Thanks Mike for the detailed budget info! 😎👍
yes
So you don't have to wait for ACR card before you file 13 A marriage visa ?
You need your ACR I-Card first, then submit with your 13A Visa application. The wording I used as attached means "add".@@garrylafferty100
@leemwppd571. Thanks for the 13A Visa and ACR card costs - I was going to ask Mike about that, since he had savings toward the ACR card included in his budget.
My biggest expense here is groceries. At this point in life the last thing Im going to deprive myself is something that we like to eat. My GF always used to say can I get this, I finally got her to the point of just putting it in the cart. Now I tease her and say can I get this. We really don't spend on anything else. Other than eating out and groceries. My rent is only 200 US a month. I have a brand new 1 bedroom. In a nice building.
sounds like your having a great life. Happy to hear your enjoying yourself
@@mikesphilippineretirement There's a ton of challenges here, I usually go home 3 times during the course of the year. Believe me I need that. We met at the red table one morning. I was with Monty Crew and my GF.
Same way for me it's really crazy! She's never in 2 years have me go out to a $50 dinar yet and I have no problem for me. And she wants me to buy from the clothes donations here can you believe this a quarter for a shirt and 30 cents for a pants. I got three pairs of new balance shoes for american us dollars $9. They are new i don't know if they're knock offs they feel good but she's got some deals.
Wow where about s can get rent for $200 new ?
@@gadgetgrader They're around just keep an eye on Marketplace.
One smart move is to bake in a 20-25% drop in the currency. You might not thing it will happen, but it will. Peso was at 40 in 2013 and 2008. Personal experience - we moved to Thailand when the baht was 34 vs USD, but a couple years later it was 28. Wise to plan for currency fluctuations, whether building into your budget or transferring $ when the $ is strong.
Thank you, Mike, for this update on the budget. I liked that you covered medical needs and savings for travel, emergencies and miscellaneous.
Thank you and your welcome
fantasic comprehensive breakdown with the on screen figures. And the bonus of the three most common situations. Best budget video seen of all those out there. Very thoroughly thought-out. Great job sharing w us.
Much appreciated!
I love the Philippines and lived there for nearly 3 years, but as a retiree, it’s become too expensive for me. Why? Going by your figures, it’s 2-3 times more expensive than what I’m paying for now in a different southeast Asian country. My rent for a new, fully-furnished, 1-bdrm. Apt. with split-level Aircon in each room and free water and Internet, plus a 45-inch Smart TV and a washing machine with a balcony is only $200 a month. Drinking water is 62 cents for a 5-gallon jug. The only other bill I pay is electricity which runs between $40-$70 a month. English is spoken and understood here in this other Asian country and the US dollar is used. A 12-month retirement visa is only $290 with no bank deposit required. For as long as you renew every year, you NEVER have to leave the country. The weather is the same here as in the Philippines.
That's very impressive. Please tell us where you've settled. Thanks 😀
@@gregben - Cambodia
@@wesgraham2262 I plan on visiting there in 2026, along with Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia. Good for you! My wife was born and raised in the Philippines and it's family reasons we will live here. She's been away since she was 23, and this April will be her 10th trip home to visit. But, in November, we will be moving there for retirement.
@@TitoBear - Congratulations. I wish you both well in your soon-to-be retirement.
So, do most folks speak English, in Cambodia?
Awesome topic. You’re one of the best expats ever lived in the Philippines 👍✌️🙏.Watching from Texas
thank you
Great video had to share this on my Facebook. People are amazed how much it costs in Philippines 🇵🇭
Thanks for that!
I know people living here on 700 , 800 , 900 , 1k ,1200 , and up . They all live good , you adjust to what you have anywhere you live.
I think you hit most everything anyone would need, thanks
Thank you I tried
Thanks for this video.
Your budget sounds realistic. I hope it doesn't change much before I get there.
It should not
Thanks man.
Seems like a common sense budget.
thanks for watching
You’re a good man Mike. So generous and loving to Janet and her son. Your budget sounds low but prudent
to be honest it is high but we have her family over a lot
@@mikesphilippineretirement🙏🏼
On my way back to the States, in the morning 😢🇵🇭✈️🇺🇸. Liquidation time!
Hurry Back!
I think your assessment of the numbers are spot on Mike, thanks for sharing. My wife always tells me “Let’s leave the US, as long as we have $2,000 (USD) passive income per month tera let’s go” lol. And I agree with her that 2k usd per month is a good life in the PH.
But for many years I’ve lived by the mantra “live on less than you make”. That said I want to save as well, which means I will want more than 2k per month coming in. We will hit our passive goal number in a few more yrs then we can come over and live the dream like you 🤙🏻
Take care/amping there bud!
Jake
I completely agree with you Jake
Oh goodie. Another budget video
thanks for watching
I believe you can live comfortably on 800 if you plan ahead and build a home and buy your transportation like a multi cab or motorcycle. I am married to a Filipino and we bought a lot and have our home being built now. I’m trying to eliminate a big part of our monthly expenses before we move there next year.
That's what we did. I'm moving into our home in November. We built it back in 2019, but the Pandemic kept me from my plans of Early Retirement (Pre 62) .. so my wife will hit 62 this year and we will both be home soon.
Total agree you can have a low budget if you spend a lot up front. Building a house, buying land, and buying a car.
If you have 3,500 to 4 k a month, you'll live like a king here
I am single and live in Bacong, if I stay home and just go to the beach and market, I can get by on 50k a month. Rent, electric and internet 28k, own my scooter and I eat at home. I get my food from the wet market and eat like a filipino. I don't smoke or drink and I am lucky to get a good seabreeze and my apartment is nicely shaded. I have a good savings that grows every month.
That sounds like a good base budget, adjust as needed. I don’t understand what the attraction is to Duma. What’s the weather like? I want to be close to at least one good sized mall, a good hospital, and nice walking paths. I want to walk at least one mile a day, plus walk around in the mall. I want to be near a good church but not catholic, maybe Baptist or something a little bit upbeat. I’ll have to do some exploring to find the right place. Right now I’m thinking Iloilo city, but there’s so many options. I might die of old age before I find the right place for me. I plan to enjoy the journey. Most importantly is, Colossians 3:17
Thanks Mike, excellent video!
Glad you liked it!
Great video. Lots of important and detailed info. Thank you so much ….
Glad it was helpful!
I love these budget videos!
thanks Gary
Thank for the good numbers, we are working on our plans for retiring to the Philipines and using a figure of $800 p/m for rent and utilities x 15 years = $144k for housing. Based on thus number we are going to buy/build a small off grid house house there for ourselves, then when we go back to the US, just give the property to my wifes nieces. Your numbers helped validate this for us. Thank you much! another GREAT video!
thank you so much
Just wanted to say that in my opinion if you are going to live in a province (out in the country) if you take a little time looking it is best to buy a house that is already built or under construction BUT learn as much as possible about the way it was constructed before you jump.
I'm glad we built and will never sell our home or property but there are many, many, many, many, many lessons you WILL learn if you do build. Good advice is hire someone before you start that has already been down that road to help you from BEFORE you start and no matter what they charge you, their advice WILL save you probably at least a quarter of the total price without their help. Plus buying property is usually, almost always a nightmare even if it is legitimate.
Keep in mind a friend of mine is renting a nice house in the mountains near Dauin about 8 kilometers up in cooler weather for less than 90 USA dollars a month and has been there for 4 years plus I'm not sure how long before I knew him. Again take your time while looking. Rent at a really nice place in a smaller town on a highway is 3-4 hundred dollars a month usually with a pool to tell you what kind of place we are talking about.
Anyways your estimated cost for rent is more than double what you will pay if you do it half way right 😉. Good luck.
I am watching your budget video from a few months ago again. I can never get enough a budget videos!! Hehe.. thanks for putting the link😮😊
I like your reasonable, stick to the facts, straight forwardness (compared to a lot of them that mix in too much bs) ..
Thank you. I try to get to the point most times
hey Mike great videos Great Info thx for sharing this info
Any time!
This was very good! Thanks!
You're welcome!
This video is fantastic. Thank you! I'm 40 y/o. One year in Thailand so far. Budgeting $2,200 monthly here in Thailand with my Thai girlfriend. When I was single here I was averaging $1,500 monthly, living large. Could've done it for much less. Sounds like a single life in the Phillipines would be a great life, too, with that same money. Not much of a drinker/partier, occasional beers, but definately a foodie. Disabled US Army Veteran, so medical would be easier in the VA clinic there, too. Something to think about now.
Thank you
Appreciate it Mike, great information.
You're welcome
GREAT ADVICE VIDEO, MIKE..👍🏼 THANKS..!!
Any time!
Great info as always Thank you Mike. Rudy G. Plano TX.
Our pleasure! Rudy
Hey Mike nice budget video. I hope everything works well for you. I see some comments for yes budget and nope just spend and spend. Well spend spend will get you broke broke. I've made several trips to the Philippines and its very easy to go thru the $$$$ once you are there. Like you mentioned keep your receipts and what I do is record my spending in the notes part on my phone so I have that record. Budgets will always change as emergences will pop up and everyone has to be prepared for that. I think you and Janet covered everything really well, The difference is Canadian rate is roughly 40 - 1. Thanks again Mike for a informative video.
you need limits unless you have so much you can never spend it all
So I'm going to put this to the test as I will be Living in Dumaguete as of Mid July joining my Girlfriend there and will be getting a New Honda PCX and Multicab with small apartment as i have some contacts and friends but life is flexible and fluid. Don't rely on just Social Security and have some passive income in case and have a big buffer zone. It all depends on what your want and lifestyle and enough trips there to know the difference as vacation mode and hotels or Airbnb are much different as last time i stayed in apt and condos. Plus the more you like local food vs western is a Big savings as I'm a Big fish eater and was a vegan so salads are tougher to find; but worked a deal with local farmer buying his produce direct. As the "Learning curve" is the most expense so girlfriend saved me a bunch as i'd rather spend difference on her.. haha win-win
how do you plan to have a extra income
Hi Mike great video, moved here to CDO from New Zealand about 2 months ago, met my partner on LTR about 10 months ago, was here in March to finally met her, now living together and every thing is great , rented 2 bedroom house uptown , filled it with furniture and have been doing our budget since after moving in, I'm a kiwi so I'm a little bit tighter lol but we don't miss out on most luxuries, $1700 nzd seems to work for us and that includes savings from what we don't use, great info from you 😀 cheers 👍
thanks Martin
Very reasonable budget, but I am 71 and was hoping for a smaller one.. Housing and health insurance are more than I expected.
You can find cheaper but will you be happy
@@mikesphilippineretirement Good question, no way to tell till I try...
Stay in the US and have some form of security .
Very helpful content. Salamat... Lechon
your welcome... thanks for your comment.
Thanks Mike, Good information.
Your welcome
Your rent seems high mate . I have a beautiful new build 2 bed above a shop in Duma for 14000.peso a month . Love to see what you have
Sounds good to me finding a furnished Apartment don't drink much Coffee i will see when i get there June. 5 th i have to find. Out how to transfer money from my. Bank to PI
a few dollars
One thing you might have to do is even if you get a furnished apartment you might have to buy a mattress as some places might have thin hard mattresses
yes a new mattress
I grew up in the country, Dudley, NC(5 miles from Goldsboro)! I can survive off of 1000 in the Philippines and enjoy the province.
great enjoy your life in the Philippines
Thank you Mike as always. My budget similar to yours probably around $2,000 U. s. Hot season is coming of this is the first month my bills gone over 5,000 pesos in the last year. Very hot up here i forgot to mention i have three here. And two most nights that are her brother's kids. The brothers wife is a foreign worker in saudi arabia under two year contract so we help with the kids. Thanks Mike
It was every hot yesterday.
Great point on having start up money. Plan on buying quite a few things when you get there. Coffee like making at home, if I was out and about then yes would buy coffee out. Good video, thanks for making this, Janet and Mike...Jim
Good stuff! Thanks Jim
Mike, I really appreciate and enjoyed this video. It was very good information and I think realistic. TY
Glad it was helpful!
Mike your budget there is now the exact same as mine here in East Lansing, Michigan. the only difference is you pay rent. i own my house with no debt. i travel around to places i want to go by car, train and plain. i dont stay in 5star resorts. i do some homework and shop and find the travel deals. i find deals on everything. i have full Medicare. it saved me about $150K when i was diagnosed with prostate cancer. i needed 20 radiation treatments and meds. im doing good now. i will travel to the Phils for vacations and fun, if and when i can get a deal. and the deals are out there if you know where and how to look. my house is a modest 5bdrm 2bath home in East Lansing. worth about $300K. i have plenty of retirement savings. my adult kids are here, young grand kids too. i go to the gym every day. i have friends there. it satisfies my social needs too. no hanging out at coffee houses, bars and restaurants for me. keeps me out of trouble and healthier😂
That's great Glenn. I enjoy going to coffee shops here in Dumaguete
We looked at our budget, now that we’re settled into the condo. P75K looks about right. We’ll see how it pans out over the next 2 months, and see how much of the P100-P110K income, we are putting away.
Thanks Mike, great itemization and breakdown 👍
Sounds great! did you say P75K. Good number and glad you have more income if needed
I do appreciate your information extremely precise I thought around 1500 I plan on having around 5000 start up money thanks for your help i really appreciate it 🙏
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you Sir.
You are most welcome
Thank you for excellent work on budget.. This is most clear and concise budget i’ve seen from vloggers on TH-cam..
Wow, thank you!
Check out Alex / the Russian - his 6 mo. detailed average expenses in Dumaguete. Very detailed and extremely frugal - pretty amazing.
Thank you! Smitty.
Our pleasure!
Great breakdown
thank you
Your budget is what suits you within your means. What works works for you as an individual and family your dynamics.
Yes I think you spend a lot but you get what You want.
I think one could “get by” on $900 to 1.200 per month but that means a different location and lifestyle. Probably gambling on health issues, no health coverage, while a bomb could hit any older person at any time.
Food well do you garden? Do you have an area to garden? Do you want to garden? Is local food good enough or do you need western food types? Hey I love fish and seafood but maybe you don’t.
Scooters are not overly expensive add fees plus fuel and maybe that works. Perhaps you’re not comfortable playing bumper tag on Philippine streets…
What works for anyone works for them.
I Hate coffee you don’t that just a little difference but $ spent or not spent adds up either way.
well said
As far as gardening goes. The cost of local produce is not expensive. Some people like gardening. it’s something to do and they enjoy it.
I am freshly retired in the USA. One day I will have to try this "budget" thing you speak about! 38 days and counting!
someday
Hi Mike, thanks for taking the time to do a budget amount for the common single guy. I am your age and those numbers you came up with are very helpful to understand what my costs would be.you always give helpful information. Anyone thinking about moving to the Philippines should watch your channel for great information.keep up the good work.
I appreciate
A budget is a spending plan based on income and expenses. In other words, it’s an estimate of how much money you’ll make and spend over a certain period of time, such as a month or year. (Or, if you're accounting for the incoming and outgoing money of everyone in your household, that's a family budget.)
Pulling money from another account for traveling is not a budget. Also for a single guy, where are the numbers for dating?
thanks for sharing
🤩SPOT ON !
🙌
Also must consider the strength of the U.S. Dollar, if the rate slides to 40 peso to the dollar can be a game changer
yes it can but I do not think any great change will happen
@@mikesphilippineretirement It actually happened while I was in the Phils on holiday. Look up "Edsa 2", The exchange rate went from over USD 50 -1 to 39 - 1... literally overnight.
Hi Mike, Excellent, Great budget summary! Makes me want to go live in the Philippines❤I live in Fort Lauderdale Fl. Our house expenses with everything included…is over $6,000.00 /per month. Our mortgage alone for our home is $3,000/per month. Florida USA 🇺🇸 is so over priced. I do have family in Manila.
Thank you for the great video! I Love that you put the figures up for us to see, not all TH-camrs do that.
Thank you
Yes! It's crazy! I had a house in Tampa, Florida paying $2,400. I've been living in Thailand now for just over a year. Phillipines next! No turning back! Living like a King on an average spend of $2,000. Can do for much less if I wanted to!
You can live for less in america depend on were you live $ 3000 $ mortgage or 500.000 k home not in my budget ever
@@garrylafferty100 For sure it's possible, but nowhere near able to have the same quality of life. Really depends on an individuals (goals).
Mike, I think this is the most accurate break-down I've seen on TH-cam so far. My budget would probably be closer to yours than to the common budget, because I would hire a live-in maid (at least until I have a girlfriend) and I don't drive motorbikes, so I would get myself a car. Nothing fancy, but it would cost more than a motorbike for fuel consumption, maintenance and insurance. I guess I would need about $2K. Thanks for your very detailed analysis.
thank you
@homebasebelgium359
@homebasebelgium359.
Don’t drive cars and trucks in the philippines. Only drive a motorbike. Many vehicles drive on the road without adequate lights, drive without regard to traffic rules, tons of homeless people, kids and everyday people walking in the road….you hit a filipino with your car or truck and they are get seriously injured or die you as a foreigner are going to prison.
Also you will be extorted out of a large amount of money even if your involved in a minor traffic accident.
The police will always side with filipinos….so its always foreigner fault regardless the facts and circumstances
@@Imold774 Thanks for your advice, but I have driven cars in the Philippines many times before. I adapted to the Filipino driving style and never had a problem. With a motorbike you can have an accident too and that will almost certainly put you in hospital if you survive.
Thanks for your info, it Will help a lot for planinh a visit or longstay, Regards Hardy from Sweden
Our pleasure!
Great video's, thank you. Difficult to find monthly rental prices in some of the mountain cities, what's the best way to find rental prices?
Good question! I use marketplace on Facebook
EXCELLENT EXPLANATION!!!!!!!
Glad it was helpful!
Good Video Mike 👍
Thanks 👍Jimmy
I make my own coffee using an aero press. That’s all you need is a pot to heat water, a grinder and some coffee beans.
The aero press uses a small paper filter. You can carry 1000 of them with you in a small area.
It makes the best cup of coffee. It’s truly an incredible money saver. That habit of going out for expensive coffees with a bunch of cream and sugar than the temptation of brownies and donuts, and all that is just a waste of money.
I have to have my cup of coffee. It’s an addiction I guess. I’d like to kick the habit but I just enjoy my cup of coffee in the morning. I only do 12-14 ounces a day.
So that’s not too bad.
good to sit down and talk with friends. You do not need cream and sugar or brownies
Basically Mikes coffee is for socializing 😊
I built, literally built from nothing since we bought the land and then constructed, a coffee shop/cafe in a town near where we live. We use beans sourced from the Philippines and Vietnam. These are ground on demand - nothing pre-prepared because that undermines the freshness. There is also an array of pastries, as well as Filipino snacks, for the customers to enjoy with their coffee. We employ 6 Filipinos. During the Covid lockdown we continued paying their wages. It is not a particularly profitable enterprise in that I don't make much from it, but we don't make a loss, and we provide employment for our staff.
I use a French press that I purchased from a SM store. It’s made of glass and stainless steel with a wood handle. Whatever you use, it’s best to grind the beans just before you brew your coffee.
Hi 👋 U2. I would think that $2200 a month is a comfortable budget for single person or for your family. It’s about self discipline & control with your finances. We all must decide how far our $$ goes not trying to exceed the budget if possible. Thanks 🙏.
Blessings 🙏🌸🌺🌼
thank you chicken legs
Gee Id think living as an expat one would have savings etc. I lived 2xs as an expat in asia but on the crazy rich side of corporate paid housing. you would not believe me..
Best budget are unlimited budget !!!
a budget of 100k or more USD works great
That seems like a reasonable budget. If anything I'd say a little high. You can do it for less but you could also do it for more. It all depends on the money you have and your comfort level. I was recently in Cebu City and did 1 month easily under $2000. Stayed in a lower cost hotel, about $750 for the month and ate out every meal. Living there I could do both for less. I did have a free breakfast but it was nothing special, more like a snack. I did eat breakfast out every day after eating the snack. I think where you are high is the food. About 10 days ago I just added up my expenses for food in the US and it was over $100 less then you have for the common budget. I don't see how that is possible since I buy nothing but the very best in-class ingredients with no bad preservatives which I'm quite sure your budget is not. For example I only drink 100% grass fed cow's milk. Only 100% grass fed yogurts. I only eat pasture raised eggs and mostly organic I only eat organic nuts as well as organic fruits and veggies. I only eat sprouted bread with no bad high inflammatory oils like canola oil, sunflower or safe flower oils. I only eat chips or popcorn made with extra virgin olive or avocado oil. I only eat 100% grass fed beef, some is pre-cooked and cost $14 a pd. I only drink pure leave tea not these highly processed low qualities teas or drinks like soda you are most likely using in your budget. And many other products as well, I pay quite a bit more for these products then if I bought the lower priced products that you are likely including in the common budget. There is no way you could be spending more then I am.
You have the food budget at $697, mine was $586. I spent $484 on just groceries, you have $365, ok you are lower, however I spent only $103 on eating out and coffee shops. You have $270 for common budget eating out alone plus additional for coffee shops. If I eliminate the $37 for coffee shops I spent I'd only spent $66 eating out. I eat at places like Texas Roadhouse, Chili's, I did get a few double patty smashburgers which were on special and once at subway getting the higher priced footlong. Coffee shops was $37 , I don't go often, only if I leave for some reason early then I get a coffee or breaky sandwhich.
What that tells me Mike Is I am not eating out as often as your budget, not even close Mike, I am paying more per meal many times when I do eat out then you are when eating out and I spent far less. Therefore I am buying way more groceries and eating at home alot more then you have it, and considering I pay far more per each item and only payed $119 more doesn't seem right. If I bought the lower priced products I would be spending less then your common budget for groceries Mike and I would be buying far more groceries and still spending less. On top of all that Mike, I am a very big eater, I eat more then the average guy my age or any age really. I am not a big guy or over-weight just a big eater. It seems high to me. But I'd rather see you give a higher budget then lower, people can always come in under and feel good about it.
it is a budget and you can adjust the number to fit your lifestyle
Reasonable budge. Mike I spend 156.00 dollars at Walmart once every 2 weeks I eat lots of egg. Whites and salads
a wife with a 17 yr old daughter is 600 + a month at walmart for us
thanks guys
Thank you, Mike for all the work you did for this video. The only answer I still need to find is how much its going to cost in Health insurance for an expat family of two expat adults and two children. I'm in contact with Michael Onstad now, so I should have an idea soon.
-Steve
He will tell you . Tell him you know me and want a discount
@@mikesphilippineretirement
Thanks, Mike. I certainly appreciate that.
30 Mbps (Megabits per second) is adequate for 2 people watching TH-cam in HD (1080P) simultaneously. 150 Mbps is overkill unless you have three or four people watching 4K video simultaneously.
200M here is only a 6-700 pesos more than 60M service. When i first came here 2 years ago you couldn't get 50M. Now i see they got 1G available. They're building that internet fast here. Chinese have been coming in
I'm still focused on the 2-week Millionaire video, heck with the budget, LOL. I had my eyes on one girl, but she is scarred from her past relationship with an expat, so I refuse to put my life on hold while she is healing. This is why the 2-week Millionaire fits my style for now.
go for it. 2 weeks of great happiness
Also stay in cambodia. Lots of things here cheap but electricity is expensive
Happy you like it in Cambodia but it is not for me
@@mikesphilippineretirement Mike, may I ask what it is that you don't like about Cambodia? I'm trying to weigh the pros/cons of Cambodia vs Philippines. (I realize it can be personal choice.) Was interested in Vietnam too, but those 90 day Visa runs are deterring me... One thing that draws me to Philippines is the Phil Health. I know it doesn't cover a lot, but at least you have some assurance you will at least be seen in an emergency & not left in a hallway to die. 😉 I do realize you need to have savings & open credit card(s) to help with potential hospitalization costs. Hopefully, in most cases, I would be able to return to the States & utilize my Medicare for anything serious or needing lengthy treatment if needed.
Im here in the Philippines vacationing Alona Beach Bohol " research " for the 2nd time in past 5 months.. Retired, but still 4 years left with younger kids in USA school..Great budget video. To anyone thinking of the move, you should vacation here a few times. This is a great option but not the only one. However, Philpina people are excellent people.. Pretty warming. yes your over charged with a smile😂
love the smile
Nice video mike. New subscriber here.
thank you John
that is one hell of a budget
hahaha why do you say that
Budgets look good, yours and common. For me personally, I'd add in something for traveling since I plan to travel each month for a 1 or 2 week trip someplace and would want to set aside the money for all the costs involved with that (resorts are typically more expensive).
I have traveling is from my saving. If your spending to much and not saving anything how can you travel
@@mikesphilippineretirement If someone is spending too much and not saving, then they'll need to earn more from side-hustle income like TH-cam or something else that can be done online. Another option for saving travel money is to find a cheaper place to live, like Cavite province where some other vloggers live very inexpensively.
You need to have medical insurance eveb if you dont use it. Ive heard people have an emergency and end up in the hospital and cant get care because no money. Horrible stories. Its better to have then not have. Its not america where you can make payment plans or not have insuranxe
Thank you great information😊
You are so welcome!
Thanks for the video, my monthly budget or pension is $1500 and I live in Tunasan, Muntinlupa City plus don't rely living pension to pension, you need extra savings and emergency funds. I'm very happy enough not paying any mortgage or rent. I know 5 farangs living there and all military veterans.
Thanks for sharing
Great video Mike. Thanks guys 👍👍👍
Our pleasure!
First off, love the video. Thanks for all the great info. My main concern is medical. I have tricare and also VA. All of my ailments are covered. How does this work if at all in Dumaguete? I am married 10 years to a Filipina living in Florida. I am 50 and am retired and we are looking to live part time in the Phils. I don't want to live in her province because it is small and not much to do. She can go visit there if she wants lol! I have a decent budget for living, but not like $10,000 a month guy. $3000 is my high estimate but I like my Aircon and amenities. Plus I still have Oh Shit money I can save each month as well.
thanks for sharing Jeff
Nice budget video period
Thank you
Your budget is going to be your budget(good one). Think you did a pretty good job for those guys coming to the Philippines on the monthly budget for them(somewhere pretty close). I'm just glad you didn't say you can live like a king on 600 dollars, ha ha. Did you cancel your Pacific Cross policy, if you did, why? I saw in a video about another vlogger who canceled his Pacific Cross policy too. Good video Mike.
yes the cost is going way high and they don't cover that much
You look great Mike and younger. i don't see entertainment cost in there which is $250 to $1,000 a month for that, and double all cost if dating. I cannot do it for less than 3k-4k myself.
for us an old married couple we are in by 3 pm each day and going out to eat, taking a joy ride someplace and meeting friends is the only entertainment we have.
Your budget would be closer to our budget. I think about the exchange rate dropping to 40 pesos to the dollar and that scares me a little. Thanks...hope to see you in April
Good point!
Thanks fir sharing
Thanks for watching
I agree with Philhealth, you can get that but I advice is for you to pay the lowest amount possible and just get a prepaid medical insurance/coverage. These prepaid medical policies can help you with emergency situation and some even have unlimited physical and dental checkup. I am not an agent for these policies, this is what I have been doing for years. Philhealth is helpful but mostly they only cover terminal cases.
Mike, IMO ya nailed it on this one. Start with the Baseline Budget you provided and then add lifestyle to it. I didn't see any unaccounted for items/issues. I personally would double the Misc. just because... but that's a small item. Great job, now go take a break my brother and Pretend your Retired hahahahha. Peace and Love, B Goat
I am retired YT is easy the hard part is making people around me happy
Budget? What budget? I don’t need no stinking budget ☺️. I am extremely blessed and fortunate 🙏. Hard, if not impossible to spend my monthly income? That’s One reason We travel soo much. I guess I could save? 🤔 Nahhh! I believe we should spend and enjoy NOW! One never knows? Tomorrow is not promised 🙏. Also have loads of credit cards in case of emergency. Living the dream 😎 Good luck Mike and Janet , wishing you the best. ❤️
Yes you can live like that. Hope for the best
Thanks for sharing!!
Good information 👍
Thanks
This is a nice budget ... the fact you cover over misc. and savings is SOOO important, because this is where most budgets fall short. And, like you said .. if I am going to go island hopping, that money should come out of the money I manage to save. Only thing I have to add is, my wife is a "shopaholic", and my house is paid for so it's a wash. lol ... Good video.
do i hear the words shopee!!