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The Philippines has many challenges for a foreigner (I hate the word expat). So when I had my 1st encounter with a Filipina back in 2009 (Q3 or Q4) it became a very intriqing country. And that resulted in me doing some (desk) research together with conversations with many other Filipinas. So, now, I think, I know a lot but understand very little of how Filipinas approach and deal with their own lives. Life - for them - could have been and can be so much easier with a little bit more common sense and common knowledge. But I get the idea that science/scientific evidence is something they frown upon. They rather 'rely' on god and religion.
@@haighton I noticed a certain "just enough" mentality among Filipinos . They don't try to make best with resources they have, why bother sealing the rooms of your house so they are not just metal plate on a wooden frame with half a meter gap between the roof and wall if you can just put plastic bag around light bulb to catch the thousands of insects that fly inside the house at night...I saw houses that use cement and blocks for example, so they already spent enough on good materials, but they slapped the roof on top with enough space to crawl through between the block wall and roof, and there are cracks in the wall you can put your hand through. But it is enough for them, no need to put just a bit more effort and make it good... Jaw dropping mentality. Not saying this as means to offend them, just an observation.
Your not being negative just honest its a hard life there; people who have a solid retirement income most likely would NOT live in a 3rd world country.
@@frankcentofanti9317, it doesnt need to be a hard life. If only they use common sense and (common) knowledge. All those single PH moms out there. Its so easy to avoid becoming preggy (even when no contraceptives are used). And the result is that all those babies will also end up poor as hell. But sex-ed and sex doesnt really mix in PH.
My wife and I retired to the Philippines in 2015 and have been very happy here. We are fortunate to have found a pleasant, clean and large peaceful FARM. Our closest neighbor is a 8+ minute walk away we don't have the barking Dogs, crowing roosters or garbage issues. I understand what you are talking about because I have seen the same things and you are spot on. BUT the #1 trick or secret to coming here is to Learn TAGALOG and or have a trustworthy wife/partner who speaks the language #2. Live in the countryside, it's safe, clean, quiet, affordable and you can grow most of your food which saves even more money. Everyday I go into my gardens and pick something fresh to eat everyday. If interested ASK ME anything.
More and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.
The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
Insightful... I was curious about her, so I looked her up online. I discovered her website, and I must say that she seems knowledgeable. I sent her an email outlining my goals. I appreciate you sharing.
I am 47, I live in Alabama and retiring here would be depressing. You remind me a lot of another Canadian youtuber that always complains about Wi-fi and things that to me are futile. The thing I love the most about Latin America and Asia is the warmth of the people and the feeling that the people are alive and open to human connections. I live in a very a nice condo here and I don't know not even one person on my floor, when people see you here I almost feel like some people go out of their way to avoid any human interaction- This is not a normal society, most people in the USA are lonely and socially disconnected.
@cyrolacorte6469 My business partner moved from Toronto to Mobile Alabama, and all he talked about is southern hospitality. Tells me how friendly everyone is. Mind you his accent may be a reason people gravitate towards him.
As an American Millennial from the Midwest I'd have to agree. I believe it because people are fearmungered by the media so everyone wants to avoid "strangers". In the 90s and early 2000s there was a legitimate chance you could meet your soul mate or best friend of a lifetime on a whim by simply asking for directions somewhere or going to a bathroom.
If you’re the type of person who can easily integrate into a community and avoid focusing on things to complain about, the Philippines is definitely worth a visit.
Left 2005 Germany to work and live in Canada. I did meet so many immigrants in Canada who couldn't stand it and left after a couple of months or even 2 years. The biggest problem people do have in other countries? They are trying to change the country instead of just changing themselves. Planned a vacation of 5 months in Panama. Arrived November 2019. That's when I did fall down the hole. Pandemic, and I wasn't allowed to fly back. I got nuts. Well at least for 2 years. As I got again my return flight denied, I just had enough from Canada. Applied for residency in Panama. Got everything done in 2 months. Sold everything in Canada. Separated from my girlfriend in November 2019. The vacation to Panama was only to get my head clear. The pandemic took the decision from me. In November this year, I am 5 years in Panama. Beaches, palms, and cool beers. Who thought that I would retire like a millionaire 😂. 6-7 months snow and ice are history. Is everything fine? God no. But I rather go with the flow. Life is short. And if I hear again in a supermarket a "Gringo" yelling around why nobody speaks English, I smile and think: Another one who leaves because it isn't Canada or the USA!
And some of those guys who go to another country to try and live don't realize their personality or vices are the problem. I haven't met too many there, but some of the guys appears to be too young to officially retire and were just drawing a check of some kind from back home. Idle hands are the tools of the devil.
Ah! Panama! That's where I chose to live for 6 years (2006-12) coming from Canada (but born t here). I lived in P. City for 2 years, and Dolega, Chiriqui for 4 years. I have the FNV there. A lot of my friends in Panama were German, and I became a Schalke 04 fan in the process! But, I'm glad I wasn't there for the plandemic because Panama, like the UK, Canada and Australia, went full Stalin on their citizens. And I left just in time too (Feb 2020) never to return. And I'm so glad I did after friends who stayed told me how bad it was with the many restrictions placed on them. I move to Uruguay instead where we had none of those nonsensical things that never worked: lockdowns, mask mandates, vax mandates and silly social distancing rules. And because I have 8 different residencies around the world, plus 5 citizenships/passports, I was able to travel freely without any restrictions. (I didn't even wear a stupid mask that never protected anyone simply because, whenever I flew I always flew private during the China virus time.) However, I'm planning a return trip to Panama later this year to renew my residency requirement for the FNV. (It's been 5 years;' I should have returned after 2 years but the excuse I'm using is the plandemic as well as all the protests Panama has had recently. My lawyer has told me that those excuses will allow me to keep the FNV. But even if I lose it, I have other residencies - as mentioned above - I can fall back on.)
@@ColonelHoganStalag13 With digital nomad lifestyle there's a lot of young people like that these days. I moved to Panama when I was 36, basically living the retired lifestyle. I was still running online businesses and day trading, but it didn't feel like work and would often describe myself as "retired" even though, officially I wasn't. I did that because the lifestyle I was leading at the time - living in the tropics, carefree, financially secure - was how I pictured retirement. So that saying "idle hands are the tools of the devil" is nothing more to me than just a saying ... it means very little to me. I want to live a free lifestyle away from the prying eyes of my government back home and by living in the tropics I was able to do that while paying 0% income taxes and enjoying a cost of living that was an eighth of what it was in Canada.
@@realismatitsfinest1 Well. You see. I was in Panama City through the lockdown. 8 months. As soon as the lockdown was lifted, I moved to Playa Uverito, Los Santos area. They had only lockdown from Friday 9pm till Monday 5am. I was living on the beach and could walk with my dog every day. I felt really stupid when I asked locals when I could go shopping for groceries. “What are you talking about? We have no restrictions except on the weekends. After 3 weeks, even this restrictions were lifted. Because I have a 82% disability with a weak immune system, I got vaccinated. 3 times. The mask isn’t to protect yourself. It protects others if you are sick. Since my accident, I catch every single cold what goes around. But I was told from the doctors that this would be happening. Funny thing was when I got sick with 41.4 degrees Celsius fever and going to the hospital. They switched 3 times the digital thermometer. When they figured out that all did show the same temperature, they didn’t know what to do. Some flu medication and go home into the bed. I don’t go anymore if it hits me again with high fever. It’s just like being in Canada by minus 30 degrees Celsius. I’m freezing in Panama by plus 34 degrees with 2 sweaters on! 😀
Hey Chad I’m another fellow Canadian who did his first trip to (Asia)Thailand in 2023 for a month after my youngest daughter moved out with her bf. I had no more excuses not to travel. In 2024 I did a month in the Philippines, a week in Malaysia because I found a cheap flight, then 3 weeks back in Thailand. On this second trip I ended up meeting up with one coworker while in Cebu and two others when I did a week trip in Malaysia. The more I talk about the fun I have the more other people get interested and now I have a buddy who is going with me for his first trip to Asia in 2025. I have also chatted with my friends and coworkers who will also be in Asia around the same time and we will all be on a group chat and are going to plan for a group meet up probably in Vietnam. The one great thing I found out in the last two years is how cheap it is to fly around Asia . I highly recommend everyone to get off the couch and try a trip to Asia at least once.
Just remember that a trip and touring is nothing like living there. You should read my detailed comment before you decide to leap. I suggest everyone who decides to go live, ease into it for a year or two, before selling everything abroad and committing too much.
@@Anonymint-vj7btonly in big places like Pattaya, Koh Samui or Phi Phi, Phuket etc. if you visit some of the smaller cities or islands, very little tourism.
@@JPinShenzhen I have read and heard that Phuket is also a zoo of Russian tourists that overrun the place and make unwelcoming for other Westernized nationalities? Well I go to Thailand for the infrastructure, so then I guess that will also be where the zoo of tourists are? Anyway, after 27 years, I am finished with SE Asia for living (visits are okay). Mexico has a much better climate. I am too old for that crush of protoplasm in the areas of Asia with infrastructure. And I can not buy land in my name there. Can not become citizen or never have to report to authorities every year at least. I am not interested in being a second class member of their society.
Lived and worked overseas for 20 years…four years in Korea and Japan. Not blind to overseas life. I’m keeping my Tacoma at my sister’s house. Every couple of years I’ll return and hit US National Parks and Canadian Parks.
Without places like the Philippines or Thailand many American men would be living monk mode. Not sure about living there full time, but visiting is good to give your life balance and enjoy being out of the feminist B.S. for awhile.
It’s so disorienting in the west . 56% divorce rate and of those still married 20% + are unhappy; stay just for the kids etc. “Don’t need no man” is wild. Perhaps we’ll soon have AI women and “don’t need no woman” will also be true 😂 S. Korea, Japan, America… all the modern east and west is low birth rate because we no longer need each other.
For me, being in a place were dating women is not a difficult issue would add as much peace of mind to my life as living in Malibu or Martha’s Vineyard would add! I have lived in an extremely nice areas of California, beach side areas that make you feel good just to walk outside and look around your neighborhood. It is a blessing to be in an area that is attractive, very clean, with great infrastructure and upscale people. It’s wonderful to live in that kind of environment ! HOWEVER, never knowing if it’s going to take me a month to meet a steady girlfriend or 2 years to meet a steady girlfriend, is just too much! And to be honest, the more upscale the town/neighborhood you live in, the harder it is to meet women, since younger, single women generally can’t afford to live there! There is nothing worse than sitting in a nightclub or bar for 3 hours, and no one seems interested. There’s nothing worse than working out at a gym every day, seeing yourself in the mirror and being happy with the results, yet that not translate to a single date! To watch as women purposely try not to make eye contact with you, or avoid even a hint of interest. And even if you are in relative good shape, if you don’t reach the 6 feet height, requirement, or you’re not the right racial demographic in the area you live in, you’re still going to struggle, and will be lucky to get 5 worthwhile dates a year, and unfortunately, some of them will have to be coworkers. No, bad infrastructure, or not, give me a place where I can afford to create a wealth bubble around myself, that also has unlimited dating options! I’ll choose that over Calabasas or Kennebunkport anytime!
I have been traveling to the Philippines for 21 years. I retired here 2.5 years ago. I wouldn't go back to the US. We live in a very nice community that is clean, quiet, and very convenient location. My food selection where I live is so good from shopping to restaurants. We have a large home that is cheap compared to the west. We are very happy here. But your videos show all views and are honest with no BS. They are appreciated.
@@Synfulzare there nice grocery stores with packaged beef chicken and fish? One guy I saw went to a open meat market and the fish looked gross. No refrigeration
After visiting Philippines for 12 years, last year I built a house and moved here full time because I could not afford to live in the US. I could survive but not live. Except I do not see my family as much but otherwise I have zero regrets. All you say is true, but I love it.
Hi Chad.. we are from Canada we retire early ,sold everything and moved to the Philippines. After we’ve been here for 6 months we visited Canada. We forgot how expensive it is to live in there. We went for breakfast 3 people cost us $65 that’s insane., We feel that Canada is so sterile, so quiet lol after being exposed to the Philippines karaoke, barking dogs plus roosters.It’s true it’s not perfect here, poverty, garbage, traffic, frustration on government agencies. But after 4 weeks in Canada we are so itchy to head back and so happy to be back in the Philippines. We are in Negros Oriental but planning to move to Iloilo city for better infrastructure. Our monthly budget is $4,000 Cnd we can live comfortably here. We travel Vietnam for a month then going to Japan in October. My point is you have more options here in the Philippines. We are happier here and will continue to travel different countries especially around Asia. Cheers!
Yes well said! For me as well, taking everything into consideration, the Philippines still offers a better lifestyle. Nowhere is perfect, and a country with such friendly people, English-speaking, and easy/safe to travel around, low cost of living, it's tough to beat despite some of the drawbacks.
Yup, eating out is expensive both in $$$ and health. I haven't eaten out in over 7 years. Cook every meal at room using real food. Love it, saves me time and I'm healthier. There was a time when I ate out 2-3 times a day. Can't say I miss it. I own my house in Phoenix AZ USA. Over the past 15 years it has appreciated an average of $2000/mo. My prop tax is $166/mo. When I move to SE Asia I'll be paying a lot for by renting. Bananas, eggs, rice are the same price, or a little lower here in Phoenix than in PH. A person today can buy a decent house (PH standards) in Cairo IL for $9k. It's on Zillow right now. You can walk to the Mississippi and Ohio rivers for super catfishing which is safe to eat so basically free fish. Here in the US I get 100% free world class healthcare and $7500/yr for dental. Because I live off savings, not taking SS, I get Medicaid ($0 copay, $0 deductible). At 65 I got Medicare and Medicaid which pays my Parts B & D and all copays and deductible. Also get a free smartphone and plan via LifeLine. The concept of PH being "cheaper" is only valid if a person chooses to spend a lot in the West buy eating out and renting rather than buying and doing whatever. My total average spend in the US for 15 years has been $600/mo while my house went up $2000/mo. Next year I'll be moving to SE Asia and expecting to spend 3-5x more for basically the same lifestyle. I'm moving for the adventure. Budget will be $5800/mo with about $500k saved. Cheaper? Nah.
To me those small negatives don't out way the large positives. In Los Angeles where I am from I have seen a lot more homeless people living on the street. You have homeless people in all countries.. Some streets are not well kept so I just drive around pot holes. In our village the internet sucks. But I now have Starlink that problem is fixed. Yes, in our village (province area) power might go off but we have a generator. But in the big cities the power is reliable. In our village the trash is burned. Yes, there are a lot of unkept dogs and cats because some people can barely feed themselves. But cost of living is very cheap which allows me and my Filipina wife to enjoy life with no financial worries. The Filipino people are very nice. And the Philippines has a lot of beautiful places you can visit. I love it here...
That’s what really annoyed me when I stayed at a motel near a pump boat marina as I had to wait for the next day’s sailing. The owner of the motel was burning plastic bags and other garbage and it was just smouldering. And, looking from my second story window I could see a surreal scene of smouldering plumes of smoke everywhere in that village. The acrid smoke got into my room. I went downstairs to tell the manager that the smouldering fire beneath my room was sending smoke in my room. But to no avail.
The bottom line is the cultural differences. They seem cute and funny at first. However, they can really start to wear on you if you can let them go. My wife {filipina} and I married 39 years ago, so she was in the states most of her life. We were both in our early 20's. She has a harder time accepting some things here than I do. But we complain about it to each other, then laugh about it later. You can find plenty of angry expats that sit around hating life here, but won't leave either. You have to be able to let it go. Be honest with yourself if you can't do that.
Hey Chad, Everything you said about the Philippines is spot on, especially the negative aspects of living here. I always tell anyone who's thinking of moving here that they need to at least try it out for 6 months. But even then, there's no guarantee it'll work out. Remember, the Philippines is still a developing country, so there are both advantages and disadvantages to that. One of the negatives is the infrastructure and stuff like that. But for me, this is probably the best time to come and try to fit in, if you're really serious about it. You don't want to come here when everything is all developed and in order. It'll be way more expensive then. And the people won't be as friendly as they are now, because they'll all be too busy trying to make more and more money. I'm lucky that I lived and worked in the US for over 30 years. We decided to move back home 2 years ago, and at first, I had some doubts about whether it was the right decision. But after living here for a few months, I realized that we made the right choice, even with all the disadvantages and the lack of the same quality amenities that America offers. And the best thing about it? IT'S MORE FUN IN THE PHILIPPINES!!!
That's awesome. My mum is from the Philippines and we both live in Australia. I haven't been back to Bohol since my cousins wedding in 2012. My dad just passed away a few weeks ago at 71 and now I'm rethinking everything in life. Im trying to convince my wife that there is more to life than working your a** off every day and soon we will have enough passive income to easily live in a place like the Philippines as Australia is extremely expensive to live now.
Phillipines is not a developing country. They have been frozen in time for the past 20-30 years. That country has rarely taken any steps forward, if anything they went backwards. My dad told me when he used to live there the peso was $1=₱4. Now it's damn near $1=₱55-57. They got a horrible government system. Like why are there malls everywhere. That money can be used to better quality of life.
Higher dollar value to php peso is what makes living there as an expat cheaper. Also, malls are owned by private corporations which the government don't own. They just give business permits as other business.
@@chieflingcoHigher dollar value to php peso is what makes living there as an expat cheaper. Also, malls are owned by private corporations which the government don't own. They just give business permits as other business.
@@chieflingcothe higher the quality of life of the majority of citizens in a country, the more the cost of living will be more expensive. So yeah, it has drawbacks
The reason for being in the Philippines is cheaper housing cheaper recreation cheaper public transportation and better choice of woman that actually want you. Nothing else is really better but it’s a trade off and depends on the person.
@@sugoidessho Then why are they also with poor white guys? No, it is a status symbol for them and some semblance of stability. A lot of the local men are not driven to find work and keep working. They know how to make babies and to scrounge up some money for _Red_ _Horse_ or bet on a cockfight but when it comes to buying food for the family, it varies. Women tend not to like that sort of lifestyle. Maybe you should observe, listen and ask questions.
Nice thing is you can create your own little paradise. Can get land in your wife's name, build a home, get Starlink for internet, etc. You can then grow your own food, raise chickens and so on.
I'm retired in Cebu city and have a $3000 dollar budget which works out great here in the Philippines. I sat down yesterday and figured what budget I would need to go back to the USA to live this life style and compared the budgets between the two. $3000 in the Philippines with a great cushion. $8500 per month in the USA. Only drawbacks in the Philippines so far is feeling isolated from being able to solve problems when they come up. In America, you know how to solve any issue. Here in the Philippines I depend on my Filipina wife to handle who, what, when, negotiation, payment when it comes to repairs, buying things, markets, dealing with banks, loans. Yeah, I try but I always pay too much because I think American or I miss the details of what I'm getting. I also hate the junk they sell here. It breaks, leaks, malfunctions or doesn't work in less than a month. Another problem is Medical, going through the "gauntlet" with trusting, knowing what they are doing, prices, over paying, worried about being a doctors "cash cow".
@@faronray5765 My first wife was from there in 1989, went back again in 04, then 2021. Place is useless. Good for staying in and watching Netflix. Visayans in general are the money grabbers, most of the bar girls in the 70s and 80s were Visayans. Cebu LoL You can keep it. Airport on an island. Wow 😳
There are drawbacks in any country. People must understand that they are entering a less developed country than the West. But some things about the country are beautiful. If you are not willing to give up your comfortable life in the US or Canada, you should not go; otherwise, you will be frustrated.
Philippines is what you see is what you get. If you want Philippines be like the US then expect Filipino people's character will be changed, they are not going to be the same people the way they are today. This is the reason why I am afraid about Philippines if it becomes a 1st world country, Filipino people will no longer be a happy people and they will become more self-centered people because their life become fast face, just like the US, Canada, Japan, Korea, Etc. For me I don't want Philippines to change. Instead of complaining about Philippine's negative things, why don't we just appreciate what Philippine can offer us, be an open minded person and enjoy life while you can, remember life is too short. Life is defined by what you really want in life. Do you want to live surrounded with happy people that accept you as one of their family members or live in a country that got everything but surrounded with chaotic people just like what's going on here in the US? For me wherever I feel home, that's where I want to be.
Another wise person. I understand were you are coming from. I do believe that the Philippines needs to improve waste management, poverty, and among other issues that the country has to deal with. Some improvements are a good thing.
Nah! we will never change, we are very diversed with ( 130 different Proto-Austronesian Ethnic Tribes/Groups ) the spanish, japs and the yankees couldn't change us. Only the Flips that immigrated to the U.S have changed and became "WhiteWashed".
As far as trash and poverty. The philippines does NOT hide it. I went to thailand and they seem to hide it well. Korean streets and subways, if you drop food on the ground, you can use the 3 second rule "say no more". Philippines the people are so nice, the food is average at best. Poverty is awful. So many beggers and never walk around late at night. There are a few select cities that are clean, but you have to fine them and then like them enough to move there. I have been traveling some and the one thing that jumps out in most cities is the trash removal. they dont clean the trash pickup areas. When it rains, stay home or you may get trench feet due to the lack of drainage. So all that trash including rooten food and feces is now in the water at your feet. I hate to beat up the country, but going to Boracay or Palawan is probably not where you are going to live. These are just a few things I've noticed in just a few short months that I've lived here.
Have you noticed that the locals steal the thrash cans and in most cases sell it. I've asked my sister and my cousin about this and they say that they do steal the thrash cans in the city streets and in the neighborhoods. One of many reasons why you will see crap all over the place. Poverty is all over the world, unfortunately other countries have it worse than others.
"As far as trash and poverty. The philippines does NOT hide it." Yes they do, they try to hide it. Look how clean the tourist sections are. Then when the pope visited last time, what did the Filipinos do? They put up tarps along the popes routes to hide the slum areas. They cleaned up along his routes. They rounded up the street children and sent them to places outside and north of Metro Manila.
Thailand is better in almost every way apart from two things. They often don't speak great English and the women in the Phillipines are far nicer and easier to get. If you could put the Filipinas in Thailand I'd live there for good 😂.
Thank you for being straight with us. Normally all we hear is the old dog, Geo, Beaver beach bar (& World Zoom) doing constant promo commercials for the Philippines!
You're welcome, just trying to paint an accurate and balanced picture based on my own observations and experience. Regardless of the things I mentioned I still love the Philippines and looking forward to getting back there. Everywhere has pros and cones. Cheers
TBF Old Dog does tell his story post-divorce. Ground hog day, he called it. Big house. Work, TV, sleep, work… rinse and repeat. Nothing wrong with get busy living or get busy dying.
@@ChadFosterExplores Chad the following JRE immigration services explains that 1) citizenship is not possible as it requires a vote of Congress, 2) anyone can make a complaint against a foreigner for any reason and have them blacklisted. The problem is that even someone can lie and have a foreigner blacklisted. Foreigners do not fully understand the risks in the Philippines. You could have all your assets there and then suddenly you can not stay there anymore nor remove the blacklisting for 5 years if ever. In 2020, my flight was canceled by the Taal volcano eruption and thus I was unable to leave before the final day of my extension and unable to obtain the ECC at the airport (as the Angeles ofc was closed due to Taal eruption even though that was far away). The BIR was going to put me in the rat-infested Bicutan detention center, unless I could produce records of my prior marriage to a Filipina and the birth certificates of my Philippines born kids. As it was they fined me like $1000 and they summarily deported me while forcing me to wait a few weeks for processing and to stay in a certain location for those weeks. Almost a form of house arrest I guess you could say but not quite. Luckily they did not blacklist me. Also I forgot to mention I was attacked by a gang of youths in front of the police station on Walking Street in 1999 and they gouged out my right eye. The Philippines was suffering from the Asian crisis and people were angry. Beware if the economy turns down again, kidnap-for-ransom could rise again, especially now that the Dirty Harry Enforcer is no longer the president, crime has reportedly increased. Also ostensibly the Chinese mafia have been moving into the Philippines. Btw, the head of JRE had mentioned in another video of his how he too gets very frustrated. Someone had parked in a non-parking space blocking him from exiting from his parking space. He found the person, and the person did not even apologize and acted annoyed that he had to move his car. You can be shot in the Philippines if you make another motorist angry. Etc.. The Philippines has many sides lurking that the virgin foreigners underestimate. th-cam.com/video/gRbKnq7_wdI/w-d-xo.html
I live in third world Latin America most of the time and am considering the Philippines. The "annoying" things are probably the same. Yes the electricity goes out a few times a week for a few hours. So what? Lines in stores take more time as no one is in a hurry. No one stresses about being on time. Meeting a girl at 8:00 might mean 8::30 and no one would think anything of that. You don't get convenience all the time and no you can't buy a lettuce with the vegetable store with twenty dollars because they can'r break that. Even at the supermarket you don't have a million different choices. Ketchup might be on the shelf one day and they are out the next---big deal. You just have to relax and go with it in a better environment, nicer people and focus on the laid back new life and take the great amount that is a better life and learn to live with the small annoyances which only annoys westerners that have had it far too easy. Cheers---.
hey! I am in Toronto. 7 years back and forth between Toronto and Philipines , started Utube channel there, then deleted, saw lots of expats and heard lots their stories...bottom line: never buy a house, start a business, or marry a Filipina, just rent a house, rent a bike/car, do have a girl friend! (no need to marry). ....now I am back in Toronto, love cleanliness, safety, salaries, seasons and predictability here. crazy expensive thou. I still love Philipines (ppl are actually alive there!) but from now on: 3 winter months only. like a normal snow bird
As a Canadian living in the Philippines and raising roosters and racing pigeons, I fit right in with the locals. There is no way I would leave Canada if not for my wonderful wife. To me that is the only valid reason to leave your home country. People who complain about their home country have a problem with themselves. The problem is not the country but them. I love Canada but if you find a good Filipina she is worth making the move as long as you are the kind of man who can adapt to any environment. Everything you said about the Philippines is true. I could make a very long list of the negative, but a good Filipina is even better than all the positive hype out there. They are special girls.
why have you not taken her back to Canada then .....because she is 30 years your junior perhaps lol and in my country, CANADA, you'd be viewed as a pervert and she as a gold digger
??? Trudeau, woke liberal nonsensical laws and policies, societal brainwashing and gaslighting, out-of-control inflation, etc, are not valid reasons to want to leave the s hole of Canada?
If you can do without the sex, most of what men need are cooking, cleaning, and companionship. I submit it is a good option to just hire that out rather than seek a GF. Expectations are much clearer-cut, and so much easier to get out of a business relationship than a "romantic" one
Chad, you’re an honest man and you always keep it real. Here’s my two cents. I’m from the PH and been living here in LA for over 30 years. The US gives you opportunities that no other can. However, so many problems. In SoCal there’s garbage everywhere too. People are undisciplined too. So you talk about our negatives but I’d say it’s the same in every country in the world. Some cities are cleaner than others. If the PH is rich and offers the same financial opportunities as the US, then people will be moving here in droves. I’m just saying every country has their strong points and weaknesses. We have so many positives and it’ll keep growing from here on out. Stay safe.
Many Philippine vloggers will not do videos on some of the cons in the Philippines because discouraging viewers doesn’t help their overall viewership. It’s as simple as that. Why discourage them and then they stop watching your channel? The reality hits hard though if these viewers don’t do their own due diligence and just go by what these vloggers have said. The main pros are cost of living, weather, and girls. Some of the cons are weather, expensive western comforts, traffic, overcrowded large cities, inefficiencies with stores and government offices, etc… I live about 30 minutes from San Francisco. We have many areas beat when it comes to high prices, crime, traffic, and dirty places. Traffic here is not as bad as Manila or Cebu, but it’s not good. I’ve yet to find anywhere in the Philippines as dirty as some of the places in Northern California, even the squatter areas in Manila and Cebu. I often tour my girlfriend’s family and friends when they visit California. They’re shocked to see how dirty that it is here. People can live in the Philippines on less than $1k usd per month where you can’t do that in the U.S. You won’t be living very well, but you’ll have a decent apartment (in the provinces anyway), Filipino type food is inexpensive and not bad, hospital visit are fairly inexpensive for routine things, and usually the beaches are free. Barking dogs and roosters go along with these things.
You can rent a nice apartment in quezon city in manilla for $500 a month. But the quality of things is just not the same as in amerixa. But that's why it's cheaper to live here 😂
Yet to see any videos of anywhere in PI i would want to live. I am sure there are some nice places but would still cost more than what it costs me here in the USA. Cheap and easy to get hot GF is 99% of why men move there.
My wife and I built our farming empire there over the years. And started an Agro business and property management business (rice, coconuts, fruits, shrimp, crawfish and rental houses). We couldn't have done that here without going millions in debt. Just because it's cheap doesn't mean you can't financially prosper there if you want to. It was a financially sound decision. For us
I agree with you 100 percent, we live in Bohol and are building here what would cost millions in Australia and the pace of life here is slow and lay back just like Australia 60 years ago. Bohol is one of the safest islands in pi and sure we have blackouts now and then and other things that is different from Aus but if you want to live in paradice then that is the price you have to pay. I love the philippines.
I'm a newly retired filipino living here in the US but will go back to Phils.someday. Biggest pros - Food and generally cheaper cost of living. Biggest Cons - Hot, humid and 3rd world and no Medicare You can minimize the cons by installing solar and/or aircondition and live in a nice neighborhood accessible to basic necessities. Buy a local insurance and stay healthy. Look for a real spouse who will not make you a walking atm. Be friendly but not be very friendly. If you want a westernized style o.f living, get a condo...but just keep in mind you will be stuck with HOA and other fees.
@@dragonwithagirltattoo598 Also look at the millions of unarmed people who were imprisoned, worked, starved, beaten, shot to death in multiple countries.
If you're a fan of history, the Philippines is a good place to visit or live. There are so many historically significant sites here. My filipina wife of 32 years and I retired in the P.I. approaching 2 years ago. We're still getting settled, but plan to travel extensively to other places in this archipelago and other countries southeast Asia. Next stop for us is Balanga City in Bataan,which is where the WWII memorial and cemetery is located, and on that peninsula is where the infamous Bataan Death March occurred. And close by is Subic Bay in Alongapo. The home of many a U.S. Sailor back in the day. Anyway, for those planning to come over and make it your new home I say don't try to do too much to soon. Be very conservative/careful in any financial dealings until you've allowed yourself time to adjust to the climate, the culture, and the infrastructure. Like Chad said, the people are generally very friendly, but just like anywhere else, you might encounter some toxic ones, so be careful. Lastly, make sure you keep and maintain at least one U.S. or Canadian bank account.
The most marked difference that I noticed coming back to North America was 1. The air quality 2. The trash that is littered everywhere Neither matters too much. Retiring to Asia in September
Chad, being honest isn't being negative. Telling the truth is what people need to hear. More and more YT channels have been telling the truth about life in the PI, you've been at the forefront of the reality of life there. Keep the great content coming sir!
Well said the point of the video was to give a realistic picture of life in the Philippines its not about being negative or positive. We know that Chad likes the Philippines but its also helpful to hear what we can expect that as a westerner that could be a challenge.
Getting through the miscellaneous conjecture, this dude is 100% correct. The PI has so many limitations and depending on optics, disappointments. But it also has all the wonderful things that are hyped. In my humble opinion, the experience is based on each individual and their past experiences from where they came, and what each person has as expectations on their new journey. I love the PI. It’s fantastic for me. I admit that there are aspects that wear me down too. But in the balance of my past and hope for the future, the scales weigh in favor of the PI. Good video, and good to see someone try to place things in actual context. Cheers. 👍🏼🇺🇸☮️🇵🇭
The ‘wear me down’ is only downplayed because you leave periodically to recharge. Run out of money and live there on the cheap for decades like I did, and you will go bat-shit-crazy.
@@Anonymint-vj7bt I get that. Sorry to hear that you got stuck. And truthfully, it’s not only leaving occasionally for a mental reset, it’s simply knowing that you can leave if you need to. I’ve felt that feeling of being isolated and trapped, but a quick jump out settles things. Really glad that you exited with your faculties intact.
@@KanoKanding 💯%. Yep. 🙏 That’s why in my other comments I am discouraging those who go merely to have a lower budget. It is a slippery slope. Life events can trap a person. You will be much more respected in Asia, if you do not NEED to be there. Become a local (e.g. I spoke the local dialect and no longer sounded like an expat) leads to being treated like a local. Realize they do not trust anyone outside their own clan. It is a low-trust culture. Under the superficial novelty of it, there lurks a culture that a Westerner will grow weary of especially if they are improverished.
Don't retire until you're damn sure you're set financially. Don't sell your house at home. Remember, most guys return home within five years. (I did) The "Paradise Syndrome" there wears off REAL FAST. Have a well funded escape plan. I returned to the US pacific northwest with ruined credit and nowhere to live. Luckily I had an income. Also, the hotter she is and larger the age gap, the more likely sh'ell dump you when a better offer comes along.
Thanks for keeping it honest with us. 1) What was the straw that broke the camel back? 2) Do you plan to go back to the PI or will you stay in the states?
@@I_Need_Travel-mw3st !) I gave up feeding my addiction to hot 20-something brown girls. (we had a 42 year gap, together 3.5 years there. ) I've "suffered" from "Asian Fever" for 40+ years and there is no cure you know. But living there it was an accumulation of little things that drove me nuts. Lack of common sense in the locals, brownouts, animal neglect/cruelty, infrastructure, humidity, no decent gyms, being treated like an ATM, water system, power grid, schools for local kids, etc,.. But OMG was she HOT and frisky!
I quit the rat race last month and I paid off my mortgage and all my credit cards. My plan is to become dual citizens of both U.S. and Philippines. So I can go back and forth anytime I want. I plan to keep my house here in U.S. and buy a small farm in the Philippines where it will be peaceful and quiet and away from the population.
For me personally the Philippines is a bit too rough and it's the reason I chose to live in Thailand. The constant sounds of barking dogs and roosters slowly made me go insane on my last trip to the Philippines. There's also hardly any soundproofing in most condo's, so even if you're on a high floor, you can still hear all the sounds from the street downstairs. I think the Philippines is a good place to be if you're an older American or Canadian guy with an "easy going" mentality and if you're not too sensitive about all the noise pollution, most of the time. But if you're like me, and very sensitive to sounds, it can really be a living nightmare. The people are very friendly though but let's be honest, at the end of the day we just want to be somewhere in peace and feel relaxed.
You haven't visited other parts of the Philippines.. You need to visit central and southern part of Philippines. Alot relaxing and quiet areas.. Ive been to Thailand,, and the islands, waters, and beaches in Central and Southern Philippines blow away Thailand
You obviously didn't stay in a luxury condo. Our condos in Manila have double glazed windows and the walls are thick cement. I could scream all I want and the neighbors won't hear me. The only noises I am able to hear are people above jumping on the floor but that's with every condo in any country.
Totally agree. 1000%. If you're sensitive to unwanted intrusive noise the Philippines will become your number one nightmare. The locals are immune to it, don't even notice it.
Thank you Chad, I spend 6 months a year in the Philippines, I’m married to a Filipina, built a Home in Pangasinan Province. Still working on the paperwork for my wife to travel with me, Not a huge age gap, I’ve made it work for my wife and I. Don’t forget to buy the hard to find items and ship them , balibak Boxes.
Emigrated to SE (from UK) Asia back in 1988, for work, 36 years ago, at the age of 25, and never went back (other than for occasional holidays). Have no intention of moving back either. Been in Manila for almost 5 years, in this stint (and 6 years in a previous stint). Now retired and enjoying life. Obviously, I have spent more than half my life living here in Asia, so I am not coming at it from the same angle as a retiree moving from the west. Many of the problems you refer to are not a problem is you live in a city. I have a condo in Pasig and don't face any of those issues. Services are very reliable, with the best mayor in Metro Manila!
I stayed with my aunt and uncle for 6 months in Kelowna, Peach land. Was AMAZING. We went up to Vancouver for a few days and I was shocked at how dirty some of the city was. I do not know what was going on but some streets where just littered with garbage. This was 20 years ago. Vancouver Island was pristine tho. So yes, it is not just the Philippines that has this issue. I worked in the UAE and met many, many Filipinos. I fell in love with the people, their culture and personalities. This is number one for me if I was to move there.
What's paramount is where you will be treated nicely and feel welcomed. Most Filipinos are kind and welcoming. it's just the culture but it's being abused with all the criminals coming in. I can't say that about other countries.
100 percent spot on my friend. For many it is a culture shock if they just up and move to the Philippines without doing a good amount of research. All the things you mentioned are spot on! My wife and I are nearing our retirement age as well. We are both Filipinos and are planning on retiring there. As for our situation, we’ve been taking vacations there and for the most part we always enjoy it. My takeaways and advice to those planning to move to the Philippines: - If you can, DO NOT homestead near relatives! You will be consistently asked to help them financially and if you deny them, they will get mad at you. To the point that they will start talking about you in a negative way. I have experienced this myself. Even if they are just neighbors that you aren’t really familiar with, they will come asking for financial help. They will almost always never pay it back. Then when you want to collect, they are the ones upset. For some reason, locals have the mentality that they are entitled to your money. - Keep your head low, stay humble, and avoid getting into arguments with anyone at all cost. - Do not flaunt your money either. Expensive clothing, shoes, jewelry, etc. Dress modestly and keep the mentality of “When in Rome, do what the Romans do”. - Be ready for the slow pace of practically every thing, compared to the western world. For example, I opened a bank account there. I arrived at the bank at 10am. I got out of there at 2pm. - Medical care can be a big hassle there. There is no appointment system there. It is first come first served. If you know someone who works at the hospital, have them put you on the list to be seen the next day. Emergencies can be a nightmare. Be ready for this situation if it ever comes up. - If you can avoid it, do not drive there and use local transportation services. Yes it is inconvenient at times, but here is why. If you are driving or using your personal car with your private driver and get into a no-fault accident, you will still be responsible for injuries the at fault party sustains. - Lastly, if you have property in the western world, keep it if you can afford it. You will want to go back now and again to the comforts and convenience of western world. These are just a few things I have to share for advice for those thinking of retiring in the Philippines. There are more to learn, so make your due diligence in researching before making that big decision to move to the Philippines. Once again, great video my friend.
It's all relative; it all depends on the person's situation. It all boils down to the questions of "what and where can I afford"; what can I give up and can't; what's more important to me; what do I believe will make me happy; to be happy and comfortable enough, what am I willing to give up...in short, there's no perfect country or place to be, so we all have to study the Pros and Cons of the places we consider to live in or retire to.
You hit the nail on the head. You know what you are talking about. People should follow your lead about the pros and cons of the places that we consider to live or retire to.
Great Video. But I work with many, many Filipinos in Canada. EVERY SINGLE PERSON that I talk to would NEVER move back to the Philippines. Visit family and friends, sure, but move back or retire there? Not a chance. Regardless of the cost of living in Canada, they would accept the high cost rather than move home.
For me, it’s quite the opposite. Many people just want to return home, but I think it varies just like with any other countries. Some of them mentioned that one of the reasons for not going back is the fear of embarrassment. They’ve built this image of living a successful, affluent life abroad, and returning might feel like admitting failure to others.
I think people in the US, Canada, take for granted what we grew up with all this luxuries come for free. They don't. Its one of the things that make our countries great places to live but its expensive. Countries like the Philippines are cheap, but there is a cost to the quality of living standards. My first time there, in Cebu, I woke up to the neighbor burning his trash below my window. Welcome to the Philippines. Thanks for telling the viewers some of the downsides, trash every where, uneven sidewalks everywhere, not very good food everywhere. But we love it.
Doesn't sound like you love the Philippines. Maybe you love a Filipina? Seems most expat men confuse the 2 things. Almost every other country in SE Asia is cheaper than PH and with better infrastructure, food, medical, etc... What will shock many men is these other countries also have great women. Maybe not the single moms most PH expats love to pay for, but still great women. And many are attracted to foreign men, but maybe not at the same Filipina single mom level of desperation. A Malaysian woman may not sleep with you on a first date. But she also didn't sleep with 20 other men on their first date either.
@@MrWaterbugdesign wow that's a harsh comment... Sounds like you got yourself involved in a bad relationship and are now blaming all the women in the country 😉
If your life is successful in your own country, chances are you might be let down by issues of any country that has issues with their ability to handle their problems. If you do well by not wanting much and are happy with the basics, you’ll probably be fine anywhere you want to go, and grow with new experience’s.❤🙏
My wife is from Phil. We live in the UK. I had the choice to emigrate to Phil. I chose not to. The biggest drawback for me was the lack of things to do. One can only walk around so many malls and waterfalls. I am not hooked up to social media every minute of every day. And fortunately, I don't need to work. And I don't drink. That, in my experience, is essentially what Phil is about. It is a hard life, and everything is focused on surviving. It is filthy. Hobbies, pastimes..... far and few opportunities, except for beach things. Nicest people on Planet Earth, though.
i love the philippines 🇵🇭 and seriously thinking investing in a property for me and my pina wife instead of USA 🇺🇸 I just enjoy filming content in the philippines 🇵🇭 ❤
Anyone going to Philippines alone and not want to go alone ? Im trying to find a travel buddy thats into having a friend to relocate with and no commitments other than have each others backs as Americans going to live our lives abroad.
Hey, Chad. Enjoy your channel. I live in Maine. Went to Philippines starting in 2004 before many vloggers were around. Went 8 times over ten years... arranging dates online and going on a myriad of adventures all over the country. Happily married now for 11 years to my filipina I met in southern Mindanao. Super nice, safe, and pleasant here in Maine. Retired recently. Big house all paid for and taxes not too bad. You coined a phrase that has been on my mind, but I have not found the words for. "You've got to build yourself a bubble in the Philippines to enjoy retirement there." To me this is alluding to the classic concrete and rebar tropical house built and then surrounded by a 6 foot concrete and rebar wall. I don't really like the idea, and it seems somewhat like a cage to me. However! I am planning to do just that! The warm people and climate really are great. I just need to have a bit of a, "bubble", to make it all work out. Going to take the plunge after a couple more visits and my adopted filipina daughter finishes up college.
@@377499 the bubble idea doesn’t bother me at all. I don’t want to be a common! Lol. I want to be elite, it’s just very expensive to do that in the US. So, if there are some other place, I can go where I can have maids, cooks, a reserve table at my favorite bar or restaurant, three sugar babies that look like Katherine Bernardo, sign me up! I like the idea of a bubble, where I can go from BGC to IT Park to Tagatay, to Boracay, and back to BGC! lol.
I guess it comes down to "You can't have your cake and eat it too."...if the Philippines became as clean, organized, and efficient as a Western country, it would be even more expensive to live there than living in the West (the Philippines is a series of islands, after all...)
Correct. I heard expats complain about the crap, but it's the crap keeping the place a dump so desperate Filipinas are with them. Snap your fingers and fix everything and poof you have Singapore in PH. And no Filipinas giving you the time of day. Go to Singapore on your $1000/mo income and no savings. Very different deal.
@@cfc1001001cfc Exactly right. Just look at Singapore. Cleaner, better infrastructure, but also way more expensive. And oh by the way, also some of the strictest laws on the books. A police state. Let's face it: There's no perfect place anywhere on this planet. It's all about pros and cons and where you, as an individual, feel most happy and comfortable. Can we have this discussion without denigrating all the women in a particular country? When you see that kind of comment, it usually means the person who wrote it got himself into a relationship with the wrong woman. Guys, that is not just the woman's fault, you need to take responsibility too for not taking your time and not noticing the red flags. Sheesh...if you made a mistake getting involved with the wrong woman, no need to blame all the women in that country...
Thailand is cheaper than the Philippines and better vastly on all levels : infrastructure .. food .. quality of accommodation at a cheaper cost .. healthcare .. clean .. organized .. the Philippines has English .. age gap commonality and easier visas in ts favor tho but that's about it
@@paulthurson I agree with everything except infrastructure, which i think is heavily overrated in thailand, street food quality you are right, quality of accommodation cheaper? PH's tourism infrastructure is far more in progress than thailand's so that may be the case for a short time to come, clean? lol, organized? lol, if you say so bro, so much of that is stuff that is said but none of you ever get updated on any of it, i highly doubt you are in PH with a filipina anyways
Thank you for this. I've been watching several (US) expats TH-cam channels for 4+ yrs, and they also touch on the same things. Some, it seems, the main driver was being able to live off of their Social Security check they took at age 62 (earliest to claim), then that it is largely English speaking, easy and low cost of visa, and the younger women. But in the videos they show, the traffic, the condition of the roads and utilities, and regular brown-outs (without storms)...And often the roosters and stray animals... That infrastructure issue really sticks out for me as a bad thing, I don't like the high heat & humidity all the time, and I spent a year when I was 12 on Guam and we had (2) Major earthquakes and (2) super typhoons (one was a direct hit) we left 6 weeks after that and water was just starting to be restored, electricity was still weeks away. So, that was miserable back then...Can't imagine that now. Several interviews these TH-camrs have had with other expats just passing through, live in Thailand/Vietnam, or Malaysia and it sure sounds like infrastructure, utilities, and trash, etc., are handled much better, and the costs are similar. The only drawback is the visa to live there long term, it is a bit more of a cost for a residence or retirement visa.
Do not ever come back anymore. Stay where you are where you can enjoy the amenities that make your life comfortable. It is as if there are no problems related to poverty over there. Indeed, here in my beloved country the Philippines, we do not have very good infrastructure; service is slow; we have problems on garbage; it's noisy; poor internet; and, so on and so forth. However, we are content and happy. You should make this viral so that other foreigners will get to know of it in order that they would be discouraged to come to our country. We do not need BS foreigners who think and act as though they are living in luxury in their home country.
@@ligayaannawi4779 hey there did you watch the whole video? You got the wrong impression of my message and purpose of the video. I love the Philippines I appreciate everything about it you have to take the good with the bad everywhere you live. The pros far outweigh the cons here. and I much prefer being here compared to back there in North America. The purpose of the video is just to be real and honest and give people an understanding so they know what they are getting into before they make a big decision for moving/retirement etc. I respect the Philippines and the Filipino people that's why I wanted to reply to your message. I've learned a lot from being here especially from the people who carry on with a smiling face and good attitude despite struggles. Salamat for watching the video... cheers
I am from Tampa and now live south of Dumaguete near the beach. We have a backup generator, high speed internet, and live on a quiet dead end street. No dogs or roosters and I live on $900 a month and have plenty of money to play with. If I had stayed in Tampa, I would have had to work till I died just to pay the bills. There are a lot of downsides, food being the biggest, but I will never go back to America.
As the child of a military man, I grew up moving from one military base to another, every 2 or 3 years. One country after another. Getting used to multiple languages, foods and cultures. This made me very adaptable, and I can now live anywhere in the world and be comfortable. During the seventies, Spain and Sicily were two very cheap places to live but are now very expensive. It looks like the Philippines is a very cost effective place these days. It might be my next home.
Other things they do not tell you: 1.) The 60% 40% law. That being if a foreigner starts a business in the Philippines, said business has to be 60% owned by native born Filipinos. 2.) Foreigners cannot own land or a house in the Philippines, only Filipinos can. The foreigner can be on the contract to buy the house but not on the deed of ownership. 3.) They will claim you can live on $300 a month. That is pure BS and the only way to do that is live in a simple nipa hut or basic cement block house in squatter areas. 4.) High crime rate. 5.) They will claim medical care is first world, it is not.
1, 2 and 3 are correct. 4 depends on the place,and 5 is possible if you're in a reputable private hospital. Basically medical skills are better than what most think and I can attest how competent every Filipino doctors and nurses that have given me care.
My Filipina wife and I are retired, and living in Cebu since 2021. We’ve been together for nearly 30 years, and my life in the PI suits me. I’m living on rice, fish, veggies and fruits, and my five pensions. I feel we have much more freedom here than in the USA. Yep, cheaper, too! The U.S. is a great place to visit, but I won’t be living there, unless forced to. Think I’ll go out on my terrace and watch yet another glorious sunset, to the soft cooing of several champion roosters off in the distance.
My mum is from Bohol. I'm only 39 but my Dad died a few weeks ago at 71 and that has really rattled me. I'm trying to convince my wife that life is short to work your ass off every day here in Australia and get nowhere. And here in Australia our freedom is getting eroded every day. Looking to maybe move to the Philippines and have a simpler life.
Exactly correct more freedom in the Phils and you don't have to put up with racism and power tripping pigs, like you do in the United "NAZI" States of America run by "GESTAPO" power tripping police State pigs.
You are absolutely right, all that you mentioned about the Philippines is true. What draws men to uproot and live there is the women, special treatment foreigners get, and cheaper living accommodation. This reality is attractive to those who have limited financial resources and for those who have no deep family ties in the West.
I live in Edmonton,AB.There are homeless people right here in downtown Edmonton. They live in tents. Also, there are homeless ones and you see them as you alight the trains. You see them on the steps as you go down the subway. And this is Alberta, Canada.
In the US, this problem is being ignored. We see the tents, but the people living in their cars are invisible. No homeless in the Soviet Union, but we stayed in cold apartments with Mom and Dad. We were all poor together. In the US now, it's each person only for themself. We should be better.
its not the same thing, 99% of the homeless in the USA and Canada are drug users who after so many years have become mentally defective humans. There is no solution for them but this comes from the mentality of trying drugs when someone is young to be different and then becoming hard users as that path in life is a dead end. The homeless in Asia are different they are people who lived in farm/rural areas and moved to the city to try and make money for the family some failed and become stuck in life so can fall to a life of crime and some maybe also like in the west have become drug users but the percent is way lower in my view
I left Philippines when I WAS 20 and now retired. I owned 10 acres in US and ten minutes to all the convenience, doctors, hospitals, churches and everything that I need. Built my NDA custom house and no debts…no way in heck that I will return to live in Philippines.
As a Filipino, I tried convincing my German husband to live in the Philippines after spending five years in Germany, where I never quite felt at home. We sold everything and moved, trying out various locations such as Cebu, Palawan, Siargao, Dumaguete, Siquijor, and Clark. However, even in my hometown of Cebu City, we struggled to find a place where we truly felt settled. Safety, food quality, and decent housing were consistently lacking. Despite paying €700-€1500 for furnished accommodations, the quality never matched the price. Eventually, I gave up trying to convince my husband. We moved to Thailand, and I have to admit, it’s been a much better experience. The healthcare, safety, and overall quality of life are significantly better here. With Thailand’s new DTV visa for digital nomads like us, we plan to stay longer. Unfortunately, my experience in the Philippines was disappointing. Even when paying a premium, the standard of living remains low, with locals accustomed to subpar services yet expecting foreigners to pay top dollar.
I agree that Philippines is not good, but what is better is my wife. The problem in Thailand was always the language barrier and i will never be able to speak thai. It's so sad to see the Philippines are so lacking because the politicans are just doing the wrong thing and people are stupid and ignorant.
700 - 1500 euro rent in the philippines is crazy. You can rent a house in a subdivision in cebu for around 30 - 40k pesos which is equivalent to around 560 euro
@@llothar68 You'll "never be able to speak thai" or were you just not willing to try and learn the language? You may as well try if you're retired. You have more time than the typical working folks.
@@Constellasian Knowing your skill set is important when not wanting to waste time. I tried but tonal languages are not for me. Couldn't hold a single tone in music lessons in high school. Failed to order a bottle of Soda because i did not raise the a at the end. That was my time of enlightment. And for what? Just for Thai food? Yes thats a very good reason, but ....
I found the PH to be a massive infrastructure mess. After 2 years of living in Cebu, Manila and Duma... I just couldn't handle the unending noise, brownouts, piss poor healthcare and the worst internet I've experienced anywhere in the world. Wonderful people but too hard pressed to find anything reasonably functional, clean and quiet.
I didn't work harder. For me US is cheaper than SE Asia. Options on how you choose to live. I'm still moving to SE Asia next years. My cost will be 3-5x higher there, but moving for the adventure and budget isn't an issue for me.
The key is home ownership. There are still affordable places to live but most people still go to the expensive places. I live on Lake Michigan and the weather is like Southern California in the summer for a fraction of the price. My modest house is paid off. Once you get to that point moving anywhere else doesn't make much sense. The Philippines would actually cost me more so I personally would not marry a girl that refused to leave for the US. We could go back twice a year to visit if she wanted but we would have to be based in the US.
@@troyelam8978 Yeah you take the good with the bad. I'd still choose to live here over California. Save a ton of money, get to experience all four seasons, and winter steels you. That first nice day of spring is awesome. Makes you appreciate it more.
Hey Chad, I'm visiting the Philippines for 27 days starting August 1st. Good video. I think no matter where you live there are trade-offs. I live in rural NC where there is no crime, less expensive, and it's quiet. But I have to drive 30 minutes to get to ANYTHING! I hope to experience the "cons" of the Philippines while I'm there so I can be informed on my ultimate decision to move there. But I got nuthin' going on here!
Don't have any expectations when you visit the Philippines. Have an open mind and accept things why we Filipinos do things differently. You will learn patience here but you will be inconvenient too.
You are spot on. Everything you have said negatively about the Philippines is true. There is trash everywhere next to a restaurant or a sham area next to a massive mall. I am a Filipina but these are things that make me embarrassed. if only the LGUs or our government would focus as well on our infrastructure and the environment, it would make a big difference. and some local people themselves. they don't give a damn, they just throw their shit everywhere. Discipline is the key to having a clean environment. The government or LGUs should construct proper roads/ highways throughout the provinces. They only highlight the nice beaches of the Philippines in their adverts but never address the unpleasant side of it before inviting tourists to come to the Philippines. im not against my country, it's where i live, its where i go home to. but most local people are the source of these problems. it should start within us. mother nature would be so happy. Im glad you have mentioned this on your vlog so to make others aware of the cons before visiting the Philippines.
It's hard to find thrash cans simply because the locals will steal them. Have you noticed that. That is just one of many reasons why you'll find crap everywhere with the exception of the high scale neighborhoods like BGC, MAKATI, etc. I know that the tourists noticed this but they are there for the beautiful beaches, nature, adventure, food, etc. I'm just proud that our people are friendly, welcoming, hospitable to the foreigners and tourists. I know that they noticed this as well. " It's more fun in the Philippines " .
It seems like the local goveernment in Ilo Ilo really focused on this. They cleaned up their streets and the nearby river. That could be the model for where PH is headed. It will take time.
Pinas is SUPER corrupt ....DU30 tried to fix it and did some good but now it's back to normal again and getting worse. Thailand is a model country for Pinas ....but things will not change due to the culture of corruption ..it is REALLY terrible. I'm leaving Pinas after 12 years for Thailand. Sad because you cannot beat the people of the Philippines for nice-ness etc
@@realgains1538And the sad thing is to that developing nations petition hard in the United Nations for First World democracies to support the developing nations like the Philippines. So money is taken by taxes from struggling Canadians or Americans, who are barely getting by and is siphoned off and given to developing nations. Where then the money lines the pockets of the politicians. But not only that, the crooked politicians of the West by throwing large sums of taxpayer money to their crony politician friends in the developing countries expect to see returns on their generosity.
Never date a person who isnt ALREADY financially independent, just move on. Option #2. Become The Bank Of Foreigner to her, her family, and her other boyfriend/s till the money runs out, and she moves on to another victim.
I AM BRITISH PHILIPPINES 🇵🇭 IS NICE PEOPLE ARE ANNOYING FAKE ALWAYS TALKING JELIOUS WHEN YOU WORK WITH THEM THEY KNOW EVERYTHING! THEY HAVE CRAB MENTALITY
I stay in a CBD in Manila so stuff like Infrastructure, health services and banking are no problem. It really depends on one's budget as I find the $10 a day folks complain the most.
From, the United States lived in the Philippines 10 years there is nothing wrong with the Philippines its the safest country in the world to live or visit i pay 100 dollars per month for 3 bedroom home 60 pm for electric 5 pm for water and 400pm for food 565 dollars for cost of living i put my 18 year old daughter in college 200 per semester my other 2 children 3 dollars a day for school
Great points. We retired and built our home there and left after 4 years, and now travel back and forth from Guam. We left for many of the reasons you described and chose Guam for most of the good things the Philippines offers... but at a higher cost. We now enjoy the best of both worlds.
Hi. I’m a 54 yr old guy living in Dartmouth Nova Scotia. Eastern Canada used to be considered really cheap. Not anymore. Our rent on about 1100 sq ft and it’s a rare find 2/2 with parking and in suite laundry is around $2400 plus utilities. We are in a good area with great access to things but it is expensive. Actually, this is considered a good deal. So I understand what you’re saying. The guys I see on YT in the PH, many of them seem to be broke or living off very little and had no choice but to go there. Not sure I could live there with the poor infrastructure etc etc. I get it Chad I just would rather fight for a better life here and do what I have to do. But good on you and others. Be happy right. I’m also not looking for a woman which I think comes into play too. And yes I’m one of those people that thinks a 25 plus year age gap is wrong. Sorry.
Yeah I think it is disgusting how these horny sixty year olds go there for 20 year old girls to have sex with and with no intention of marrying. Giving expats a bad name. Morality matters.
My Filipina wife said no to a personal assistant, said she would do those thing required of an assistant...to get paid. Very good video, though. Thanks, Chad...Jim
Appreciate your honesty, other channel's seem to intentionally ignore the down side of the Philippines. Life expectancy in the Philippines is 9-13 years less than most western countries, simply a fact. Thanks for your open discussion.
Life expectancy has been DROPPING in the US, it's now 76.8. It's 71 in PH as of 2018 and is STILL rising and projected to be 75.8 by 2050. So you tell me which country is going the right direction? The death rate in the US is twice as high as PH as well. PH has a lower inflation rate than the US better unemployment rate and a cheaper cost of living. The US has been heading the WRONG way for awhile now on all these trends and PH the right way and they are closing the gap. Living in a place like BGC is much nicer than any city in the US and still cheaper than the US. There are definitely downsides in PH and if you are expecting youtube channels to show them you'll be sadly wanting. It takes a mindset change to live in ph, if you can't do that you'll be miserable.
Life expectancy may be dropping in the US but it is not dropping in Canada, Australia, the UK and most of Europe. The drop in the US appears to be due to some unique policy decisions that are not found in most of the other western countries.
@@vandinroth Life expectancy is dropping in the US as an inverse relationship to the average persons weight. I didn't see many obese Filipinos, not to mention morbidly so. Their diets are way better if they can afford food to be not the main expense of their budget. Cost of living is only cheaper for food, property/land, other things and services are just overpriced versions of services I'm used to at lower quality and reduced volume, but I'm not living out of NA/West Europe, so cheapness of PH is overrated for me comparatively. I spent most of my time in the provinces and mostly outside big population centers, so I saw how average people in PH live. Very sad sight to be honest, I admire how Filipinos are so smiling, positive and content with their lives...
@@Johndoe-qn9jr Air quality is bad in population centers due to traffic, it was huge change for me cause it felt like I'm inhaling directly from the exhaust pipe when I stayed for many days on the outskirts of Manila. It is good outside of major centers though. Many western countries heavily regulate car quality and exhaust control, so even in heavy traffic air is still better. It is wild west in PH in regards to that unfortunately.
It amazes me as a Filipino how foreigners LOVE to talk about my country 😅. They're giving too many F*s, im beginning to think -- are the other countries too boring to discuss ?
As a former Filipino citizen (now US citizen), I have a better life here in the USA, peaceful, quiet and free from the tsismis. You can live well in the USA as well. You just have to get sway from the cities and look very well at the neighborhood you're moving into. Building a bubble? Anyone in the Philippines can easily pop that. Let's see how one does once one angers the natives
Live in a city like Miami for a few years and you will find The Philippines a paradise with all the polite, happy and smiling people and dude you are way too boring to listen to.
I have lived in The Caribbean, Canada, the US and many places overseas. What I have discovered is if you are from Canada or the US, you will most likely not want to move to an island nation. What you are really looking for is a somewhat secluded nice affordable place in the US or Canada. Furthermore you may want to try to live in a smaller, cheaper European nation. So many Canadians and Americans move to Island nations in The Caribbean, Philippines, Belize, Puerto Rico, etc..., and then move back after 5 years. See if you can find a cheaper location in the US or Canada first, then try a cheaper country in Europe. If that fails then look at island nations.
PH in a nutshell after my visit there: "The largest vehicle is at fault." Those who've been there will understand the meaning and why it can be metaphorically describe how everything and all aspects of life are in the PH. It is a amazing experience to come visit it, especially going outside of the BGC and other tourists bubbles. Get your expectations in order and adjust your mentality, it is a cold shower everyday, and I mean literally you will have a cold shower everyday :)
Thank you for another great and honest video. You ARE helping people. You’ve inspired me to travel to the Philippines in October. It will be my first big adventure. Keep up the great work! Thank you again for all your help.
I lived in Mexico 5 years and you could swap your description of the Philippines for Mexico. Barking dogs is what I find the most difficult thing to endure. Rooster, lots of garbage, air and water pollution, noisy neighbors with loud music, inefficiencies of the bureaucracy etc. Returning to Québec I find it so respectful, peaceful and clean.
Same for me in Thailand. Five years too. Most of the people that have the finances to return home will do so. There are many expats trapped because they have zero funds to set up their live again in Canada, USA, UK, etc.
@@bruce6641 I work half time (semi-retired) in my 30s earning $330K a year as a diagnostic radiologist, also $150K-180K in income from my 30+ real estate investments. I can (and have) live anywhere in the world. I am here now in PH and I have zero desire to move back to any Western country. The toxic consumerist mindset, inflation, and some of the worst women in the world. No thanks. I have lived in Hawaii for 6 years, Tokyo, Seoul, and PH is great. Even as a wealthy person.
Forget the barking dogs the biggest problems are the constant parties, fiestas, etc. I don’t have a house within 300m of me and the music is sometimes so loud it shakes even my walls from so far away and it goes until 3-4am or even sometimes until the sun rises. However, even this is not the worst thing to deal with. The lying, cheating, and stealing is much worse. There are a lot of trespassers on my farm land and anything from bananas, trees for firewood, and even my kawayan bamboo has gotten stolen from time to time. I have caught a few but I think many come at night and the river in the back of my property is about 150m away from my house. Workers will steal or not show up with no notice. I just quit hiring and tend to my 3 hectares as best I can by myself. People that complain about infrastructure, driving, and the food don’t make sense to me. These are relatively small problems that can be mitigated.
Chad. Welcome back my man! Curtis here in San Antonio, Texas. I often say that the Philippines is like a love, hate relationship. What I mean is when we are there, we love and enjoy it very much. But at the same time, we miss our way of life here in the US/Canada and vice versa. Having served in the US military for well over twenty-years and have had the pleasure of traveling the world. The Philippines is the most loudest country I have visited. For individuals like yourself, you know what I am talking about. In the end, I still look forward to returning home to the US. By the way, if you're ever in San Antonio, please give me a holla!!! ---- Semper Fi!!!!!
Hey Curtis!! Thank you yes it's good to be back... Love hate relationship indeed but much more love than hate. I've gained so many positive experiences from my time there and I know I'll be back some time soon. I'll look you up if I'm in that area for sure! Take care Curtis
It is what it is. Tourist, foreigners, and visitors enjoy the pros and leave the cons behind especially if you are only there on a holiday/vacation or for business. enjoy with the country has to offer and leave all that negativity behind. I have traveled everywhere and I have a blind eye for the cons and only for the pros. "Be all you can be" GO ARMY!!!
That's exactly true. I've lived many places. Once lived on a the side of a mountain near Mt Shasta. Hydro power off a great stream. 10 minute drive to town. Living in town would be an extremely different lifestyle. And not just the area, but the specific property and your neighbors.
Hiring the locals with great pay (for their standards) is the ultimate giving back to the community and you'll genuinely feel a small sense of pride by carrying it out. I highly recommend it; you'll love the time you save and learn so much about your interests... groceries, government, society, etc. then you normally would have without hiring any help. The help with open your eyes to better figure out how to work within their system. It's a win/win. And there's not many win/wins in life.
The Philippines is common since. It really gets me the things complained about. It is a 3rd world country you can't expect the Philippines to be like the US Canada Australia. Common since tells you traffic is going to be bad lack of roads tricycles top speeds of 30 to 35 mph , hundreds on the road. Trash ,electric lines that are terrifying, water you can't drink. I moved here in 2017 me and my Filipina wife retired early , its been great, so just use common since.
I just rented a house, 2 bedrooms and 1 bath for only 15k in Palo Leyte. It is clean and nice and in a gated community and the front of my house is also gated. It was completely unfurnished but I was happy with that. I already have it furnished.
Poverty will destroy everything, even grass. It is hard to care about Plastic on the beach when you are busy stripping the leftover meat off discarded chicken so you can recook and feed your aging parents. I have lived all over and I find 2 things that are almost intolerable and they are the concept of Island Time, where no one is in a hurry and everything takes forever. The second thing is boredom. Boredom causes people to become alcoholics, addicts, be it sex or drugs and maybe even adrenalin. I had to find things to do and even volunteer or work for free.
Thank you for such a great "reality" based video. When I met my Nenz, neither one of us were looking for love - we were licking our wounds from losing our spouses to cancer (we met on a widow/widower group - non-dating). I have spent my entire life in the snowbelt of the United States, and she was a veteran RN, who was born and raised in the greater Bacolod region of the Philippines, who'd been working in Oman for about two decades. Fast forward: We are months away from getting married, and we now spend our lives sharing one another's native countries with each other. I love the Philippines!! - BUT it is not for everybody, especially for those who can't adapt to new ways. As for me, I enjoy immersing myself into their culture. Thank you again for a real look at the Philippines, and not yet another pie in the sky video.
First of all it is good for you to visit your roots. The Philippines serves westerners the outlet that they are looking for. I can see running around S.E. Asia to see that part of the world for sure. In my opinion you will not find the female companion you are looking for in those other countries unless she is a Filipina. As far as food goes as in your comments generally speaking predominantly the majority of the westerners donot embrace the local food. I am 74 and have been married to my 59 year old Filipina wife for 30 years while living here in the US. She cooks the food that I want as well as her dishes. Sometimes it's Filipino food (selective dishes) and sometimes its Southern style dishes. I would not think that you are stable enough from traveling to maintain a regular house keeper. If so you might want an older lady to remove any temptations for fratemization to occur. What does your future long term retirement look like for you need to think about that one!
The real asset and beauty of the Philippines is not the beaches,mountains,falls and weather……… is it the caring,warming,loving and family oriented people of the Filipinos. . Last meal and they will still offer it to you with no string attach. Always smiling and accomodating. . If u dont like that and u value artificial things……. Then the Island of the Philippines is not for you. . Goodluck in your next destination.
I’ve been here in the Philippine for 2 1/2 years. I can honestly say the only 2 things I miss from the west is twizzlers and a nice hot shower. (No water pressure were I live we are on the bucket system)
Thanks for watching!
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The Philippines has many challenges for a foreigner (I hate the word expat). So when I had my 1st encounter with a Filipina back in 2009 (Q3 or Q4) it became a very intriqing country. And that resulted in me doing some (desk) research together with conversations with many other Filipinas. So, now, I think, I know a lot but understand very little of how Filipinas approach and deal with their own lives. Life - for them - could have been and can be so much easier with a little bit more common sense and common knowledge. But I get the idea that science/scientific evidence is something they frown upon. They rather 'rely' on god and religion.
@@haighton I noticed a certain "just enough" mentality among Filipinos . They don't try to make best with resources they have, why bother sealing the rooms of your house so they are not just metal plate on a wooden frame with half a meter gap between the roof and wall if you can just put plastic bag around light bulb to catch the thousands of insects that fly inside the house at night...I saw houses that use cement and blocks for example, so they already spent enough on good materials, but they slapped the roof on top with enough space to crawl through between the block wall and roof, and there are cracks in the wall you can put your hand through. But it is enough for them, no need to put just a bit more effort and make it good... Jaw dropping mentality. Not saying this as means to offend them, just an observation.
Your not being negative just honest its a hard life there; people who have a solid retirement income most likely would NOT live in a 3rd world country.
@@frankcentofanti9317,
it doesnt need to be a hard life. If only they use common sense and (common) knowledge. All those single PH moms out there. Its so easy to avoid becoming preggy (even when no contraceptives are used). And the result is that all those babies will also end up poor as hell. But sex-ed and sex doesnt really mix in PH.
@@alexis-hunter,
they are good at pooping out babies. LOL but true. Even when they cant afford even one baby. "just enough" or "never enough"?
My wife and I retired to the Philippines in 2015 and have been very happy here. We are fortunate to have found a pleasant, clean and large peaceful FARM. Our closest neighbor is a 8+ minute walk away we don't have the barking Dogs, crowing roosters or garbage issues. I understand what you are talking about because I have seen the same things and you are spot on. BUT the #1 trick or secret to coming here is to Learn TAGALOG and or have a trustworthy wife/partner who speaks the language #2. Live in the countryside, it's safe, clean, quiet, affordable and you can grow most of your food which saves even more money. Everyday I go into my gardens and pick something fresh to eat everyday. If interested ASK ME anything.
You're a GREAT MAN...
❤from South Africa😊
Thank you for sharing! I totally agree with you... sounds like a perfect setup you have 🙂
what about safty ? how can it be safe ? where are you located how far from the sea ? Thank You
Your countryside location sounds wonderful.
May we ask where you live in the Philippines 🇵🇭?
Maria & Jason
@@jasontheworldtraveler17:07
More and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.
The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
@@BaileyHoward101 That does make a lot of sense, unlike us, you seem to have the Market figured out. Who is this consultant?
Izella Annette Anderson is my FA, simply do due diligence . You'd find necessary details online to work with and set up an appointment.
Insightful... I was curious about her, so I looked her up online. I discovered her website, and I must say that she seems knowledgeable. I sent her an email outlining my goals. I appreciate you sharing.
I am 47, I live in Alabama and retiring here would be depressing. You remind me a lot of another Canadian youtuber that always complains about Wi-fi and things that to me are futile. The thing I love the most about Latin America and Asia is the warmth of the people and the feeling that the people are alive and open to human connections. I live in a very a nice condo here and I don't know not even one person on my floor, when people see you here I almost feel like some people go out of their way to avoid any human interaction- This is not a normal society, most people in the USA are lonely and socially disconnected.
@cyrolacorte6469 My business partner moved from Toronto to Mobile Alabama, and all he talked about is southern hospitality. Tells me how friendly everyone is. Mind you his accent may be a reason people gravitate towards him.
As an American Millennial from the Midwest I'd have to agree. I believe it because people are fearmungered by the media so everyone wants to avoid "strangers". In the 90s and early 2000s there was a legitimate chance you could meet your soul mate or best friend of a lifetime on a whim by simply asking for directions somewhere or going to a bathroom.
So true I never go back to PI
Your assessment is spot on. Covid made it worse. People go to work and keep to themselves. Just a rat race grind. No time for living.
100%
If you’re the type of person who can easily integrate into a community and avoid focusing on things to complain about, the Philippines is definitely worth a visit.
Left 2005 Germany to work and live in Canada. I did meet so many immigrants in Canada who couldn't stand it and left after a couple of months or even 2 years. The biggest problem people do have in other countries? They are trying to change the country instead of just changing themselves. Planned a vacation of 5 months in Panama. Arrived November 2019. That's when I did fall down the hole. Pandemic, and I wasn't allowed to fly back. I got nuts. Well at least for 2 years. As I got again my return flight denied, I just had enough from Canada. Applied for residency in Panama. Got everything done in 2 months. Sold everything in Canada. Separated from my girlfriend in November 2019. The vacation to Panama was only to get my head clear. The pandemic took the decision from me. In November this year, I am 5 years in Panama. Beaches, palms, and cool beers. Who thought that I would retire like a millionaire 😂. 6-7 months snow and ice are history. Is everything fine? God no. But I rather go with the flow. Life is short. And if I hear again in a supermarket a "Gringo" yelling around why nobody speaks English, I smile and think: Another one who leaves because it isn't Canada or the USA!
And some of those guys who go to another country to try and live don't realize their personality or vices are the problem. I haven't met too many there, but some of the guys appears to be too young to officially retire and were just drawing a check of some kind from back home. Idle hands are the tools of the devil.
That first sentence was German grammar 😂😂
Ah! Panama! That's where I chose to live for 6 years (2006-12) coming from Canada (but born t here). I lived in P. City for 2 years, and Dolega, Chiriqui for 4 years. I have the FNV there. A lot of my friends in Panama were German, and I became a Schalke 04 fan in the process! But, I'm glad I wasn't there for the plandemic because Panama, like the UK, Canada and Australia, went full Stalin on their citizens. And I left just in time too (Feb 2020) never to return. And I'm so glad I did after friends who stayed told me how bad it was with the many restrictions placed on them. I move to Uruguay instead where we had none of those nonsensical things that never worked: lockdowns, mask mandates, vax mandates and silly social distancing rules.
And because I have 8 different residencies around the world, plus 5 citizenships/passports, I was able to travel freely without any restrictions. (I didn't even wear a stupid mask that never protected anyone simply because, whenever I flew I always flew private during the China virus time.) However, I'm planning a return trip to Panama later this year to renew my residency requirement for the FNV. (It's been 5 years;' I should have returned after 2 years but the excuse I'm using is the plandemic as well as all the protests Panama has had recently. My lawyer has told me that those excuses will allow me to keep the FNV. But even if I lose it, I have other residencies - as mentioned above - I can fall back on.)
@@ColonelHoganStalag13 With digital nomad lifestyle there's a lot of young people like that these days. I moved to Panama when I was 36, basically living the retired lifestyle. I was still running online businesses and day trading, but it didn't feel like work and would often describe myself as "retired" even though, officially I wasn't. I did that because the lifestyle I was leading at the time - living in the tropics, carefree, financially secure - was how I pictured retirement. So that saying "idle hands are the tools of the devil" is nothing more to me than just a saying ... it means very little to me. I want to live a free lifestyle away from the prying eyes of my government back home and by living in the tropics I was able to do that while paying 0% income taxes and enjoying a cost of living that was an eighth of what it was in Canada.
@@realismatitsfinest1 Well. You see. I was in Panama City through the lockdown. 8 months. As soon as the lockdown was lifted, I moved to Playa Uverito, Los Santos area. They had only lockdown from Friday 9pm till Monday 5am. I was living on the beach and could walk with my dog every day. I felt really stupid when I asked locals when I could go shopping for groceries. “What are you talking about? We have no restrictions except on the weekends. After 3 weeks, even this restrictions were lifted. Because I have a 82% disability with a weak immune system, I got vaccinated. 3 times. The mask isn’t to protect yourself. It protects others if you are sick. Since my accident, I catch every single cold what goes around. But I was told from the doctors that this would be happening. Funny thing was when I got sick with 41.4 degrees Celsius fever and going to the hospital. They switched 3 times the digital thermometer. When they figured out that all did show the same temperature, they didn’t know what to do. Some flu medication and go home into the bed. I don’t go anymore if it hits me again with high fever. It’s just like being in Canada by minus 30 degrees Celsius. I’m freezing in Panama by plus 34 degrees with 2 sweaters on! 😀
Hey Chad I’m another fellow Canadian who did his first trip to (Asia)Thailand in 2023 for a month after my youngest daughter moved out with her bf. I had no more excuses not to travel. In 2024 I did a month in the Philippines, a week in Malaysia because I found a cheap flight, then 3 weeks back in Thailand. On this second trip I ended up meeting up with one coworker while in Cebu and two others when I did a week trip in Malaysia. The more I talk about the fun I have the more other people get interested and now I have a buddy who is going with me for his first trip to Asia in 2025. I have also chatted with my friends and coworkers who will also be in Asia around the same time and we will all be on a group chat and are going to plan for a group meet up probably in Vietnam. The one great thing I found out in the last two years is how cheap it is to fly around Asia . I highly recommend everyone to get off the couch and try a trip to Asia at least once.
Thanks for sharing that! I totally agree, so cheap and so much fun 😎 I can't wait to explore other countries in the region
Just remember that a trip and touring is nothing like living there. You should read my detailed comment before you decide to leap. I suggest everyone who decides to go live, ease into it for a year or two, before selling everything abroad and committing too much.
@@ChadFosterExplores Thailand has far superior infrastructure, but it is a zoo of tourists.
@@Anonymint-vj7btonly in big places like Pattaya, Koh Samui or Phi Phi, Phuket etc. if you visit some of the smaller cities or islands, very little tourism.
@@JPinShenzhen I have read and heard that Phuket is also a zoo of Russian tourists that overrun the place and make unwelcoming for other Westernized nationalities?
Well I go to Thailand for the infrastructure, so then I guess that will also be where the zoo of tourists are?
Anyway, after 27 years, I am finished with SE Asia for living (visits are okay). Mexico has a much better climate. I am too old for that crush of protoplasm in the areas of Asia with infrastructure. And I can not buy land in my name there. Can not become citizen or never have to report to authorities every year at least. I am not interested in being a second class member of their society.
Lived and worked overseas for 20 years…four years in Korea and Japan. Not blind to overseas life. I’m keeping my Tacoma at my sister’s house. Every couple of years I’ll return and hit US National Parks and Canadian Parks.
Without places like the Philippines or Thailand many American men would be living monk mode. Not sure about living there full time, but visiting is good to give your life balance and enjoy being out of the feminist B.S. for awhile.
Amen
It’s so disorienting in the west . 56% divorce rate and of those still married 20% + are unhappy; stay just for the kids etc.
“Don’t need no man” is wild. Perhaps we’ll soon have AI women and “don’t need no woman” will also be true 😂
S. Korea, Japan, America… all the modern east and west is low birth rate because we no longer need each other.
@@MichaelPrudhomme-u7x You are already outdated, "Don't need no woman" is on the rise with MGTOW growing exponentially in the west.
For me, being in a place were dating women is not a difficult issue would add as much peace of mind to my life as living in Malibu or Martha’s Vineyard would add!
I have lived in an extremely nice areas of California, beach side areas that make you feel good just to walk outside and look around your neighborhood. It is a blessing to be in an area that is attractive, very clean, with great infrastructure and upscale people. It’s wonderful to live in that kind of environment !
HOWEVER, never knowing if it’s going to take me a month to meet a steady girlfriend or 2 years to meet a steady girlfriend, is just too much! And to be honest, the more upscale the town/neighborhood you live in, the harder it is to meet women, since younger, single women generally can’t afford to live there!
There is nothing worse than sitting in a nightclub or bar for 3 hours, and no one seems interested. There’s nothing worse than working out at a gym every day, seeing yourself in the mirror and being happy with the results, yet that not translate to a single date! To watch as women purposely try not to make eye contact with you, or avoid even a hint of interest. And even if you are in relative good shape, if you don’t reach the 6 feet height, requirement, or you’re not the right racial demographic in the area you live in, you’re still going to struggle, and will be lucky to get 5 worthwhile dates a year, and unfortunately, some of them will have to be coworkers.
No, bad infrastructure, or not, give me a place where I can afford to create a wealth bubble around myself, that also has unlimited dating options! I’ll choose that over Calabasas or Kennebunkport anytime!
So you're implying Phillipinees and Thailand are the dumping ground for old less appealing guys? Let me guess? Pattaya? Lmao lmao lmao
I have been traveling to the Philippines for 21 years. I retired here 2.5 years ago. I wouldn't go back to the US. We live in a very nice community that is clean, quiet, and very convenient location. My food selection where I live is so good from shopping to restaurants. We have a large home that is cheap compared to the west. We are very happy here. But your videos show all views and are honest with no BS. They are appreciated.
What part are you in?
@@lakecityransom We are in Nuvali in Laguna.
Laguna is my fave province. ❤
@@Synfulzare there nice grocery stores with packaged beef chicken and fish? One guy I saw went to a open meat market and the fish looked gross. No refrigeration
@Synfulz Laguna many waterfalls, cold spring ,hot spring ❤
After visiting Philippines for 12 years, last year I built a house and moved here full time because I could not afford to live in the US. I could survive but not live. Except I do not see my family as much but otherwise I have zero regrets. All you say is true, but I love it.
How did you possibly build a house without being married to a Filipino. You cannot buy or own land.
@@thomasodetinape4180, He cannot own the house either. Foreigners can be on the contract to buy, but not on the deed of ownership for a house.
@@thomasodetinape4180 you can lease land and own structures
Hi Chad.. we are from Canada we retire early ,sold everything and moved to the Philippines. After we’ve been here for 6 months we visited Canada. We forgot how expensive it is to live in there. We went for breakfast 3 people cost us $65 that’s insane., We feel that Canada is so sterile, so quiet lol after being exposed to the Philippines karaoke, barking dogs plus roosters.It’s true it’s not perfect here, poverty, garbage, traffic, frustration on government agencies. But after 4 weeks in Canada we are so itchy to head back and so happy to be back in the Philippines. We are in Negros Oriental but planning to move to Iloilo city for better infrastructure. Our monthly budget is $4,000 Cnd we can live comfortably here. We travel Vietnam for a month then going to Japan in October. My point is you have more options here in the Philippines. We are happier here and will continue to travel different countries especially around Asia. Cheers!
Yes well said! For me as well, taking everything into consideration, the Philippines still offers a better lifestyle. Nowhere is perfect, and a country with such friendly people, English-speaking, and easy/safe to travel around, low cost of living, it's tough to beat despite some of the drawbacks.
Yup, eating out is expensive both in $$$ and health. I haven't eaten out in over 7 years. Cook every meal at room using real food. Love it, saves me time and I'm healthier. There was a time when I ate out 2-3 times a day. Can't say I miss it.
I own my house in Phoenix AZ USA. Over the past 15 years it has appreciated an average of $2000/mo. My prop tax is $166/mo. When I move to SE Asia I'll be paying a lot for by renting. Bananas, eggs, rice are the same price, or a little lower here in Phoenix than in PH.
A person today can buy a decent house (PH standards) in Cairo IL for $9k. It's on Zillow right now. You can walk to the Mississippi and Ohio rivers for super catfishing which is safe to eat so basically free fish.
Here in the US I get 100% free world class healthcare and $7500/yr for dental. Because I live off savings, not taking SS, I get Medicaid ($0 copay, $0 deductible). At 65 I got Medicare and Medicaid which pays my Parts B & D and all copays and deductible. Also get a free smartphone and plan via LifeLine.
The concept of PH being "cheaper" is only valid if a person chooses to spend a lot in the West buy eating out and renting rather than buying and doing whatever.
My total average spend in the US for 15 years has been $600/mo while my house went up $2000/mo. Next year I'll be moving to SE Asia and expecting to spend 3-5x more for basically the same lifestyle. I'm moving for the adventure. Budget will be $5800/mo with about $500k saved.
Cheaper? Nah.
Didn’t mention weather or natural disasters, you need health insurance or a large nest egg if you plan to stay there
Number 1 is you have to enjoy the endless heat, otherwise you’ll be going from AirConditioning to AirConditioning.
@@peterfrymaster
yup and that's exactly the same anywhere in SEA .. Central/South America etc in that regard
To me those small negatives don't out way the large positives. In Los Angeles where I am from I have seen a lot more homeless people living on the street. You have homeless people in all countries.. Some streets are not well kept so I just drive around pot holes. In our village the internet sucks. But I now have Starlink that problem is fixed. Yes, in our village (province area) power might go off but we have a generator. But in the big cities the power is reliable. In our village the trash is burned. Yes, there are a lot of unkept dogs and cats because some people can barely feed themselves. But cost of living is very cheap which allows me and my Filipina wife to enjoy life with no financial worries. The Filipino people are very nice. And the Philippines has a lot of beautiful places you can visit. I love it here...
I agree! The pros definitely outweigh the cons and I'll be back there… The Filipino people alone make up for it!
@@ChadFosterExploreslol but you just had to make a hard bait "cons" video on it though, you're honestly no better than that "Philippinestruth" guy
That’s what really annoyed me when I stayed at a motel near a pump boat marina as I had to wait for the next day’s sailing. The owner of the motel was burning plastic bags and other garbage and it was just smouldering. And, looking from my second story window I could see a surreal scene of smouldering plumes of smoke everywhere in that village. The acrid smoke got into my room. I went downstairs to tell the manager that the smouldering fire beneath my room was sending smoke in my room. But to no avail.
The bottom line is the cultural differences. They seem cute and funny at first. However, they can really start to wear on you if you can let them go. My wife {filipina} and I married 39 years ago, so she was in the states most of her life. We were both in our early 20's. She has a harder time accepting some things here than I do. But we complain about it to each other, then laugh about it later. You can find plenty of angry expats that sit around hating life here, but won't leave either. You have to be able to let it go. Be honest with yourself if you can't do that.
Hey Chad,
Everything you said about the Philippines is spot on, especially the negative aspects of living here. I always tell anyone who's thinking of moving here that they need to at least try it out for 6 months. But even then, there's no guarantee it'll work out.
Remember, the Philippines is still a developing country, so there are both advantages and disadvantages to that. One of the negatives is the infrastructure and stuff like that. But for me, this is probably the best time to come and try to fit in, if you're really serious about it. You don't want to come here when everything is all developed and in order. It'll be way more expensive then.
And the people won't be as friendly as they are now, because they'll all be too busy trying to make more and more money.
I'm lucky that I lived and worked in the US for over 30 years. We decided to move back home 2 years ago, and at first, I had some doubts about whether it was the right decision. But after living here for a few months, I realized that we made the right choice, even with all the disadvantages and the lack of the same quality amenities that America offers.
And the best thing about it?
IT'S MORE FUN IN THE PHILIPPINES!!!
That's awesome. My mum is from the Philippines and we both live in Australia. I haven't been back to Bohol since my cousins wedding in 2012. My dad just passed away a few weeks ago at 71 and now I'm rethinking everything in life. Im trying to convince my wife that there is more to life than working your a** off every day and soon we will have enough passive income to easily live in a place like the Philippines as Australia is extremely expensive to live now.
Phillipines is not a developing country. They have been frozen in time for the past 20-30 years. That country has rarely taken any steps forward, if anything they went backwards. My dad told me when he used to live there the peso was $1=₱4. Now it's damn near $1=₱55-57. They got a horrible government system. Like why are there malls everywhere. That money can be used to better quality of life.
Higher dollar value to php peso is what makes living there as an expat cheaper. Also, malls are owned by private corporations which the government don't own. They just give business permits as other business.
@@chieflingcoHigher dollar value to php peso is what makes living there as an expat cheaper. Also, malls are owned by private corporations which the government don't own. They just give business permits as other business.
@@chieflingcothe higher the quality of life of the majority of citizens in a country, the more the cost of living will be more expensive. So yeah, it has drawbacks
The reason for being in the Philippines is cheaper housing cheaper recreation cheaper public transportation and better choice of woman that actually want you. Nothing else is really better but it’s a trade off and depends on the person.
They want your money. Don't kid yourself.
Plus, 90% can Speak English
@@sugoidessho Then why are they also with poor white guys? No, it is a status symbol for them and some semblance of stability. A lot of the local men are not driven to find work and keep working. They know how to make babies and to scrounge up some money for _Red_ _Horse_ or bet on a cockfight but when it comes to buying food for the family, it varies. Women tend not to like that sort of lifestyle.
Maybe you should observe, listen and ask questions.
women are same every country going cost you
Nice thing is you can create your own little paradise. Can get land in your wife's name, build a home, get Starlink for internet, etc. You can then grow your own food, raise chickens and so on.
I'm retired in Cebu city and have a $3000 dollar budget which works out great here in the Philippines. I sat down yesterday and figured what budget I would need to go back to the USA to live this life style and compared the budgets between the two. $3000 in the Philippines with a great cushion. $8500 per month in the USA. Only drawbacks in the Philippines so far is feeling isolated from being able to solve problems when they come up. In America, you know how to solve any issue. Here in the Philippines I depend on my Filipina wife to handle who, what, when, negotiation, payment when it comes to repairs, buying things, markets, dealing with banks, loans. Yeah, I try but I always pay too much because I think American or I miss the details of what I'm getting. I also hate the junk they sell here. It breaks, leaks, malfunctions or doesn't work in less than a month. Another problem is Medical, going through the "gauntlet" with trusting, knowing what they are doing, prices, over paying, worried about being a doctors "cash cow".
Are there clean nice beaches in Cebu?
@@limegreen90 Yes in Lapu Lapu.
Cebu has to be the most boring island in the world.
@@thomasodetinape4180 That's your opinion and I would love for you to explain it?
@@faronray5765 My first wife was from there in 1989, went back again in 04, then 2021. Place is useless.
Good for staying in and watching Netflix. Visayans in general are the money grabbers, most of the bar girls in the 70s and 80s were Visayans. Cebu LoL
You can keep it. Airport on an island.
Wow 😳
There are drawbacks in any country. People must understand that they are entering a less developed country than the West. But some things about the country are beautiful. If you are not willing to give up your comfortable life in the US or Canada, you should not go; otherwise, you will be frustrated.
Well said!
Philippines is what you see is what you get. If you want Philippines be like the US then expect Filipino people's character will be changed, they are not going to be the same people the way they are today. This is the reason why I am afraid about Philippines if it becomes a 1st world country, Filipino people will no longer be a happy people and they will become more self-centered people because their life become fast face, just like the US, Canada, Japan, Korea, Etc. For me I don't want Philippines to change. Instead of complaining about Philippine's negative things, why don't we just appreciate what Philippine can offer us, be an open minded person and enjoy life while you can, remember life is too short. Life is defined by what you really want in life. Do you want to live surrounded with happy people that accept you as one of their family members or live in a country that got everything but surrounded with chaotic people just like what's going on here in the US? For me wherever I feel home, that's where I want to be.
Well said! I totally agree :))
Another wise person. I understand were you are coming from. I do believe that the Philippines needs to improve waste management, poverty, and among other issues that the country has to deal with. Some improvements are a good thing.
Nah! we will never change, we are very diversed with ( 130 different Proto-Austronesian Ethnic Tribes/Groups ) the spanish, japs and the yankees couldn't change us. Only the Flips that immigrated to the U.S have changed and became "WhiteWashed".
I totally agree with u period.
There is zero chance that Philippines will become a 1st (or even 2nd) world country in our land our childrens lifetime.
As far as trash and poverty. The philippines does NOT hide it. I went to thailand and they seem to hide it well. Korean streets and subways, if you drop food on the ground, you can use the 3 second rule "say no more". Philippines the people are so nice, the food is average at best. Poverty is awful. So many beggers and never walk around late at night. There are a few select cities that are clean, but you have to fine them and then like them enough to move there. I have been traveling some and the one thing that jumps out in most cities is the trash removal. they dont clean the trash pickup areas. When it rains, stay home or you may get trench feet due to the lack of drainage. So all that trash including rooten food and feces is now in the water at your feet. I hate to beat up the country, but going to Boracay or Palawan is probably not where you are going to live. These are just a few things I've noticed in just a few short months that I've lived here.
Have you noticed that the locals steal the thrash cans and in most cases sell it. I've asked my sister and my cousin about this and they say that they do steal the thrash cans in the city streets and in the neighborhoods. One of many reasons why you will see crap all over the place. Poverty is all over the world, unfortunately other countries have it worse than others.
Thailand is not a 3rd. World country..mostly modern and efficient unlike PI.
"As far as trash and poverty. The philippines does NOT hide it." Yes they do, they try to hide it. Look how clean the tourist sections are. Then when the pope visited last time, what did the Filipinos do? They put up tarps along the popes routes to hide the slum areas. They cleaned up along his routes. They rounded up the street children and sent them to places outside and north of Metro Manila.
Thailand is better in almost every way apart from two things. They often don't speak great English and the women in the Phillipines are far nicer and easier to get. If you could put the Filipinas in Thailand I'd live there for good 😂.
Thank you for being straight with us. Normally all we hear is the old dog, Geo, Beaver beach bar (& World Zoom) doing constant promo commercials for the Philippines!
You're welcome, just trying to paint an accurate and balanced picture based on my own observations and experience. Regardless of the things I mentioned I still love the Philippines and looking forward to getting back there. Everywhere has pros and cones. Cheers
Hi Chad,, I spent 6 months last winter doing what you were doing. Selling all stuff and heading back. Still searching for the right place. Cheers Dave
TBF Old Dog does tell his story post-divorce. Ground hog day, he called it.
Big house. Work, TV, sleep, work… rinse and repeat. Nothing wrong with get busy living or get busy dying.
That Beaver Bar is a slow moving train wreck. Stay tuned.
@@ChadFosterExplores Chad the following JRE immigration services explains that 1) citizenship is not possible as it requires a vote of Congress, 2) anyone can make a complaint against a foreigner for any reason and have them blacklisted. The problem is that even someone can lie and have a foreigner blacklisted. Foreigners do not fully understand the risks in the Philippines. You could have all your assets there and then suddenly you can not stay there anymore nor remove the blacklisting for 5 years if ever. In 2020, my flight was canceled by the Taal volcano eruption and thus I was unable to leave before the final day of my extension and unable to obtain the ECC at the airport (as the Angeles ofc was closed due to Taal eruption even though that was far away). The BIR was going to put me in the rat-infested Bicutan detention center, unless I could produce records of my prior marriage to a Filipina and the birth certificates of my Philippines born kids. As it was they fined me like $1000 and they summarily deported me while forcing me to wait a few weeks for processing and to stay in a certain location for those weeks. Almost a form of house arrest I guess you could say but not quite. Luckily they did not blacklist me.
Also I forgot to mention I was attacked by a gang of youths in front of the police station on Walking Street in 1999 and they gouged out my right eye. The Philippines was suffering from the Asian crisis and people were angry. Beware if the economy turns down again, kidnap-for-ransom could rise again, especially now that the Dirty Harry Enforcer is no longer the president, crime has reportedly increased. Also ostensibly the Chinese mafia have been moving into the Philippines.
Btw, the head of JRE had mentioned in another video of his how he too gets very frustrated. Someone had parked in a non-parking space blocking him from exiting from his parking space. He found the person, and the person did not even apologize and acted annoyed that he had to move his car. You can be shot in the Philippines if you make another motorist angry. Etc.. The Philippines has many sides lurking that the virgin foreigners underestimate.
th-cam.com/video/gRbKnq7_wdI/w-d-xo.html
I live in third world Latin America most of the time and am considering the Philippines. The "annoying" things are probably the same. Yes the electricity goes out a few times a week for a few hours. So what? Lines in stores take more time as no one is in a hurry. No one stresses about being on time. Meeting a girl at 8:00 might mean 8::30 and no one would think anything of that. You don't get convenience all the time and no you can't buy a lettuce with the vegetable store with twenty dollars because they can'r break that. Even at the supermarket you don't have a million different choices. Ketchup might be on the shelf one day and they are out the next---big deal. You just have to relax and go with it in a better environment, nicer people and focus on the laid back new life and take the great amount that is a better life and learn to live with the small annoyances which only annoys westerners that have had it far too easy. Cheers---.
Your language "3rd world " simply tells me your aged. You live in Victorian time😅😅😅 grow up
hey! I am in Toronto. 7 years back and forth between Toronto and Philipines , started Utube channel there, then deleted, saw lots of expats and heard lots their stories...bottom line: never buy a house, start a business, or marry a Filipina, just rent a house, rent a bike/car, do have a girl friend! (no need to marry).
....now I am back in Toronto, love cleanliness, safety, salaries, seasons and predictability here. crazy expensive thou. I still love Philipines (ppl are actually alive there!) but from now on: 3 winter months only. like a normal snow bird
Best advice !!
Correct
I want to be a 3 month snow bird
As a Canadian living in the Philippines and raising roosters and racing pigeons, I fit right in with the locals. There is no way I would leave Canada if not for my wonderful wife. To me that is the only valid reason to leave your home country. People who complain about their home country have a problem with themselves. The problem is not the country but them. I love Canada but if you find a good Filipina she is worth making the move as long as you are the kind of man who can adapt to any environment. Everything you said about the Philippines is true. I could make a very long list of the negative, but a good Filipina is even better than all the positive hype out there. They are special girls.
@@grandpapeteswordsofwisdom7114 Thank You for having the right attitude..🙂
why have you not taken her back to Canada then .....because she is 30 years your junior perhaps lol and in my country, CANADA, you'd be viewed as a pervert and she as a gold digger
What part of the Philippines are you located?
@@FromTheDeepTitanic Davao
???
Trudeau, woke liberal nonsensical laws and policies, societal brainwashing and gaslighting, out-of-control inflation, etc, are not valid reasons to want to leave the s hole of Canada?
If you can do without the sex, most of what men need are cooking, cleaning, and companionship. I submit it is a good option to just hire that out rather than seek a GF. Expectations are much clearer-cut, and so much easier to get out of a business relationship than a "romantic" one
True. That "P" can destroy you.
Agree 100%
What about being loved? That’s what I’m looking for most. And you can’t pay for that
@@stillwaterfilms3626 Its possible I guess that you will find it. Good luck!
@@stillwaterfilms3626 You sir are a unicorn. Most men really hate women. We are tired. So tired..
Chad, you’re an honest man and you always keep it real. Here’s my two cents. I’m from the PH and been living here in LA for over 30 years. The US gives you opportunities that no other can. However, so many problems. In SoCal there’s garbage everywhere too. People are undisciplined too. So you talk about our negatives but I’d say it’s the same in every country in the world. Some cities are cleaner than others. If the PH is rich and offers the same financial opportunities as the US, then people will be moving here in droves. I’m just saying every country has their strong points and weaknesses. We have so many positives and it’ll keep growing from here on out. Stay safe.
You are absolutely right. You see the world as I see it.
Many Philippine vloggers will not do videos on some of the cons in the Philippines because discouraging viewers doesn’t help their overall viewership. It’s as simple as that. Why discourage them and then they stop watching your channel? The reality hits hard though if these viewers don’t do their own due diligence and just go by what these vloggers have said. The main pros are cost of living, weather, and girls. Some of the cons are weather, expensive western comforts, traffic, overcrowded large cities, inefficiencies with stores and government offices, etc… I live about 30 minutes from San Francisco. We have many areas beat when it comes to high prices, crime, traffic, and dirty places. Traffic here is not as bad as Manila or Cebu, but it’s not good. I’ve yet to find anywhere in the Philippines as dirty as some of the places in Northern California, even the squatter areas in Manila and Cebu. I often tour my girlfriend’s family and friends when they visit California. They’re shocked to see how dirty that it is here. People can live in the Philippines on less than $1k usd per month where you can’t do that in the U.S. You won’t be living very well, but you’ll have a decent apartment (in the provinces anyway), Filipino type food is inexpensive and not bad, hospital visit are fairly inexpensive for routine things, and usually the beaches are free. Barking dogs and roosters go along with these things.
You can rent a nice apartment in quezon city in manilla for $500 a month. But the quality of things is just not the same as in amerixa. But that's why it's cheaper to live here 😂
"If it wasn't cheap... ...I wonder how many people would go there"... ....brilliant point. The harsh reality is: next to nobody.
Yet to see any videos of anywhere in PI i would want to live. I am sure there are some nice places but would still cost more than what it costs me here in the USA. Cheap and easy to get hot GF is 99% of why men move there.
My wife and I built our farming empire there over the years. And started an Agro business and property management business (rice, coconuts, fruits, shrimp, crawfish and rental houses). We couldn't have done that here without going millions in debt. Just because it's cheap doesn't mean you can't financially prosper there if you want to. It was a financially sound decision. For us
I agree with you 100 percent, we live in Bohol and are building here what would cost millions in Australia and the pace of life here is slow and lay back just like Australia 60 years ago. Bohol is one of the safest islands in pi and sure we have blackouts now and then and other things that is different from Aus but if you want to live in paradice then that is the price you have to pay. I love the philippines.
I'm a newly retired filipino living here in the US but will go back to Phils.someday. Biggest pros - Food and generally cheaper cost of living. Biggest Cons - Hot, humid and 3rd world and no Medicare You can minimize the cons by installing solar and/or aircondition and live in a nice neighborhood accessible to basic necessities. Buy a local insurance and stay healthy. Look for a real spouse who will not make you a walking atm. Be friendly but not be very friendly. If you want a westernized style o.f living, get a condo...but just keep in mind you will be stuck with HOA and other fees.
DONT SAY PULL THE TRIGGER if you live in Canada. They took all the triggers just like they did in Australia
Yeah and look at their lower crime and murder rates.
@@dragonwithagirltattoo598 Also look at the millions of unarmed people who were imprisoned, worked, starved, beaten, shot to death in multiple countries.
Ask the truckers what happened during the plandemic
@@dragonwithagirltattoo598😂😂😂
If you're a fan of history, the Philippines is a good place to visit or live. There are so many historically significant sites here. My filipina wife of 32 years and I retired in the P.I. approaching 2 years ago. We're still getting settled, but plan to travel extensively to other places in this archipelago and other countries southeast Asia. Next stop for us is Balanga City in Bataan,which is where the WWII memorial and cemetery is located, and on that peninsula is where the infamous Bataan Death March occurred. And close by is Subic Bay in Alongapo. The home of many a U.S. Sailor back in the day. Anyway, for those planning to come over and make it your new home I say don't try to do too much to soon. Be very conservative/careful in any financial dealings until you've allowed yourself time to adjust to the climate, the culture, and the infrastructure. Like Chad said, the people are generally very friendly, but just like anywhere else, you might encounter some toxic ones, so be careful. Lastly, make sure you keep and maintain at least one U.S. or Canadian bank account.
The most marked difference that I noticed coming back to North America was 1. The air quality 2. The trash that is littered everywhere
Neither matters too much. Retiring to Asia in September
Chad, being honest isn't being negative. Telling the truth is what people need to hear. More and more YT channels have been telling the truth about life in the PI, you've been at the forefront of the reality of life there. Keep the great content coming sir!
Well said the point of the video was to give a realistic picture of life in the Philippines its not about being negative or positive. We know that Chad likes the Philippines but its also helpful to hear what we can expect that as a westerner that could be a challenge.
@@paulz6491 My thoughts exactly.
Lol, people need to tell such "truths" about all surrounding nations for once
@@gangstagummybear3432 I know right.
@RP88A Thailand and vietnam need alot less sunshine and rainbows youtubers
Getting through the miscellaneous conjecture, this dude is 100% correct. The PI has so many limitations and depending on optics, disappointments. But it also has all the wonderful things that are hyped. In my humble opinion, the experience is based on each individual and their past experiences from where they came, and what each person has as expectations on their new journey. I love the PI. It’s fantastic for me. I admit that there are aspects that wear me down too. But in the balance of my past and hope for the future, the scales weigh in favor of the PI. Good video, and good to see someone try to place things in actual context. Cheers. 👍🏼🇺🇸☮️🇵🇭
The ‘wear me down’ is only downplayed because you leave periodically to recharge. Run out of money and live there on the cheap for decades like I did, and you will go bat-shit-crazy.
@@Anonymint-vj7bt I get that. Sorry to hear that you got stuck. And truthfully, it’s not only leaving occasionally for a mental reset, it’s simply knowing that you can leave if you need to. I’ve felt that feeling of being isolated and trapped, but a quick jump out settles things. Really glad that you exited with your faculties intact.
@@KanoKanding 💯%. Yep. 🙏 That’s why in my other comments I am discouraging those who go merely to have a lower budget. It is a slippery slope. Life events can trap a person. You will be much more respected in Asia, if you do not NEED to be there. Become a local (e.g. I spoke the local dialect and no longer sounded like an expat) leads to being treated like a local. Realize they do not trust anyone outside their own clan. It is a low-trust culture. Under the superficial novelty of it, there lurks a culture that a Westerner will grow weary of especially if they are improverished.
Don't retire until you're damn sure you're set financially. Don't sell your house at home. Remember, most guys return home within five years. (I did) The "Paradise Syndrome" there wears off REAL FAST. Have a well funded escape plan. I returned to the US pacific northwest with ruined credit and nowhere to live. Luckily I had an income. Also, the hotter she is and larger the age gap, the more likely sh'ell dump you when a better offer comes along.
Sage advice.
A wise man indeed....
Thanks for keeping it honest with us.
1) What was the straw that broke the camel back?
2) Do you plan to go back to the PI or will you stay in the states?
@@I_Need_Travel-mw3st !) I gave up feeding my addiction to hot 20-something brown girls. (we had a 42 year gap, together 3.5 years there. ) I've "suffered" from "Asian Fever" for 40+ years and there is no cure you know. But living there it was an accumulation of little things that drove me nuts. Lack of common sense in the locals, brownouts, animal neglect/cruelty, infrastructure, humidity, no decent gyms, being treated like an ATM, water system, power grid, schools for local kids, etc,..
But OMG was she HOT and frisky!
The Duma Pedos are good at telling stories.
I quit the rat race last month and I paid off my mortgage and all my credit cards. My plan is to become dual citizens of both U.S. and Philippines. So I can go back and forth anytime I want. I plan to keep my house here in U.S. and buy a small farm in the Philippines where it will be peaceful and quiet and away from the population.
For me personally the Philippines is a bit too rough and it's the reason I chose to live in Thailand.
The constant sounds of barking dogs and roosters slowly made me go insane on my last trip to the Philippines. There's also hardly any soundproofing in most condo's, so even if you're on a high floor, you can still hear all the sounds from the street downstairs.
I think the Philippines is a good place to be if you're an older American or Canadian guy with an "easy going" mentality and if you're not too sensitive about all the noise pollution, most of the time.
But if you're like me, and very sensitive to sounds, it can really be a living nightmare. The people are very friendly though but let's be honest, at the end of the day we just want to be somewhere in peace and feel relaxed.
You haven't visited other parts of the Philippines.. You need to visit central and southern part of Philippines. Alot relaxing and quiet areas.. Ive been to Thailand,, and the islands, waters, and beaches in Central and Southern Philippines blow away Thailand
You obviously didn't stay in a luxury condo. Our condos in Manila have double glazed windows and the walls are thick cement. I could scream all I want and the neighbors won't hear me. The only noises I am able to hear are people above jumping on the floor but that's with every condo in any country.
yeah right, after using the Philippines as your content to earn money, you leave. LAME! 😂
Totally agree. 1000%. If you're sensitive to unwanted intrusive noise the Philippines will become your number one nightmare. The locals are immune to it, don't even notice it.
@sugoidessho it's amazing my gf carries on conversation and sleeps when the is a loud dog barking right outside our window she doesn't even notice it
Thank you Chad, I spend 6 months a year in the Philippines, I’m married to a Filipina, built a Home in Pangasinan Province. Still working on the paperwork for my wife to travel with me, Not a huge age gap, I’ve made it work for my wife and I. Don’t forget to buy the hard to find items and ship them , balibak Boxes.
Emigrated to SE (from UK) Asia back in 1988, for work, 36 years ago, at the age of 25, and never went back (other than for occasional holidays). Have no intention of moving back either. Been in Manila for almost 5 years, in this stint (and 6 years in a previous stint). Now retired and enjoying life. Obviously, I have spent more than half my life living here in Asia, so I am not coming at it from the same angle as a retiree moving from the west.
Many of the problems you refer to are not a problem is you live in a city. I have a condo in Pasig and don't face any of those issues. Services are very reliable, with the best mayor in Metro Manila!
Good for you. Happy for you.
And I become 36 tomorrow and was just born in 88
That's the place to live. 👍
I stayed with my aunt and uncle for 6 months in Kelowna, Peach land. Was AMAZING. We went up to Vancouver for a few days and I was shocked at how dirty some of the city was. I do not know what was going on but some streets where just littered with garbage. This was 20 years ago. Vancouver Island was pristine tho. So yes, it is not just the Philippines that has this issue. I worked in the UAE and met many, many Filipinos. I fell in love with the people, their culture and personalities. This is number one for me if I was to move there.
What's paramount is where you will be treated nicely and feel welcomed. Most Filipinos are kind and welcoming. it's just the culture but it's being abused with all the criminals coming in. I can't say that about other countries.
100 percent spot on my friend. For many it is a culture shock if they just up and move to the Philippines without doing a good amount of research.
All the things you mentioned are spot on! My wife and I are nearing our retirement age as well. We are both Filipinos and are planning on retiring there.
As for our situation, we’ve been taking vacations there and for the most part we always enjoy it.
My takeaways and advice to those planning to move to the Philippines:
- If you can, DO NOT homestead near relatives! You will be consistently asked to help them financially and if you deny them, they will get mad at you. To the point that they will start talking about you in a negative way. I have experienced this myself. Even if they are just neighbors that you aren’t really familiar with, they will come asking for financial help. They will almost always never pay it back. Then when you want to collect, they are the ones upset. For some reason, locals have the mentality that they are entitled to your money.
- Keep your head low, stay humble, and avoid getting into arguments with anyone at all cost.
- Do not flaunt your money either. Expensive clothing, shoes, jewelry, etc. Dress modestly and keep the mentality of “When in Rome, do what the Romans do”.
- Be ready for the slow pace of practically every thing, compared to the western world. For example, I opened a bank account there. I arrived at the bank at 10am. I got out of there at 2pm.
- Medical care can be a big hassle there. There is no appointment system there. It is first come first served. If you know someone who works at the hospital, have them put you on the list to be seen the next day. Emergencies can be a nightmare. Be ready for this situation if it ever comes up.
- If you can avoid it, do not drive there and use local transportation services. Yes it is inconvenient at times, but here is why. If you are driving or using your personal car with your private driver and get into a no-fault accident, you will still be responsible for injuries the at fault party sustains.
- Lastly, if you have property in the western world, keep it if you can afford it. You will want to go back now and again to the comforts and convenience of western world.
These are just a few things I have to share for advice for those thinking of retiring in the Philippines. There are more to learn, so make your due diligence in researching before making that big decision to move to the Philippines.
Once again, great video my friend.
It's all relative; it all depends on the person's situation. It all boils down to the questions of "what and where can I afford"; what can I give up and can't; what's more important to me; what do I believe will make me happy; to be happy and comfortable enough, what am I willing to give up...in short, there's no perfect country or place to be, so we all have to study the Pros and Cons of the places we consider to live in or retire to.
You hit the nail on the head. You know what you are talking about. People should follow your lead about the pros and cons of the places that we consider to live or retire to.
Great Video. But I work with many, many Filipinos in Canada. EVERY SINGLE PERSON that I talk to would NEVER move back to the Philippines. Visit family and friends, sure, but move back or retire there? Not a chance. Regardless of the cost of living in Canada, they would accept the high cost rather than move home.
Move home? You mean shitty 3rd world full of corruption
For me, it’s quite the opposite. Many people just want to return home, but I think it varies just like with any other countries. Some of them mentioned that one of the reasons for not going back is the fear of embarrassment. They’ve built this image of living a successful, affluent life abroad, and returning might feel like admitting failure to others.
Come to Switzerland if you want to experience expensive! Apartments in Zurich start around $1'000'000.
I think people in the US, Canada, take for granted what we grew up with all this luxuries come for free. They don't. Its one of the things that make our countries great places to live but its expensive. Countries like the Philippines are cheap, but there is a cost to the quality of living standards. My first time there, in Cebu, I woke up to the neighbor burning his trash below my window. Welcome to the Philippines. Thanks for telling the viewers some of the downsides, trash every where, uneven sidewalks everywhere, not very good food everywhere. But we love it.
"Everywhere" is a bit strong... There are many places like Makati, BGC, Eastwood, etc that are clean, have world class food, and Great hospitals.
Doesn't sound like you love the Philippines. Maybe you love a Filipina? Seems most expat men confuse the 2 things. Almost every other country in SE Asia is cheaper than PH and with better infrastructure, food, medical, etc... What will shock many men is these other countries also have great women. Maybe not the single moms most PH expats love to pay for, but still great women. And many are attracted to foreign men, but maybe not at the same Filipina single mom level of desperation. A Malaysian woman may not sleep with you on a first date. But she also didn't sleep with 20 other men on their first date either.
@@MrWaterbugdesignAre you living in Malaysia?
@@MrWaterbugdesign wow that's a harsh comment... Sounds like you got yourself involved in a bad relationship and are now blaming all the women in the country 😉
@@MrWaterbugdesigncan't have better anything of something that has all those things in progress far more than any of those said countries.
If your life is successful in your own country, chances are you might be let down by issues of any country that has issues with their ability to handle their problems. If you do well by not wanting much and are happy with the basics, you’ll probably be fine anywhere you want to go, and grow with new experience’s.❤🙏
You are a wise person!
You always present as honest as you have now Thank You
Good luck 🤞 with decisions you may make
Thank you 🙏 no point in only taking a one-sided approach it doesn't help anyone
My wife is from Phil. We live in the UK. I had the choice to emigrate to Phil. I chose not to. The biggest drawback for me was the lack of things to do. One can only walk around so many malls and waterfalls. I am not hooked up to social media every minute of every day. And fortunately, I don't need to work. And I don't drink. That, in my experience, is essentially what Phil is about. It is a hard life, and everything is focused on surviving. It is filthy. Hobbies, pastimes..... far and few opportunities, except for beach things. Nicest people on Planet Earth, though.
i love the philippines 🇵🇭 and seriously thinking investing in a property for me and my pina wife instead of USA 🇺🇸 I just enjoy filming content in the philippines 🇵🇭 ❤
Anyone going to Philippines alone and not want to go alone ? Im trying to find a travel buddy thats into having a friend to relocate with and no commitments other than have each others backs as Americans going to live our lives abroad.
Hey, Chad. Enjoy your channel. I live in Maine. Went to Philippines starting in 2004 before many vloggers were around. Went 8 times over ten years... arranging dates online and going on a myriad of adventures all over the country. Happily married now for 11 years to my filipina I met in southern Mindanao.
Super nice, safe, and pleasant here in Maine. Retired recently. Big house all paid for and taxes not too bad. You coined a phrase that has been on my mind, but I have not found the words for. "You've got to build yourself a bubble in the Philippines to enjoy retirement there." To me this is alluding to the classic concrete and rebar tropical house built and then surrounded by a 6 foot concrete and rebar wall. I don't really like the idea, and it seems somewhat like a cage to me. However! I am planning to do just that! The warm people and climate really are great. I just need to have a bit of a, "bubble", to make it all work out. Going to take the plunge after a couple more visits and my adopted filipina daughter finishes up college.
@@377499 the bubble idea doesn’t bother me at all. I don’t want to be a common! Lol. I want to be elite, it’s just very expensive to do that in the US. So, if there are some other place, I can go where I can have maids, cooks, a reserve table at my favorite bar or restaurant, three sugar babies that look like Katherine Bernardo, sign me up! I like the idea of a bubble, where I can go from BGC to IT Park to Tagatay, to Boracay, and back to BGC! lol.
I guess it comes down to "You can't have your cake and eat it too."...if the Philippines became as clean, organized, and efficient as a Western country, it would be even more expensive to live there than living in the West (the Philippines is a series of islands, after all...)
Correct. I heard expats complain about the crap, but it's the crap keeping the place a dump so desperate Filipinas are with them. Snap your fingers and fix everything and poof you have Singapore in PH. And no Filipinas giving you the time of day.
Go to Singapore on your $1000/mo income and no savings. Very different deal.
@@cfc1001001cfc Exactly right. Just look at Singapore. Cleaner, better infrastructure, but also way more expensive. And oh by the way, also some of the strictest laws on the books. A police state. Let's face it: There's no perfect place anywhere on this planet. It's all about pros and cons and where you, as an individual, feel most happy and comfortable. Can we have this discussion without denigrating all the women in a particular country? When you see that kind of comment, it usually means the person who wrote it got himself into a relationship with the wrong woman. Guys, that is not just the woman's fault, you need to take responsibility too for not taking your time and not noticing the red flags. Sheesh...if you made a mistake getting involved with the wrong woman, no need to blame all the women in that country...
Thailand is cheaper than the Philippines and better vastly on all levels : infrastructure .. food .. quality of accommodation at a cheaper cost .. healthcare .. clean .. organized .. the Philippines has English .. age gap commonality and easier visas in ts favor tho but that's about it
im living here in the PH 🇵🇭 btw with my Filipina and make the best of it .. but justkeeping it real in regards to Thailand 🇹🇭
@@paulthurson I agree with everything except infrastructure, which i think is heavily overrated in thailand, street food quality you are right, quality of accommodation cheaper? PH's tourism infrastructure is far more in progress than thailand's so that may be the case for a short time to come, clean? lol, organized? lol, if you say so bro, so much of that is stuff that is said but none of you ever get updated on any of it, i highly doubt you are in PH with a filipina anyways
Thank you for this. I've been watching several (US) expats TH-cam channels for 4+ yrs, and they also touch on the same things. Some, it seems, the main driver was being able to live off of their Social Security check they took at age 62 (earliest to claim), then that it is largely English speaking, easy and low cost of visa, and the younger women. But in the videos they show, the traffic, the condition of the roads and utilities, and regular brown-outs (without storms)...And often the roosters and stray animals... That infrastructure issue really sticks out for me as a bad thing, I don't like the high heat & humidity all the time, and I spent a year when I was 12 on Guam and we had (2) Major earthquakes and (2) super typhoons (one was a direct hit) we left 6 weeks after that and water was just starting to be restored, electricity was still weeks away. So, that was miserable back then...Can't imagine that now. Several interviews these TH-camrs have had with other expats just passing through, live in Thailand/Vietnam, or Malaysia and it sure sounds like infrastructure, utilities, and trash, etc., are handled much better, and the costs are similar. The only drawback is the visa to live there long term, it is a bit more of a cost for a residence or retirement visa.
Do not ever come back anymore. Stay where you are where you can enjoy the amenities that make your life comfortable. It is as if there are no problems related to poverty over there. Indeed, here in my beloved country the Philippines, we do not have very good infrastructure; service is slow; we have problems on garbage; it's noisy; poor internet; and, so on and so forth. However, we are content and happy. You should make this viral so that other foreigners will get to know of it in order that they would be discouraged to come to our country. We do not need BS foreigners who think and act as though they are living in luxury in their home country.
@@ligayaannawi4779 hey there did you watch the whole video? You got the wrong impression of my message and purpose of the video. I love the Philippines I appreciate everything about it you have to take the good with the bad everywhere you live. The pros far outweigh the cons here. and I much prefer being here compared to back there in North America. The purpose of the video is just to be real and honest and give people an understanding so they know what they are getting into before they make a big decision for moving/retirement etc. I respect the Philippines and the Filipino people that's why I wanted to reply to your message. I've learned a lot from being here especially from the people who carry on with a smiling face and good attitude despite struggles. Salamat for watching the video... cheers
I am from Tampa and now live south of Dumaguete near the beach. We have a backup generator, high speed internet, and live on a quiet dead end street. No dogs or roosters and I live on $900 a month and have plenty of money to play with. If I had stayed in Tampa, I would have had to work till I died just to pay the bills. There are a lot of downsides, food being the biggest, but I will never go back to America.
As the child of a military man, I grew up moving from one military base to another, every 2 or 3 years. One country after another. Getting used to multiple languages, foods and cultures. This made me very adaptable, and I can now live anywhere in the world and be comfortable. During the seventies, Spain and Sicily were two very cheap places to live but are now very expensive. It looks like the Philippines is a very cost effective place these days. It might be my next home.
The best part living in the Philippines 🇵🇭 is my $ goes further and able to leave the rat race early in America.
I feel you , bro. I still live in a rat race but am winning. WORD!!!
Other things they do not tell you:
1.) The 60% 40% law. That being if a foreigner starts a business in the Philippines, said business has to be 60% owned by native born Filipinos.
2.) Foreigners cannot own land or a house in the Philippines, only Filipinos can. The foreigner can be on the contract to buy the house but not on the deed of ownership.
3.) They will claim you can live on $300 a month. That is pure BS and the only way to do that is live in a simple nipa hut or basic cement block house in squatter areas.
4.) High crime rate.
5.) They will claim medical care is first world, it is not.
1, 2 and 3 are correct. 4 depends on the place,and 5 is possible if you're in a reputable private hospital. Basically medical skills are better than what most think and I can attest how competent every Filipino doctors and nurses that have given me care.
@@happysolitudetv, and I can attest to how incompetent they are regarding my experience.
My Filipina wife and I are retired, and living in Cebu since 2021. We’ve been together for nearly 30 years, and my life in the PI suits me. I’m living on rice, fish, veggies and fruits, and my five pensions. I feel we have much more freedom here than in the USA. Yep, cheaper, too! The U.S. is a great place to visit, but I won’t be living there, unless forced to. Think I’ll go out on my terrace and watch yet another glorious sunset, to the soft cooing of several champion roosters off in the distance.
My mum is from Bohol. I'm only 39 but my Dad died a few weeks ago at 71 and that has really rattled me. I'm trying to convince my wife that life is short to work your ass off every day here in Australia and get nowhere. And here in Australia our freedom is getting eroded every day.
Looking to maybe move to the Philippines and have a simpler life.
Exactly correct more freedom in the Phils and you don't have to put up with racism and power tripping pigs, like you do in the United "NAZI" States of America run by "GESTAPO" power tripping police State pigs.
@@JasonISF LOL Of course life is simpler in the Phils because it's a third world developing country! LOL.
You are absolutely right, all that you mentioned about the Philippines is true. What draws men to uproot and live there is the women, special treatment foreigners get, and cheaper living accommodation. This reality is attractive to those who have limited financial resources and for those who have no deep family ties in the West.
I live in Edmonton,AB.There are homeless people right here in downtown Edmonton. They live in tents. Also, there are homeless ones and you see them as you alight the trains. You see them on the steps as you go down the subway. And this is Alberta, Canada.
In the US, this problem is being ignored. We see the tents, but the people living in their cars are invisible.
No homeless in the Soviet Union, but we stayed in cold apartments with Mom and Dad. We were all poor together. In the US now, it's each person only for themself. We should be better.
its not the same thing, 99% of the homeless in the USA and Canada are drug users who after so many years have become mentally defective humans. There is no solution for them but this comes from the mentality of trying drugs when someone is young to be different and then becoming hard users as that path in life is a dead end. The homeless in Asia are different they are people who lived in farm/rural areas and moved to the city to try and make money for the family some failed and become stuck in life so can fall to a life of crime and some maybe also like in the west have become drug users but the percent is way lower in my view
I left Philippines when I WAS 20 and now retired. I owned 10 acres in US and ten minutes to all the convenience, doctors, hospitals, churches and everything that I need. Built my NDA custom house and no debts…no way in heck that I will return to live in Philippines.
Lucky you but 10s of millions are living pay to pay and can only dream of retiring.
Filipinos don't care if you don't come back in their country. They loss nothing from you.😂😂
So why watch videos about the Philippines?
As a Filipino, I tried convincing my German husband to live in the Philippines after spending five years in Germany, where I never quite felt at home. We sold everything and moved, trying out various locations such as Cebu, Palawan, Siargao, Dumaguete, Siquijor, and Clark. However, even in my hometown of Cebu City, we struggled to find a place where we truly felt settled. Safety, food quality, and decent housing were consistently lacking. Despite paying €700-€1500 for furnished accommodations, the quality never matched the price.
Eventually, I gave up trying to convince my husband. We moved to Thailand, and I have to admit, it’s been a much better experience. The healthcare, safety, and overall quality of life are significantly better here. With Thailand’s new DTV visa for digital nomads like us, we plan to stay longer. Unfortunately, my experience in the Philippines was disappointing. Even when paying a premium, the standard of living remains low, with locals accustomed to subpar services yet expecting foreigners to pay top dollar.
Corruption and no true order is PH they ain't fooling me thailand is 10x better he made a good choice.
I agree that Philippines is not good, but what is better is my wife. The problem in Thailand was always the language barrier and i will never be able to speak thai.
It's so sad to see the Philippines are so lacking because the politicans are just doing the wrong thing and people are stupid and ignorant.
700 - 1500 euro rent in the philippines is crazy. You can rent a house in a subdivision in cebu for around 30 - 40k pesos which is equivalent to around 560 euro
@@llothar68 You'll "never be able to speak thai" or were you just not willing to try and learn the language? You may as well try if you're retired. You have more time than the typical working folks.
@@Constellasian Knowing your skill set is important when not wanting to waste time. I tried but tonal languages are not for me. Couldn't hold a single tone in music lessons in high school. Failed to order a bottle of Soda because i did not raise the a at the end. That was my time of enlightment. And for what? Just for Thai food? Yes thats a very good reason, but ....
I found the PH to be a massive infrastructure mess. After 2 years of living in Cebu, Manila and Duma... I just couldn't handle the unending noise, brownouts, piss poor healthcare and the worst internet I've experienced anywhere in the world. Wonderful people but too hard pressed to find anything reasonably functional, clean and quiet.
I've been waiting for a video like this from you. Big thumbs up!
Its safe to make it now that he is no longer there and in his home country 😂.
LIFE IS SHORT hello from Phillipines
But misery always feels long.
That’s reality it’s really expensive here in USA 🇺🇸, so really have to work hard to pay those bills.
I didn't work harder. For me US is cheaper than SE Asia. Options on how you choose to live. I'm still moving to SE Asia next years. My cost will be 3-5x higher there, but moving for the adventure and budget isn't an issue for me.
The key is home ownership. There are still affordable places to live but most people still go to the expensive places. I live on Lake Michigan and the weather is like Southern California in the summer for a fraction of the price. My modest house is paid off. Once you get to that point moving anywhere else doesn't make much sense. The Philippines would actually cost me more so I personally would not marry a girl that refused to leave for the US. We could go back twice a year to visit if she wanted but we would have to be based in the US.
@@RJT80 OK, the weather is like Southern California during the summers, but what is the weather like on Lake Michigan during the winters?
@@troyelam8978 Yeah you take the good with the bad. I'd still choose to live here over California. Save a ton of money, get to experience all four seasons, and winter steels you. That first nice day of spring is awesome. Makes you appreciate it more.
@@RJT80 Michigan winters though? Not to mention, it’s just not a pretty state in general. California is gorgeous.
Hey Chad, I'm visiting the Philippines for 27 days starting August 1st. Good video. I think no matter where you live there are trade-offs. I live in rural NC where there is no crime, less expensive, and it's quiet. But I have to drive 30 minutes to get to ANYTHING! I hope to experience the "cons" of the Philippines while I'm there so I can be informed on my ultimate decision to move there. But I got nuthin' going on here!
Don't have any expectations when you visit the Philippines. Have an open mind and accept things why we Filipinos do things differently. You will learn patience here but you will be inconvenient too.
Just don't live in province . Live in BGC adjust first
You are spot on. Everything you have said negatively about the Philippines is true. There is trash everywhere next to a restaurant or a sham area next to a massive mall. I am a Filipina but these are things that make me embarrassed. if only the LGUs or our government would focus as well on our infrastructure and the environment, it would make a big difference. and some local people themselves. they don't give a damn, they just throw their shit everywhere. Discipline is the key to having a clean environment. The government or LGUs should construct proper roads/ highways throughout the provinces. They only highlight the nice beaches of the Philippines in their adverts but never address the unpleasant side of it before inviting tourists to come to the Philippines. im not against my country, it's where i live, its where i go home to. but most local people are the source of these problems. it should start within us. mother nature would be so happy. Im glad you have mentioned this on your vlog so to make others aware of the cons before visiting the Philippines.
It's hard to find thrash cans simply because the locals will steal them. Have you noticed that. That is just one of many reasons why you'll find crap everywhere with the exception of the high scale neighborhoods like BGC, MAKATI, etc. I know that the tourists noticed this but they are there for the beautiful beaches, nature, adventure, food, etc. I'm just proud that our people are friendly, welcoming, hospitable to the foreigners and tourists. I know that they noticed this as well. " It's more fun in the Philippines "
.
It seems like the local goveernment in Ilo Ilo really focused on this. They cleaned up their streets and the nearby river. That could be the model for where PH is headed. It will take time.
Pinas is SUPER corrupt ....DU30 tried to fix it and did some good but now it's back to normal again and getting worse. Thailand is a model country for Pinas ....but things will not change due to the culture of corruption ..it is REALLY terrible. I'm leaving Pinas after 12 years for Thailand. Sad because you cannot beat the people of the Philippines for nice-ness etc
@@realgains1538And the sad thing is to that developing nations petition hard in the United Nations for First World democracies to support the developing nations like the Philippines. So money is taken by taxes from struggling Canadians or Americans, who are barely getting by and is siphoned off and given to developing nations. Where then the money lines the pockets of the politicians. But not only that, the crooked politicians of the West by throwing large sums of taxpayer money to their crony politician friends in the developing countries expect to see returns on their generosity.
@@rickcinway2312 Almost every SEA country had leadership that robbed them blind and left them in poverty and many will struggle for years to fix it.
Thank you for this honest insight that too often goes unsaid .
You are welcome and thank you 🙏
Never date a person who isnt ALREADY financially independent, just move on.
Option #2. Become The Bank Of Foreigner to her, her family, and her other boyfriend/s till the money runs out, and she moves on to another victim.
I AM BRITISH
PHILIPPINES 🇵🇭 IS NICE
PEOPLE ARE ANNOYING
FAKE
ALWAYS TALKING
JELIOUS
WHEN YOU WORK WITH THEM THEY KNOW EVERYTHING!
THEY HAVE CRAB MENTALITY
I stay in a CBD in Manila so stuff like Infrastructure, health services and banking are no problem. It really depends on one's budget as I find the $10 a day folks complain the most.
From, the United States lived in the Philippines 10 years there is nothing wrong with the Philippines its the safest country in the world to live or visit i pay 100 dollars per month for 3 bedroom home 60 pm for electric 5 pm for water and 400pm for food 565 dollars for cost of living i put my 18 year old daughter in college 200 per semester my other 2 children 3 dollars a day for school
Spend your life being an optimist. Don't focus too much on the negatives. Life is awesome.
Its absolutely fantastic 💉
EVEN A ROSE GARDEN HAS THORNS >>>> THAT'S LIFE/ THAT'S REALITY. STOP LYING TO YOURSELF "MR. UNWISE&LYING" -YOU'RE EXPOSED -
Great points. We retired and built our home there and left after 4 years, and now travel back and forth from Guam. We left for many of the reasons you described and chose Guam for most of the good things the Philippines offers... but at a higher cost. We now enjoy the best of both worlds.
Hi. I’m a 54 yr old guy living in Dartmouth Nova Scotia. Eastern Canada used to be considered really cheap. Not anymore. Our rent on about 1100 sq ft and it’s a rare find 2/2 with parking and in suite laundry is around $2400 plus utilities. We are in a good area with great access to things but it is expensive. Actually, this is considered a good deal. So I understand what you’re saying. The guys I see on YT in the PH, many of them seem to be broke or living off very little and had no choice but to go there. Not sure I could live there with the poor infrastructure etc etc. I get it Chad I just would rather fight for a better life here and do what I have to do. But good on you and others. Be happy right. I’m also not looking for a woman which I think comes into play too. And yes I’m one of those people that thinks a 25 plus year age gap is wrong. Sorry.
Yeah I think it is disgusting how these horny sixty year olds go there for 20 year old girls to have sex with and with no intention of marrying. Giving expats a bad name.
Morality matters.
My Filipina wife said no to a personal assistant, said she would do those thing required of an assistant...to get paid. Very good video, though. Thanks, Chad...Jim
Appreciate your honesty, other channel's seem to intentionally ignore the down side of the Philippines. Life expectancy in the Philippines is 9-13 years less than most western countries, simply a fact. Thanks for your open discussion.
Life expectancy has been DROPPING in the US, it's now 76.8. It's 71 in PH as of 2018 and is STILL rising and projected to be 75.8 by 2050. So you tell me which country is going the right direction? The death rate in the US is twice as high as PH as well. PH has a lower inflation rate than the US better unemployment rate and a cheaper cost of living. The US has been heading the WRONG way for awhile now on all these trends and PH the right way and they are closing the gap. Living in a place like BGC is much nicer than any city in the US and still cheaper than the US.
There are definitely downsides in PH and if you are expecting youtube channels to show them you'll be sadly wanting. It takes a mindset change to live in ph, if you can't do that you'll be miserable.
Life expectancy may be dropping in the US but it is not dropping in Canada, Australia, the UK and most of Europe. The drop in the US appears to be due to some unique policy decisions that are not found in most of the other western countries.
@@vandinroth Life expectancy is dropping in the US as an inverse relationship to the average persons weight. I didn't see many obese Filipinos, not to mention morbidly so. Their diets are way better if they can afford food to be not the main expense of their budget. Cost of living is only cheaper for food, property/land, other things and services are just overpriced versions of services I'm used to at lower quality and reduced volume, but I'm not living out of NA/West Europe, so cheapness of PH is overrated for me comparatively. I spent most of my time in the provinces and mostly outside big population centers, so I saw how average people in PH live. Very sad sight to be honest, I admire how Filipinos are so smiling, positive and content with their lives...
why is the life expextanse lower ? the air quality seems to be ok is it safty ?
@@Johndoe-qn9jr Air quality is bad in population centers due to traffic, it was huge change for me cause it felt like I'm inhaling directly from the exhaust pipe when I stayed for many days on the outskirts of Manila. It is good outside of major centers though. Many western countries heavily regulate car quality and exhaust control, so even in heavy traffic air is still better. It is wild west in PH in regards to that unfortunately.
It amazes me as a Filipino how foreigners LOVE to talk about my country 😅. They're giving too many F*s, im beginning to think -- are the other countries too boring to discuss ?
As a former Filipino citizen (now US citizen), I have a better life here in the USA, peaceful, quiet and free from the tsismis. You can live well in the USA as well. You just have to get sway from the cities and look very well at the neighborhood you're moving into.
Building a bubble? Anyone in the Philippines can easily pop that. Let's see how one does once one angers the natives
Live in a city like Miami for a few years and you will find The Philippines a paradise with all the polite, happy and smiling people and dude you are way too boring to listen to.
I have lived in The Caribbean, Canada, the US and many places overseas. What I have discovered is if you are from Canada or the US, you will most likely not want to move to an island nation. What you are really looking for is a somewhat secluded nice affordable place in the US or Canada. Furthermore you may want to try to live in a smaller, cheaper European nation. So many Canadians and Americans move to Island nations in The Caribbean, Philippines, Belize, Puerto Rico, etc..., and then move back after 5 years. See if you can find a cheaper location in the US or Canada first, then try a cheaper country in Europe. If that fails then look at island nations.
PH in a nutshell after my visit there: "The largest vehicle is at fault." Those who've been there will understand the meaning and why it can be metaphorically describe how everything and all aspects of life are in the PH. It is a amazing experience to come visit it, especially going outside of the BGC and other tourists bubbles. Get your expectations in order and adjust your mentality, it is a cold shower everyday, and I mean literally you will have a cold shower everyday :)
All so true!
Thank you for another great and honest video. You ARE helping people. You’ve inspired me to travel to the Philippines in October. It will be my first big adventure. Keep up the great work! Thank you again for all your help.
I am scheduled for the Philippines in September. First time. Cebu. Be safe sir.
The "cooked to order" meals or the cooked in the morning and sits out all day is a huge difference between countries
You can try eating at a small restaurant with a list of "Short Order" in their menu. They'll prepare these for you and it's served hot.
I lived in Mexico 5 years and you could swap your description of the Philippines for Mexico. Barking dogs is what I find the most difficult thing to endure. Rooster, lots of garbage, air and water pollution, noisy neighbors with loud music, inefficiencies of the bureaucracy etc. Returning to Québec I find it so respectful, peaceful and clean.
Same for me in Thailand. Five years too. Most of the people that have the finances to return home will do so. There are many expats trapped because they have zero funds to set up their live again in Canada, USA, UK, etc.
@@bruce6641 I work half time (semi-retired) in my 30s earning $330K a year as a diagnostic radiologist, also $150K-180K in income from my 30+ real estate investments. I can (and have) live anywhere in the world.
I am here now in PH and I have zero desire to move back to any Western country. The toxic consumerist mindset, inflation, and some of the worst women in the world. No thanks. I have lived in Hawaii for 6 years, Tokyo, Seoul, and PH is great. Even as a wealthy person.
Forget the barking dogs the biggest problems are the constant parties, fiestas, etc. I don’t have a house within 300m of me and the music is sometimes so loud it shakes even my walls from so far away and it goes until 3-4am or even sometimes until the sun rises. However, even this is not the worst thing to deal with. The lying, cheating, and stealing is much worse. There are a lot of trespassers on my farm land and anything from bananas, trees for firewood, and even my kawayan bamboo has gotten stolen from time to time. I have caught a few but I think many come at night and the river in the back of my property is about 150m away from my house. Workers will steal or not show up with no notice. I just quit hiring and tend to my 3 hectares as best I can by myself. People that complain about infrastructure, driving, and the food don’t make sense to me. These are relatively small problems that can be mitigated.
I have enjoyed your channel since day 1 Chad & the quality only gets better.
From Miami-Dade county, I wish you continued success !!
Wow thank you I appreciate that! 🙏 thanks for following along the journey
Chad. Welcome back my man! Curtis here in San Antonio, Texas. I often say that the Philippines is like a love, hate relationship. What I mean is when we are there, we love and enjoy it very much. But at the same time, we miss our way of life here in the US/Canada and vice versa. Having served in the US military for well over twenty-years and have had the pleasure of traveling the world. The Philippines is the most loudest country I have visited. For individuals like yourself, you know what I am talking about. In the end, I still look forward to returning home to the US. By the way, if you're ever in San Antonio, please give me a holla!!! ---- Semper Fi!!!!!
Hey Curtis!! Thank you yes it's good to be back... Love hate relationship indeed but much more love than hate. I've gained so many positive experiences from my time there and I know I'll be back some time soon. I'll look you up if I'm in that area for sure! Take care Curtis
It is what it is. Tourist, foreigners, and visitors enjoy the pros and leave the cons behind especially if you are only there on a holiday/vacation or for business. enjoy with the country has to offer and leave all that negativity behind. I have traveled everywhere and I have a blind eye for the cons and only for the pros. "Be all you can be" GO ARMY!!!
@@ChadFosterExplores absolutely Chad. It is more love. I truly miss my other home in Biliran. Take care brother!!!
you're always welcome to Philippines Chad, anytime. enjoyed your vacation
Me and my Canadian husband just watched your video. Thank you for your honesty. We are planning to retire in the Philippines. 🇵🇭
Just choose where you're going to be happy sir, there's no perfect country, culture or people ✌️.
That's exactly true. I've lived many places. Once lived on a the side of a mountain near Mt Shasta. Hydro power off a great stream. 10 minute drive to town. Living in town would be an extremely different lifestyle. And not just the area, but the specific property and your neighbors.
You're on the money, sir.
Hiring the locals with great pay (for their standards) is the ultimate giving back to the community and you'll genuinely feel a small sense of pride by carrying it out. I highly recommend it; you'll love the time you save and learn so much about your interests... groceries, government, society, etc. then you normally would have without hiring any help. The help with open your eyes to better figure out how to work within their system. It's a win/win. And there's not many win/wins in life.
The Philippines is common since. It really gets me the things complained about. It is a 3rd world country you can't expect the Philippines to be like the US Canada Australia. Common since tells you traffic is going to be bad lack of roads tricycles top speeds of 30 to 35 mph , hundreds on the road. Trash ,electric lines that are terrifying, water you can't drink. I moved here in 2017 me and my Filipina wife retired early , its been great, so just use common since.
Common "sense"
I just rented a house, 2 bedrooms and 1 bath for only 15k in Palo Leyte. It is clean and nice and in a gated community and the front of my house is also gated. It was completely unfurnished but I was happy with that. I already have it furnished.
Poverty will destroy everything, even grass. It is hard to care about Plastic on the beach when you are busy stripping the leftover meat off discarded chicken so you can recook and feed your aging parents. I have lived all over and I find 2 things that are almost intolerable and they are the concept of Island Time, where no one is in a hurry and everything takes forever. The second thing is boredom. Boredom causes people to become alcoholics, addicts, be it sex or drugs and maybe even adrenalin. I had to find things to do and even volunteer or work for free.
Or playing on your phone 12 hours a day. No time to do anything else
Thank you for such a great "reality" based video. When I met my Nenz, neither one of us were looking for love - we were licking our wounds from losing our spouses to cancer (we met on a widow/widower group - non-dating). I have spent my entire life in the snowbelt of the United States, and she was a veteran RN, who was born and raised in the greater Bacolod region of the Philippines, who'd been working in Oman for about two decades. Fast forward: We are months away from getting married, and we now spend our lives sharing one another's native countries with each other. I love the Philippines!! - BUT it is not for everybody, especially for those who can't adapt to new ways. As for me, I enjoy immersing myself into their culture. Thank you again for a real look at the Philippines, and not yet another pie in the sky video.
First of all it is good for you to visit your roots. The Philippines serves westerners the outlet that they are looking for. I can see running around S.E. Asia to see that part of the world for sure. In my opinion you will not find the female companion you are looking for in those other countries unless she is a Filipina. As far as food goes as in your comments generally speaking predominantly the majority of the westerners donot embrace the local food. I am 74 and have been married to my 59 year old Filipina wife for 30 years while living here in the US. She cooks the food that I want as well as her dishes. Sometimes it's Filipino food (selective dishes) and sometimes its Southern style dishes. I would not think that you are stable enough from traveling to maintain a regular house keeper. If so you might want an older lady to remove any temptations for fratemization to occur. What does your future long term retirement look like for you need to think about that one!
The real asset and beauty of the Philippines is not the beaches,mountains,falls and weather……… is it the caring,warming,loving and family oriented people of the Filipinos.
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Last meal and they will still offer it to you with no string attach.
Always smiling and accomodating.
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If u dont like that and u value artificial things…….
Then the Island of the Philippines is not for you.
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Goodluck in your next destination.
I’ve been here in the Philippine for 2 1/2 years. I can honestly say the only 2 things I miss from the west is twizzlers and a nice hot shower. (No water pressure were I live we are on the bucket system)
Sounds like Ireland