================================= How to work with me: ================================= 😎 One-on-one Consulting for planning your move abroad: calendly.com/adventurefreaksss/50min
I'm Brazilian, living in the USA for 25 yesrs now, and despite having my life pretty much established here, I'm moving back to my country by the end of this year !!! ❤❤❤
My wife and I are Brazilians and have lived in Florida for 35 years. I bought a 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom apartment. 4 minutes walk to the beach. It has a swimming pool and complete leisure area. a beautiful view of the sea. I bought it for 80 thousand dollars last year, on Praia do Morro in Guarapari. we will stop working in 4 years and live there like kings.
Guys I am a European living in Northeast Brasil and I think it’s much better but living outside example Fortaleza ( lovely mountains to live are Tiangua and Guaramiranga), the temperature is tropical but also fresh morning and night ( through the day it’s 26-30 year around ). Anywhere outside the big cities it’s very safe. Big benefit is it’s cheap…South Brasil is very expensive and the climate is not good ( very unstable and pretty cold ). I recommend people to live in the countryside of Brasil and just visit 1 time a month the beach as it gets boring and usually not that safe. South Brasil in general it’s pretty safe but they have big issues also with the floods taking an example of what happened there. Floripa sure it’s a pleasant place but I am more for year around weather so Northeast works for my family 😀 Just giving some of you guys ideas outside of this main video advice👍🏼
@AdorableUrban I agree with you. Guarapari, Espírito Santo is pretty safe and cheap. My apt is 4 minutes walking from the praia do morro. Cost me 80k (dollars), and I am paying 600 reais monthly maintenance. Guarapari has 50 beaches and mountains. So beautiful.
Fortaleza is where I live right now. In my opinion it is the hands down best place in Brazil for expats who love sunny weather and a cheap cost of living. Oh yeah, the people are nicer than in the south as well.
Ok, that sounds interesting. At what time of the day is it getting dark over there? I live in Goias, where 18:00 is the deadline all through the year. Its to early for me as am European
I'm Brazilian and if you think that living in Florianopolis is cheap, oh boy, you need to know about João Pessoa in the State of Paraíba in the Northeast region. Here you have everything Floripa has, except for the mountains, but the city is known for being the best state of Brazil to retire, also the beaches are very good and the water is warmer, with natural pools in the middle of the ocean. Also, the state of Paraíba is getting a lot of investiments and getting a economic boom, so now is the time to invest here. Hope i could help with theses informations.
@@timmaloney6441 Brazil is very diverse. each region is different from the other. between mountains and ocean there is something for all tastes. It's worth spending a season there. Happy, welcoming people. problem in any country. see New York, California, Chicago. just know where you are going and at what time.
@@helciocampos eu fique no Brazil por seis meses so , bem longe atrais ( 1973 puxa ) e ate agora eu mi lembro a falar mais ou menos assim . mais e` certo , que os Brazileiros son muito boa gente . tudo legal , bacanna , tudo otimo viu . saudades di la .
Brazil is so big that if you travel through several regions that are far from each other, you may have the feeling that you have traveled to another country. The northern and west of the country has more influence from indigenous peoples, in the northeast region there is more influence from African descendants and in the states of the southern region (Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul) it has more influence from European descendants, in addition, the northern half is less developed and all this reflects in the behavior of Brazilians in each region. There is a lot of cultural difference between the regions of Brazil due to many different peoples and cultures interacting and influencing each other. In the north and northeast of Brazil there is practically no winter, it's hot all year round (at the height of summer it's VERY hot). There are not 4 seasons, but rather 2 seasons: one with a lot of rain and one with little rain. In the southern half of Brazil there are 4 seasons, and in the extreme south it can be VERY cold in winter (some regions high up in the mountains can even snow a little). In the states of the southern region (Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina and Paraná), extratropical cyclones occasionally occur on the coast and tornadoes in the extreme west. At the moment the safest state in Brazil is São Paulo, followed by Santa Catarina and Minas Gerais.
@@InMyBrz You are as delusional as one gets, I have seen you in other videos say some bull. Brazil NEVER in a million years in safer then the US. You should take that word out of your name NotDelusional, it is exactly what you are.
I've been leaving and traveling a lot, but a I can say 💯 Brazil has the most complete beauties, and the energy from that country is unique and priceless 😊.
In 1975/76 I travelled around for about 5 months: Boa Vista -> Caracarai -> Rio Branco -> Rio Negro -> Manaus - Amazonas -> Belem - Rio - San Paulo -> Santos -> Itahaem Fantastic! country. and then I exit to Quito, Ecuador in Feb 1976 Thanks for sharing your experience
That is amazing, could you share your experience? I'm from brazil and I've been to 42 countries and I would love to hear your experience traveling to Brazil in 1975 and 1976. Thanks
@@luanbrites I was with 3 other friends. We crossed the river from Lethem over to Brazil. Emptiness no life there but red sand flying with the wind. A van got stranded, and we helped the driver by giving him a push start, and it started. Communication was 0 as we spoke English and knew no Portuguese. Somehow we understood each other, and he gave us a hike to Boa Vista. Upon our arrival in BV, we understood we had to pay him for the hike. We paid him and booked a sleeping room. The next morning we were raided by the immigration cops. We were clean. They gave us directions to check in Brasil immigration. We did, and we got a 3-month visa. We took a bus the same day to Caracarai. When we got there, it was almost dark, and we were trying to see if we could get a boat to take us to Manaus. We did but hadn't enough money to pay the captain. We gave the little cash we had and some personal valuables, upon which he agreed. We didn't have much contact with other Brazilians yet. The captain gave us food during the boat ride. Communication was still 0. We arrived at around 20:00 hrs in Manaus. We walked around the night searching for a place to sleep but found nothing-we were broke. All funds and valuables were already used up for the boat hike from Caracarai. It was Friday. A lot of partying there, in Manaus, folks drinking in open-air bars. A few police officers patrolling the area on foot approached us around 03:00 hrs and said, "Documentos." Looks like I am writing a book hahahahaha. To be cont'd
@@luanbrites Traveling broke is tough anywhere in the world. The locals in any country are the ones who would make your travels a little more comfortable. Brazilians helped me enormously to survive. I know absolutely nothing about tourism life in Brazil. I was living with the common and poor folks with warmth and a huge heart.
O sistema público de saúde do Brasil (SUS), que é gratuito, atende turistas estrangeiros para casos ambulatoriais (rápido atendimento) ou emergenciais para garantir a sua vida (gratuito para os estrangeiros também). Para atendimentos de casos mais prolongados ou cirurgias não emergenciais o estrangeiro tem que ser residente no Brasil e fazer o CPF (Cadastro de Pessoa Física) e talvez o RNE (Registro Nacional de Estrangeiro).
Florianópolis its not a cheap city at least for us Brazilians, but the public health system in the south its better than rest of country, for you guys that have dollars could be a cheap option but its not the best option in my point of view. But Santa Catarina for sure have best cities to live.
@@adventurefreaksss I'am Brazilian. It depends on whether the person is looking for a city to work or to retire, whether they prefer a big city with a lively nightlife or a smaller, quieter city, whether they prefer a beach or mountain city, whether they prefer a warmer or colder place, whether they prioritize more security than the rest or not. For each situation, the city indication changes. Joinville is the largest city (604 thousand inhabitants) in the state of Santa Catarina and is industrialized, but it's very hot in the summer. Florianópolis (capital - 516 thousand inhabitants) can become hell in the high summer season, as it's crowded with tourists and with complicated traffic, making it more difficult to enter and leave the island. Blumenau is the third largest city in the state (366 thousand inhabitants) and is influenced by German descendants. It's 55 km from the coast, at an altitude of just 21 m and is also a good city. At certain times of the year, extratropical cyclones can occur that harm coastal cities.
@@adventurefreaksss Hi, I do live in the state of Santa Catarina, and there are good options on the coast: Florianopolis, Balneario Camboriu, Itapema, Garopaba (all of them with distinct characteristics) And a little far (until 1 one-hour drive from the coast, I would say) from the coast, you can find nice and super-developed cities like Joinville, Blumenau, Pomerode, and Criciuma. There are still some other good options in the countryside and highlands that are very charming and even cheaper
I know Floripa and much of Brazil but lived in Curitiba awesome country, had an opportunity to live there but was married and wife refuse to go. Life goes on I end up in France awesome!!
Curitiba is probably the best managed large Brazilian city I've visited. The winters can get a little chilly due to being about 3000ft in elevation however summer nights tend to be more tolerable then sea level.
Hope all is blessed. I just wanted to talk about the electricity. When you are hear, $60, that's mainly with very little use of air conditioner. I've live in Cumbuco, CE, and I have a house of about 1900sqft with 7 split AC units, and i pay between R$800 and R$1000, and I have solar panels 1000kw system. So, $140 to $175. Mind you I keep all the ac units on nonstop
fantastic place to Iive for sure. Ive been to Brazil twice and I love what I saw.I am actually thinking of visiting their now to look at the possibilities on living there. Thank you for all the informative info you gave in this video. I really appreciate it.
There is many Beautiful States in Brasil with nice cities to live..João Pessoa, Fortataza, Aracaju, Natal all in the northeast, summer all year ❤ I found a Beautiful apartment in João Pessoa with 3 bedrooms a few blocks from the Beach for $700 per month for a year lease. Real estate in North is cheaper than the South.
I'm from Brazil, I've been to 42 countries (Europe, Asia, South America and Africa), I've lived in Ireland, Thailand, Malaysia, Spain and The UK if all my experience traveling, is hard to see a country like Brazil, with good food, good people, beauty and good weather. We have our problems but is easy to avoid if you can choose where to live. I would say Brazil is a good place to live if you earn in USD, Euros or Pounds. I've lived in Florianopolis, is a nice place to be, you are doing great, thank you for being in Brazil and I hope you can have an amazing live living in my country, Brazil is a country with immigrants and all immigrants are welcome.
@@adventurefreaksssBrazilian here living in the US for the last 20 years, in California for 14. I love my life in the US. I work in tech and make a great living. I have to go further than you on US health care. In my opinion, the healthcare system in the US is borderline criminal. The only part I find disgusting. I’m proud to soon become an US citizen but can’t say the same about our healthcare system. Thanks for the great video!
@@pachvandio My sister live in US also, and she told me the same about the healthcare system. It is crazy, there are people that prefer almost die before call for an ambulance
Moro em Guaratuba, uma pequena cidade no litoral sul do Brasil (estado do Paraná, a duas horas de carro de Floripa). Para você ter uma ideia: meu sogro tem um cardiologista de forma gratuita e ainda recebe parte da medicação de uma farmácia pública. Certa vez ele teve um infarto, ficou internado por dois dias em uma UTI (ICU em inglês), foi transportador de avião para um centro maior e recebeu um "stent". Tudo via sistema público e sem pagar nada. Claro, nosso sistema público de saúde (SUS) não é perfeito, mas funciona.
It’s so nice to see an American saying only good things about Brazil when the Brazilians itself don’t give a sh* about the country… I’ve been to more than 35 countries and I love Brazil. Proud to be Brazilian
e claro que sim o orgulho de ser brasileiro , i am dutch that visited a lot ,married a much younger brazilian babe , having a mixed race special young son with my wife living stil in the netherlands . But in a few years will retire and live at least during the cold dutch winters in the Netherlands in Salvador Bahia , where Luciana is from .
@@simonejaffa8675 Hope you're not car jacked or violently robbed or killed in Fortaleza NOT a real safe place, try a small town nearby Joao Pessoa is a lot safer
there is non heater in there,so well it sucks alright,even swedish guy living in floripa said that he suffers in the winter without a heater..what more people from florida,u will at least need some fire place NORDIC INVESTOR said the winter in the south sucks without heater
Im From Harrisburg PA ,Have been living in Natal Rio Grande do Nord for well over 20 years ,Best place in the world .Way cheaper than south of Brazil ,My Apt it's like 100 meters from the beach and has 3 bedrooms ,3 full bath ,2 cars garages.Pools and all 9 yards ....I paid $12k ,But that was long time ago ,Now it sells around $75k ,Me my wife and my daughter are living comfortably on $1200 a month .If someone likes more Info ? Leave a comment !
Love US but... Brazil maintains the SUS with 15% of the GDP, (it's 10 times smaller than the US') for the 10 most common diseases the medicines are free, asthma (I'm asthmatic by the way) diabetes, hypertension, glaucoma, rhinitis, dyslipidemia, all sexual, palliative and cancer treatments... You can go to any drugstore, present your medical certificate and they will give it to you and the state will pay them. it's not wonderful, but for emergency measures it's absolutely great. If you fall off your bike, have a labor accident, cut yourself, have a sudden allergic reaction, cardiac arrest, concussion, feeling not good at all... SUS fixes you right away, but for all other things, like chronic or regular exams, you have to get on a waiting list that can sometimes take months, depending on what are your medical exams, a complete CT scan, for example, it's free but takes time etc... Sure you can get private healthcare as well and you will be seen right away, but then it is very expensive by Brazilian standards. Can you imagine what the US would do if they just started minding their own business and ended all offshore military operations? The US could even provide a glass of boubon and a caviar appetizer to whoever is being treated, even nursing rooms could have top tier equipments.
Floripa is expensive for Brazilian standards. People that want to live well work hard. Traffic is awful. And it rains a lot. Culture is not the best. We need to travel to São Paulo and Rio to get some. Nevertheless, it’s one the best places to live that I have been. Unfortunately, it has been filled with people looking for a dream, and finding a nightmare. Salaries are low. Opening a business? Competition is fierce. We only have one month for making money with summer rental: January. All the prices he gave are right. Except for the meals. Unless if you go to really cheapo restaurants. I spend at least US$10,00 in a nice per kilo. Coffee? 2 dollars. Hospitals are not that great. If you don’t have private health insurance you are not getting the exams fast you need unless you are dying. Public health is complicated. But is great. The best doctors work on the public system. And the best dentists. However, the materials they use, and the waiting list… you need health insurance. I love Floripa. My family is from here, and I live well. But as a city, there are better places in the state, and in the country: Blumenau and João Pessoa are my favorites. But if you want live well here, you need in reais, our money: 3500 for rent and condo fees, 2000 reais for groceries. That’s a 1000 US dollars. Everything else you need in life is after that. So you need at least 2000 for a decent middle class life. You can live for less? Of course. But 900 dollars is tough. Don’t bother.
you can came to brazil with friends rent a apartment for couple months and test if you like the culture the way of life, i really suggest and not only Florianopolis
By numbers you probably mean our SUS card which is a card that we show when we go to a public hospital. Anyone can make this card at any public health center. If you go to a public hospital without one, they will make one on the spot.
only if you have income outside of Brazil, as salaries and Brazilian currency are devalued, so much so that it is not possible to pay rent and basic bills with a minimum wage.
Same thing is happening in the US. People have no savings due to living pay check to pay check and only have social security pension to depend on. Challenging times for many! Thanks for your comment!
My parents moved to nYc in the 1950s and always had a house or property in Brasil. I was born in New York and now at 54 years old in 2024 I'm done living in the US permanently. This year I'm moving and I mean Never coming back.I won't be able to retire if I stay even with my house paid off finally. BLESS you all and find your paradise before it's too late 🇧🇷🙏🏼
Thanks for featuring a place a place in Brazil that isn't Rio or Salvador. Can you drink the water from the faucet in Brazil? Or do you have to use bottled water?
It all depends, I did a new construction house in a gated community and the community provide deep water-well treated water and I have it also going thru a filter entering the house, then my refrigerator has a filter so we drink the water with no problem.
In Brazil there is the "Filtro de barro" (Clay Filter), which many Brazilians use to filter tap water. It's a clay pot divided into two parts and with a filter in the middle, so many Brazilians don't even need to buy bottled water.
I think these numbers are a little low for prices of rent and groceries. If you are living nice like this guy you will pay closer to 900 a month in rent and 500 a month on groceries for two people. I have lived in almost every city in Brazil now and only stay in the best neighborhoods and this is what you can expect. Maybe in the suburbs or outside the city center these prices are more realistic.
I'm sure like many fans out there who are curious to know YOUR favorite or Top 3 favorite countries you want to retire in?? We all want to know if you like to share your personal favorites.
People, this video is an advertisement for Floripa, nothing more. The premise that it is the 'best pace to live in Brazil cheap' is just not an objective truth. Floripa is as expensive, maybe more than, big city Brazil. And it gets really cold there, by tropical standards, in the winter. Floripa is a nice place to visit, at the right time of year (not in winter) and during non-holiday times. I have been there several times, both high and low seasons, and it can be a really nice pplace during either, depending on what a person is looking for. But to live there? No.
Florianópolis is a good spot of you want a more first world lifestyle ( For Brazil) near the beach with late December to early April being the best times to go. The winters aren't bad, not everyone wants year round tropical weather.
I LIVE in Florianopolis now (Ingleses) but have lived in the north too; RECIFE and JOAO PESSOA I too am from Florida - Clearwater Where are living here ? Like both places for different reasons Florianopolis is the most like the USA, lots of people speak English, are friendly but a little racist in the interior of the state. Flp has COLD BEACHES year around IF YOU live like a Brasilian you can buy a 2br condo for $25,000 usd on the island YOU are WAY OFF on the real estate prices beach Canasvieiras or Ingleses for $300 usd Lived in Joao Pessoa back in 2006 but have been back there in 2022 to look for another place to buy Very limited english but the people are nice, lots more poor people. Warm beaches
Eu olho esse tipo de vídeo de um estrangeiro que vive no Brasil fala com tanto entusiasmo e das vantagens de como as coisas são baratas... eu não me conformo como a maioria dos brasileiros não pode usufruir de tantas coisas boas que são faladas nesse vídeo... é muito injusto o nosso país ser "barato" demais para quem chega aqui com um punhado de dólares e espalha isso para outros estrangeiros, espero que mais brasileiros possam ser beneficiados não apenas por entrada de dólares na nossa economia, mas que esses dólares possam de uma certa forma atingir mais brasileiros seja por geracao direta de mais empregos e pagamento de impostos proporcional no uso dos serviços publicos... e das coisas "boas" que foram faladas nesse vídeo... pois a realidade que 80% da população não tem acesso a metade das coisas que foram faladas nesse vídeo. Do contrário as coisas continuarão inflacionadas e mais "caras" para justamente aqueles que não tem um punhado de dólares...
I was in Rio and was asked for a number in order to see a doctor. Or I could pay over 200 USD online to speak with a doctor or I could go to the hospital and see a doctor for over 200 usd.
If you compare 99% of the countries OF COURSE they are cheaper . But living in this countries you realize is not cheap at all . Brazil was never a cheap country and never paradise !!! I am here 21 years , trust me i know . Even i am in top 3 % of earners in Brazil according to “ classes social statistics “ i dont feel rich .
Floripa is a decent city. Pretty good beaches. Not super hot in the summer, but a little cold in winter. Like most places in brazil theres a decent amount of homeless people. Also i think its the gay city of brazil
UNFORTUNATELY for us earning in Reais, EVERYTHING is VERY VERY expensive, from supermarket stuff to electricity to gas and clothes and all the rest. Bless are you who earn in dollars!
THIS GUY'S prices are WAY OFF , he's talking about living like a wealthy American You can buy a REAL NICE condo near the beach for r$350,000-500,000 If you want to live like a Brasilian you can buy something for r$140,000 to 200,000 Off season you rent furnished r$1200-1500 on the island I own my condo and have a car, I spend from $600-1000 PER MONTH, only go out to eat once a week Eating out here is expensive vs the north. Usually about $9 pp, churrasco $15 pp The bus system is excellent, nice new buses and many terminals locally. Once you pay at one terminal and transfer to another, you can keep going to other terminals without paying. Less than $1 per trip. Uber is very cheap and car rentals are cheap too Lot of Russians and Ukrainians are coming here now, some Haitians too
Free healthcare isn't free. It's actually way more expensive than private, and very poorly run. It's better in the souther states. Just try going to the North/northeast and having this "amazing free healthcare experience" and tell me later what you think. If you have a life threatening emergency, you better off visiting a church.
As someone that has an economics egree and lots of investment experience I dont trust his whole "invest" here spiel when he directly contradicted himself just a few minutes prior. Not to mention the Real just got hammered, generally not a sign of good things. Having access to US markets is a privledge.
Floripa is expensive , choked with traffic and full of toxic politics. The North East is much cheaper , more fun with a greater diversity of beautiful people , better quicker international flight options especially to Europe. - Fortaleza, Recife , Salvador ... all better choices.
I'm just guessing but I imagine Health Care is 'free' Only if you are a Citizen of Brazil , With all the proper documents .Thank you so much for this detailed interview .
Based on what Thor shared, you would be covered if something were to happen while visiting but yes mainly for residents and citizens. Thank you for viewing!
Actually, no. According to our constitution, everyone has the right to health care, regardless of nationally, origin etc. An American tourist fell sick in Brazil. He couldn't travel back home because he was in the hospital. It turned out he had a brain tumor and he went through surgery and had the tumor removed all for free.
O sistema público de saúde do Brasil (SUS), que é gratuito, atende turistas estrangeiros para casos ambulatoriais (rápido atendimento) ou emergenciais para garantir a sua vida (gratuito para os estrangeiros também). Para atendimentos de casos mais prolongados ou cirurgias não emergenciais o estrangeiro tem que ser residente no Brasil e fazer o CPF (Cadastro de Pessoa Física) e talvez o RNE (Registro Nacional de Estrangeiro).
it's interesting to learn about the cost of living around the world and especially as from residents rather than those of a tourist when we visit don't know anywhere that has "stayed the same" since 2020 would still prefer to live off the land, going back to basics and near a coast experiencing the flora and fauna and being at one with nature any day rather than caught up in commercially bought and sold concrete jungles with plastic people trying to out do eachother with the newest form of what's on the market we are aware it's consumerism accompanied by manufacture that has ruined our world not the climate let's hope for a better future 🙏 good luck all may you be happy in life 🌻
=================================
How to work with me:
=================================
😎 One-on-one Consulting for planning your move abroad: calendly.com/adventurefreaksss/50min
I'm Brazilian, living in the USA for 25 yesrs now, and despite having my life pretty much established here, I'm moving back to my country by the end of this year !!! ❤❤❤
@@Luciano9Bezerra i still have to wait 4 years to go back.
Just can't wait
My wife and I are Brazilians and have lived in Florida for 35 years. I bought a 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom apartment. 4 minutes walk to the beach. It has a swimming pool and complete leisure area. a beautiful view of the sea. I bought it for 80 thousand dollars last year, on Praia do Morro in Guarapari. we will stop working in 4 years and live there like kings.
@@helciocampos congratulations!!
I assume that you meant to say Floripa instead of Florida.
@@jazzyeric21
nop.
I said Florida USA
Guys I am a European living in Northeast Brasil and I think it’s much better but living outside example Fortaleza ( lovely mountains to live are Tiangua and Guaramiranga), the temperature is tropical but also fresh morning and night ( through the day it’s 26-30 year around ). Anywhere outside the big cities it’s very safe. Big benefit is it’s cheap…South Brasil is very expensive and the climate is not good ( very unstable and pretty cold ).
I recommend people to live in the countryside of Brasil and just visit 1 time a month the beach as it gets boring and usually not that safe. South Brasil in general it’s pretty safe but they have big issues also with the floods taking an example of what happened there. Floripa sure it’s a pleasant place but I am more for year around weather so Northeast works for my family 😀
Just giving some of you guys ideas outside of this main video advice👍🏼
@AdorableUrban I agree with you.
Guarapari, Espírito Santo is pretty safe and cheap.
My apt is 4 minutes walking from the praia do morro.
Cost me 80k (dollars), and I am paying 600 reais monthly maintenance.
Guarapari has 50 beaches and mountains.
So beautiful.
Fortaleza is where I live right now. In my opinion it is the hands down best place in Brazil for expats who love sunny weather and a cheap cost of living. Oh yeah, the people are nicer than in the south as well.
Rob, thank you for this addition. Would you be interested in being on the podcast and talking about Fortaleza?
Ok, that sounds interesting. At what time of the day is it getting dark over there?
I live in Goias, where 18:00 is the deadline all through the year. Its to early for me as am European
@@robremote Rob, thank you for this addition. Would you be interested in being on the podcast and talking about Fortaleza?
The problem there is that is VERY dangerous
come to Parnaíba, you will like.
Brazil is amazing! i love this paradise.
I'm Brazilian and if you think that living in Florianopolis is cheap, oh boy, you need to know about João Pessoa in the State of Paraíba in the Northeast region. Here you have everything Floripa has, except for the mountains, but the city is known for being the best state of Brazil to retire, also the beaches are very good and the water is warmer, with natural pools in the middle of the ocean. Also, the state of Paraíba is getting a lot of investiments and getting a economic boom, so now is the time to invest here. Hope i could help with theses informations.
You sound like you are trying to promote this area. Is there a purpose behind this?
LIVED in JP back in 2006, #2 best city in Brasil
WARM ALL YEAR
@@adventurefreaksss people are proud of their Home Town and he just wanted to join in the conversation .
@@timmaloney6441
Brazil is very diverse. each region is different from the other. between mountains and ocean there is something for all tastes. It's worth spending a season there. Happy, welcoming people. problem in any country. see New York, California, Chicago. just know where you are going and at what time.
@@helciocampos eu fique no Brazil por seis meses so , bem longe atrais ( 1973 puxa ) e ate agora eu mi lembro a falar mais ou menos assim . mais e` certo , que os Brazileiros son muito boa gente . tudo legal , bacanna , tudo otimo viu . saudades di la .
Brazil is so big that if you travel through several regions that are far from each other, you may have the feeling that you have traveled to another country. The northern and west of the country has more influence from indigenous peoples, in the northeast region there is more influence from African descendants and in the states of the southern region (Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul) it has more influence from European descendants, in addition, the northern half is less developed and all this reflects in the behavior of Brazilians in each region. There is a lot of cultural difference between the regions of Brazil due to many different peoples and cultures interacting and influencing each other.
In the north and northeast of Brazil there is practically no winter, it's hot all year round (at the height of summer it's VERY hot). There are not 4 seasons, but rather 2 seasons: one with a lot of rain and one with little rain.
In the southern half of Brazil there are 4 seasons, and in the extreme south it can be VERY cold in winter (some regions high up in the mountains can even snow a little).
In the states of the southern region (Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina and Paraná), extratropical cyclones occasionally occur on the coast and tornadoes in the extreme west.
At the moment the safest state in Brazil is São Paulo, followed by Santa Catarina and Minas Gerais.
Thank you for sharing!
Dry and wet are the two seasons in every day sunshine Sao Luis the love island of the north east.
Thank you . We are in USA and planning go to Brazil . 🇧🇷
What part of Brazil are you considering?
Brazil is the best place in the world to live and be happy.
And contrary to most stats, it's completely SAFE too. Lot safer than the US !
Totally agree
@@InMyBrz You are as delusional as one gets, I have seen you in other videos say some bull. Brazil NEVER in a million years in safer then the US. You should take that word out of your name NotDelusional, it is exactly what you are.
I've been leaving and traveling a lot, but a
I can say 💯 Brazil has the most complete beauties, and the energy from that country is unique and priceless 😊.
In 1975/76 I travelled around for about 5 months: Boa Vista -> Caracarai -> Rio Branco -> Rio Negro -> Manaus - Amazonas -> Belem - Rio - San Paulo -> Santos -> Itahaem
Fantastic! country. and then I exit to Quito, Ecuador in Feb 1976
Thanks for sharing your experience
Did you attend any concerts?
@@Rasfa nope. I had no money, i was a bum of a hitch hiker
That is amazing, could you share your experience? I'm from brazil and I've been to 42 countries and I would love to hear your experience traveling to Brazil in 1975 and 1976. Thanks
@@luanbrites I was with 3 other friends. We crossed the river from Lethem over to Brazil. Emptiness no life there but red sand flying with the wind. A van got stranded, and we helped the driver by giving him a push start, and it started. Communication was 0 as we spoke English and knew no Portuguese. Somehow we understood each other, and he gave us a hike to Boa Vista. Upon our arrival in BV, we understood we had to pay him for the hike. We paid him and booked a sleeping room. The next morning we were raided by the immigration cops. We were clean. They gave us directions to check in Brasil immigration. We did, and we got a 3-month visa. We took a bus the same day to Caracarai. When we got there, it was almost dark, and we were trying to see if we could get a boat to take us to Manaus. We did but hadn't enough money to pay the captain. We gave the little cash we had and some personal valuables, upon which he agreed. We didn't have much contact with other Brazilians yet. The captain gave us food during the boat ride. Communication was still 0. We arrived at around 20:00 hrs in Manaus. We walked around the night searching for a place to sleep but found nothing-we were broke. All funds and valuables were already used up for the boat hike from Caracarai. It was Friday. A lot of partying there, in Manaus, folks drinking in open-air bars. A few police officers patrolling the area on foot approached us around 03:00 hrs and said, "Documentos."
Looks like I am writing a book hahahahaha.
To be cont'd
@@luanbrites Traveling broke is tough anywhere in the world. The locals in any country are the ones who would make your travels a little more comfortable. Brazilians helped me enormously to survive. I know absolutely nothing about tourism life in Brazil. I was living with the common and poor folks with warmth and a huge heart.
I have lived in Brasil for 3 years and this guy is well travelled and telling it as it is!! Great info he shares guys👌
Thank you and yes he is a well traveled and savvy guy:)
ALL BS
O sistema público de saúde do Brasil (SUS), que é gratuito, atende turistas estrangeiros para casos ambulatoriais (rápido atendimento) ou emergenciais para garantir a sua vida (gratuito para os estrangeiros também). Para atendimentos de casos mais prolongados ou cirurgias não emergenciais o estrangeiro tem que ser residente no Brasil e fazer o CPF (Cadastro de Pessoa Física) e talvez o RNE (Registro Nacional de Estrangeiro).
Para casos não emergenciais, com certeza o estrangeiro vai precisar apresentar seu RNE /CRNM. O resto que você comentou é verdade 👍.
In Floripa you May not have the best weather but its the safest brazilian capital. We have four seasons here so tourists have to prepare themselves.
Thank you for this!
You mean snow in winter ? 😊
Florianópolis its not a cheap city at least for us Brazilians, but the public health system in the south its better than rest of country, for you guys that have dollars could be a cheap option but its not the best option in my point of view. But Santa Catarina for sure have best cities to live.
@@Nutritipsdacarol thank you for this information!
In your opinion, what is the best city to live in in Santa Catarina?
@@adventurefreaksss I'am Brazilian. It depends on whether the person is looking for a city to work or to retire, whether they prefer a big city with a lively nightlife or a smaller, quieter city, whether they prefer a beach or mountain city, whether they prefer a warmer or colder place, whether they prioritize more security than the rest or not. For each situation, the city indication changes.
Joinville is the largest city (604 thousand inhabitants) in the state of Santa Catarina and is industrialized, but it's very hot in the summer.
Florianópolis (capital - 516 thousand inhabitants) can become hell in the high summer season, as it's crowded with tourists and with complicated traffic, making it more difficult to enter and leave the island.
Blumenau is the third largest city in the state (366 thousand inhabitants) and is influenced by German descendants. It's 55 km from the coast, at an altitude of just 21 m and is also a good city.
At certain times of the year, extratropical cyclones can occur that harm coastal cities.
@@adventurefreaksss Hi, I do live in the state of Santa Catarina, and there are good options on the coast: Florianopolis, Balneario Camboriu, Itapema, Garopaba (all of them with distinct characteristics)
And a little far (until 1 one-hour drive from the coast, I would say) from the coast, you can find nice and super-developed cities like Joinville, Blumenau, Pomerode, and Criciuma.
There are still some other good options in the countryside and highlands that are very charming and even cheaper
@@vinicius.maciel Thank you for this information. Are you Brazilian or did you move there?
I know Floripa and much of Brazil but lived in Curitiba awesome country, had an opportunity to live there but was married and wife refuse to go. Life goes on I end up in France awesome!!
What part of France do you live in? Thank you for viewing!
@@adventurefreaksss awesome Bretagne/Brittany/Breizh !
Curitiba is probably the best managed large Brazilian city I've visited.
The winters can get a little chilly due to being about 3000ft in elevation however summer nights tend to be more tolerable then sea level.
@@BasedInBrazil Do you live there currently? Thank you for this information!
Hope all is blessed. I just wanted to talk about the electricity. When you are hear, $60, that's mainly with very little use of air conditioner. I've live in Cumbuco, CE, and I have a house of about 1900sqft with 7 split AC units, and i pay between R$800 and R$1000, and I have solar panels 1000kw system. So, $140 to $175. Mind you I keep all the ac units on nonstop
fantastic place to Iive for sure. Ive been to Brazil twice and I love what I saw.I am actually thinking of visiting their now to look at the possibilities on living there. Thank you for all the informative info you gave in this video. I really appreciate it.
There is many Beautiful States in Brasil with nice cities to live..João Pessoa, Fortataza, Aracaju, Natal all in the northeast, summer all year ❤
I found a Beautiful apartment in João Pessoa with 3 bedrooms a few blocks from the Beach for $700 per month for a year lease. Real estate in North is cheaper than the South.
Love to have you as a guest on the podcast if you're still living down there! adventurefreaksss@gmail.com
@@adventurefreaksss I will, thanks!!
South is much safer, though.
Gosto muito do Brasil. Muito obrigado.
Thank you. It is an amazing country!!
I'm from Brazil, I've been to 42 countries (Europe, Asia, South America and Africa), I've lived in Ireland, Thailand, Malaysia, Spain and The UK if all my experience traveling, is hard to see a country like Brazil, with good food, good people, beauty and good weather. We have our problems but is easy to avoid if you can choose where to live. I would say Brazil is a good place to live if you earn in USD, Euros or Pounds. I've lived in Florianopolis, is a nice place to be, you are doing great, thank you for being in Brazil and I hope you can have an amazing live living in my country, Brazil is a country with immigrants and all immigrants are welcome.
I’m planning to head down there in their off season.
@@revnation_auto keep us posted on your trip and findings!
Here in California you can’t even get a cardiologist to take see you in their office if you don’t have insurance and are a cash patient.
That is a truly sad reality in the US.
@@adventurefreaksssBrazilian here living in the US for the last 20 years, in California for 14. I love my life in the US. I work in tech and make a great living. I have to go further than you on US health care. In my opinion, the healthcare system in the US is borderline criminal. The only part I find disgusting. I’m proud to soon become an US citizen but can’t say the same about our healthcare system. Thanks for the great video!
@@pachvandio well said! Obrigado!
@@pachvandio My sister live in US also, and she told me the same about the healthcare system. It is crazy, there are people that prefer almost die before call for an ambulance
Moro em Guaratuba, uma pequena cidade no litoral sul do Brasil (estado do Paraná, a duas horas de carro de Floripa).
Para você ter uma ideia: meu sogro tem um cardiologista de forma gratuita e ainda recebe parte da medicação de uma farmácia pública.
Certa vez ele teve um infarto, ficou internado por dois dias em uma UTI (ICU em inglês), foi transportador de avião para um centro maior e recebeu um "stent". Tudo via sistema público e sem pagar nada.
Claro, nosso sistema público de saúde (SUS) não é perfeito, mas funciona.
Floripa is awesome, but I would suggest expats check João Pessoa. Prices are much lower, city is amazing.
AND the ocean is warm, not freezing like in the south
It’s so nice to see an American saying only good things about Brazil when the Brazilians itself don’t give a sh* about the country… I’ve been to more than 35 countries and I love Brazil.
Proud to be Brazilian
e claro que sim o orgulho de ser brasileiro , i am dutch that visited a lot ,married a much younger brazilian babe , having a mixed race special young son with my wife living stil in the netherlands . But in a few years will retire and live at least during the cold dutch winters in the Netherlands in Salvador Bahia , where Luciana is from .
This is a cool share, I really thought Florianópolis was really expensive and the winter really sucks. Thanks 👍
Thank you for viewing. Yea, Thor loves it there and I've not met anyone that has visited that dislikes it.
WINTER DOES SUCK in Floripa, so does the COLD OCEAN WATER year around
Yeah I've set my sights on the polar opposite (basically) part of Brazil: Fortaleza.
@@simonejaffa8675 Hope you're not car jacked or violently robbed or killed in Fortaleza
NOT a real safe place, try a small town nearby
Joao Pessoa is a lot safer
there is non heater in there,so well it sucks alright,even swedish guy living in floripa said that he suffers in the winter without a heater..what more people from florida,u will at least need some fire place NORDIC INVESTOR said the winter in the south sucks without heater
Im From Harrisburg PA ,Have been living in Natal Rio Grande do Nord for well over 20 years ,Best place in the world .Way cheaper than south of Brazil ,My Apt it's like 100 meters from the beach and has 3 bedrooms ,3 full bath ,2 cars garages.Pools and all 9 yards ....I paid $12k ,But that was long time ago ,Now it sells around $75k ,Me my wife and my daughter are living comfortably on $1200 a month .If someone likes more Info ? Leave a comment !
@@jonsekander619 thanks for this. Send me your email and we can schedule a time to do a podcast! Adventurefreaksss@gmail.com
Great to hear that Brazil is getting better,and isn't just. Problems!!! He has no reason as an American to sugar coat!
Great video.
Thank you for viewing!
Love US but... Brazil maintains the SUS with 15% of the GDP, (it's 10 times smaller than the US') for the 10 most common diseases the medicines are free, asthma (I'm asthmatic by the way) diabetes, hypertension, glaucoma, rhinitis, dyslipidemia, all sexual, palliative and cancer treatments... You can go to any drugstore, present your medical certificate and they will give it to you and the state will pay them. it's not wonderful, but for emergency measures it's absolutely great. If you fall off your bike, have a labor accident, cut yourself, have a sudden allergic reaction, cardiac arrest, concussion, feeling not good at all... SUS fixes you right away, but for all other things, like chronic or regular exams, you have to get on a waiting list that can sometimes take months, depending on what are your medical exams, a complete CT scan, for example, it's free but takes time etc... Sure you can get private healthcare as well and you will be seen right away, but then it is very expensive by Brazilian standards.
Can you imagine what the US would do if they just started minding their own business and ended all offshore military operations? The US could even provide a glass of boubon and a caviar appetizer to whoever is being treated, even nursing rooms could have top tier equipments.
60-80 reais for a kilo of steak is amazing value. Here in London we're paying 170 reais for low quality steak per kilo.
Floripa is expensive for Brazilian standards. People that want to live well work hard. Traffic is awful. And it rains a lot. Culture is not the best. We need to travel to São Paulo and Rio to get some. Nevertheless, it’s one the best places to live that I have been. Unfortunately, it has been filled with people looking for a dream, and finding a nightmare. Salaries are low. Opening a business? Competition is fierce. We only have one month for making money with summer rental: January. All the prices he gave are right. Except for the meals. Unless if you go to really cheapo restaurants. I spend at least US$10,00 in a nice per kilo. Coffee? 2 dollars. Hospitals are not that great. If you don’t have private health insurance you are not getting the exams fast you need unless you are dying. Public health is complicated. But is great. The best doctors work on the public system. And the best dentists. However, the materials they use, and the waiting list… you need health insurance. I love Floripa. My family is from here, and I live well. But as a city, there are better places in the state, and in the country: Blumenau and João Pessoa are my favorites. But if you want live well here, you need in reais, our money: 3500 for rent and condo fees, 2000 reais for groceries. That’s a 1000 US dollars. Everything else you need in life is after that. So you need at least 2000 for a decent middle class life. You can live for less? Of course. But 900 dollars is tough. Don’t bother.
@@ushadigiacomo7213 thank you for sharing this information!
you can came to brazil with friends rent a apartment for couple months and test if you like the culture the way of life, i really suggest and not only Florianopolis
@@mareminho Brazil is such a beautiful country. I love Brazil!!
By numbers you probably mean our SUS card which is a card that we show when we go to a public hospital. Anyone can make this card at any public health center. If you go to a public hospital without one, they will make one on the spot.
@@luizvinha thank you for this additional information!
only if you have income outside of Brazil, as salaries and Brazilian currency are devalued, so much so that it is not possible to pay rent and basic bills with a minimum wage.
Same thing is happening in the US. People have no savings due to living pay check to pay check and only have social security pension to depend on. Challenging times for many! Thanks for your comment!
Do you have websites to search for luxury rental apartments?
@@bernhard.rieder unfortunately we do not at this time.
Parnaíba and Barra Grande in Piauí State is the best!!
@@yagogabriell i just googled, it is really nice. Thanks for sharing!
Northeast sucks! Most nordestinos get out of there and come here to the south fleeing that poor, backwards part of the country.
My parents moved to nYc in the 1950s and always had a house or property in Brasil. I was born in New York and now at 54 years old in 2024 I'm done living in the US permanently. This year I'm moving and I mean Never coming back.I won't be able to retire if I stay even with my house paid off finally. BLESS you all and find your paradise before it's too late 🇧🇷🙏🏼
Keep us posted on your move. I love Brazil, such an amazing country!
Thanks for featuring a place a place in Brazil that isn't Rio or Salvador.
Can you drink the water from the faucet in Brazil? Or do you have to use bottled water?
I spent 4 wks travelling the state of Bahia 2 months ago. You can not drink the faucet water.
No you cannot drink water from the faucet.
It all depends, I did a new construction house in a gated community and the community provide deep water-well treated water and I have it also going thru a filter entering the house, then my refrigerator has a filter so we drink the water with no problem.
The tap water is drinkable here in my small city but I still get bottled water.
In Brazil there is the "Filtro de barro" (Clay Filter), which many Brazilians use to filter tap water. It's a clay pot divided into two parts and with a filter in the middle, so many Brazilians don't even need to buy bottled water.
Do they give senior expats discounts on things?
can ride the public buses for FREE 65 +
Does Brazil have any cities that have cool weather ??? Thanks !
I am Brazilian. The south of the country gets cool during winter.
Any cities you like that have cool weather ?
Check out this video. He lives in Agrolandia! th-cam.com/video/7_WLlmgu3s8/w-d-xo.html
Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, Paraná.
Curitiba is a beautiful city with a mild winter similar to northern Florida, or Houston winter
I think these numbers are a little low for prices of rent and groceries. If you are living nice like this guy you will pay closer to 900 a month in rent and 500 a month on groceries for two people. I have lived in almost every city in Brazil now and only stay in the best neighborhoods and this is what you can expect. Maybe in the suburbs or outside the city center these prices are more realistic.
I'm sure like many fans out there who are curious to know YOUR favorite or Top 3 favorite countries you want to retire in?? We all want to know if you like to share your personal favorites.
Great idea!
People, this video is an advertisement for Floripa, nothing more. The premise that it is the 'best pace to live in Brazil cheap' is just not an objective truth. Floripa is as expensive, maybe more than, big city Brazil. And it gets really cold there, by tropical standards, in the winter. Floripa is a nice place to visit, at the right time of year (not in winter) and during non-holiday times. I have been there several times, both high and low seasons, and it can be a really nice pplace during either, depending on what a person is looking for. But to live there? No.
Thank you for viewing and for this addition!
If you’re a foreigner then please stay away from Brasil in general. I’m looking to move there to get away from foreigners.
Florianópolis is a good spot of you want a more first world lifestyle ( For Brazil) near the beach with late December to early April being the best times to go.
The winters aren't bad, not everyone wants year round tropical weather.
He said Floripa was more expensive when he was talking about rent.
Go away.
I LIVE in Florianopolis now (Ingleses) but have lived in the north too; RECIFE and JOAO PESSOA I too am from Florida - Clearwater Where are living here ? Like both places for different reasons Florianopolis is the most like the USA, lots of people speak English, are friendly but a little racist in the interior of the state. Flp has COLD BEACHES year around IF YOU live like a Brasilian you can buy a 2br condo for $25,000 usd on the island YOU are WAY OFF on the real estate prices beach Canasvieiras or Ingleses for $300 usd Lived in Joao Pessoa back in 2006 but have been back there in 2022 to look for another place to buy Very limited english but the people are nice, lots more poor people. Warm beaches
Ill be back wyen you put timestamps. Thanks
Eu olho esse tipo de vídeo de um estrangeiro que vive no Brasil fala com tanto entusiasmo e das vantagens de como as coisas são baratas... eu não me conformo como a maioria dos brasileiros não pode usufruir de tantas coisas boas que são faladas nesse vídeo... é muito injusto o nosso país ser "barato" demais para quem chega aqui com um punhado de dólares e espalha isso para outros estrangeiros, espero que mais brasileiros possam ser beneficiados não apenas por entrada de dólares na nossa economia, mas que esses dólares possam de uma certa forma atingir mais brasileiros seja por geracao direta de mais empregos e pagamento de impostos proporcional no uso dos serviços publicos... e das coisas "boas" que foram faladas nesse vídeo... pois a realidade que 80% da população não tem acesso a metade das coisas que foram faladas nesse vídeo. Do contrário as coisas continuarão inflacionadas e mais "caras" para justamente aqueles que não tem um punhado de dólares...
Thank you for sharing @domusbr! Much appreciated!!
I was in Rio and was asked for a number in order to see a doctor. Or I could pay over 200 USD online to speak with a doctor or I could go to the hospital and see a doctor for over 200 usd.
In order to get the free service you must go to the UPA 24hrs if you have an emergency. Going to regular hospitals you have to pay.
“Sobering” comments here.
Healthcare is not free. You'll pay the highest consumption tax in the world. Bought a TV? 70% tax. Food, 30% tax. Electricity 50%. and so forth
Excellent point. Thank you!
If you compare 99% of the countries OF COURSE they are cheaper . But living in this countries you realize is not cheap at all . Brazil was never a cheap country and never paradise !!! I am here 21 years , trust me i know . Even i am in top 3 % of earners in Brazil according to “ classes social statistics “ i dont feel rich .
@@moreto62 thank you for sharing your experience
Floripa is a decent city. Pretty good beaches. Not super hot in the summer, but a little cold in winter. Like most places in brazil theres a decent amount of homeless people. Also i think its the gay city of brazil
Gay city of Brazil? Only in your thoughts!!
It’s not. It’s a creative city, so gays are free to be themselves.
UNFORTUNATELY for us earning in Reais, EVERYTHING is VERY VERY expensive, from supermarket stuff to electricity to gas and clothes and all the rest. Bless are you who earn in dollars!
@@Marcelo-Caruccio obrigado for sharing this!
It doesn't matter how much you earn, but how much you spend. No matter what if you get in dollars or reals.
@@pot1045rrg Well said!
@@pot1045rrg BS
THIS GUY'S prices are WAY OFF , he's talking about living like a wealthy American
You can buy a REAL NICE condo near the beach for r$350,000-500,000
If you want to live like a Brasilian you can buy something for r$140,000 to 200,000 Off season you rent furnished r$1200-1500 on the island
I own my condo and have a car, I spend from $600-1000 PER MONTH, only go out to eat once a week
Eating out here is expensive vs the north. Usually about $9 pp, churrasco $15 pp
The bus system is excellent, nice new buses and many terminals locally. Once you pay at one terminal and transfer to another, you can keep going to other terminals without paying. Less than $1 per trip. Uber is very cheap and car rentals are cheap too
Lot of Russians and Ukrainians are coming here now, some Haitians too
thank you for adding this!
Free healthcare isn't free. It's actually way more expensive than private, and very poorly run. It's better in the souther states. Just try going to the North/northeast and having this "amazing free healthcare experience" and tell me later what you think. If you have a life threatening emergency, you better off visiting a church.
Oh no, it sounds like you had a bad experience.
@@adventurefreaksss - the north is about 3x poorer
Iiiiiii don’t know the hospital I saw in São Luís was sooooo sketch
@@augurcybernaut4785 São Luís is the poorest capital in Brazil, even big cities like my here in Paraíba have much better hospitals than there.
@@Galegolas123 crédito não. Eu Esteve em Fortaleza também.
As someone that has an economics egree and lots of investment experience I dont trust his whole "invest" here spiel when he directly contradicted himself just a few minutes prior. Not to mention the Real just got hammered, generally not a sign of good things. Having access to US markets is a privledge.
Floripa is expensive , choked with traffic and full of toxic politics. The North East is much cheaper , more fun with a greater diversity of beautiful people , better quicker international flight options especially to Europe. - Fortaleza, Recife , Salvador ... all better choices.
@@papi8659 thank you for this!
AGREED 100%
🇧🇷🌅☀️🇧🇷☀️🇧🇷
I'm just guessing but I imagine Health Care is 'free' Only if you are a Citizen of Brazil , With all the proper documents .Thank you so much for this detailed interview .
Based on what Thor shared, you would be covered if something were to happen while visiting but yes mainly for residents and citizens. Thank you for viewing!
Actually, no. According to our constitution, everyone has the right to health care, regardless of nationally, origin etc. An American tourist fell sick in Brazil. He couldn't travel back home because he was in the hospital. It turned out he had a brain tumor and he went through surgery and had the tumor removed all for free.
O sistema público de saúde do Brasil (SUS), que é gratuito, atende turistas estrangeiros para casos ambulatoriais (rápido atendimento) ou emergenciais para garantir a sua vida (gratuito para os estrangeiros também). Para atendimentos de casos mais prolongados ou cirurgias não emergenciais o estrangeiro tem que ser residente no Brasil e fazer o CPF (Cadastro de Pessoa Física) e talvez o RNE (Registro Nacional de Estrangeiro).
@@Nathavolt Obrigadao por sus informaciones . isso faz muito senso . e agora intendo melhor , O Brasil e` Ottimo . parbems
@@Nathavolt Obrigado!
cheap compared to what?
@@C.S.T Compared to the US.
@@Galegolas123exactly. If your work for reais, it’s very expensive.
I live in the south but I own my 2br condo, spending about $700 a month on everything
it's interesting to learn about the cost of living around the world and especially as from residents rather than those of a tourist when we visit
don't know anywhere that has "stayed the same" since 2020
would still prefer to live off the land, going back to basics and near a coast experiencing the flora and fauna and being at one with nature any day rather than caught up in commercially bought and sold concrete jungles with plastic people trying to out do eachother with the newest form of what's on the market
we are aware it's consumerism accompanied by manufacture that has ruined our world not the climate
let's hope for a better future 🙏 good luck all may you be happy in life 🌻
This guy is a little bit of a loony...
@@Jarlaxled-wg6wj all my friends are a little loco in a good way including me:)