Well, overall living in portugal is much cheaper for you due to your higher income (not for us with a 700 euros minimum salary) . Anyways, thank you for helping a younger generation of portuguese who are strugling to start a life here, with the amount of people who recently came to enjoy our contry, making the house market totaly inaccessible. Next year, renting and house prices will continue to rise, as well as groceries pricing, since you find it so cheap. Thanks
Thanks for watching @anarchie771 and we do understand that Portugal has lower salaries and we'd love to see that increase. We have empathy for anyone looking for housing - but this is not just a Portugal issue. In the US, for example, in any major city, at the minimum salary, with what you end up with after taxes it is difficult/impossible to afford housing unless you have one, two or three roommates. But let's not forget that the government of Portugal has put together programs to attract people like us to move here because - whether they are right or wrong - the government has determined it is better for Portugal to have an increase in immigration. I understand that there are people who disagree with this invitation by Portugal to move here. Best of luck, and, like you, we'd love to see the Portugal economy grow, tourism and industry grow, and salaries grow.
People around the world don’t seem to realize that you can’t buy a house with average wages in the USA either right now. You can’t even afford rent if you are making minimum wage.
We're a little over 2 years living here in Portugal. It does get easier. I've noticed that the last 8-10 months, I've started getting a better feel and understanding of how things work. I've mostly mastered grocery shopping now, and even getting my head wrapped around the bureaucracy a bit. It is tough to learn a brand new bureaucracy, especially in a new language. I see people with wildly unrealistic expectations for settling in. There are so many new things to learn, but that's part of the adventure. Also, I see a lot of people pick a "charming town" or some small coastal town that is really pretty, but often lacking the important amenities needed for daily life. They get caught up in the romance of a small, charming home near the sea, then later discover all the downsides. Make sure you live in a place with enough shops and stores, and a private hospital. A little planning goes a LONG ways.
Thanks for watching and adding your thoughts @grizfan93. We do love Nazaré and it has most everything we need but we still need to go to Leiria or Caldas da Rainha for some things, including private doctor / hospital. But for us it's been great.
@@TheUnretirees Nazaré is a great town, I've visited there a few times. But, that's one of the costs to living in a town like that; lack of access. That's fine if you understand and accept the fact that you will need to travel for a lot of things. Unfortunately, not everyone seems to be aware of this, or willing to actually accept the tradeoff.
Thanks for watching. In our area, lots of people who rent have dogs. It may not be true in all locations, but Portugal tends to be a pet-friendly place as far as we can tell.
Thank you for your very informative videos. Any chance of you doing a video of filing your taxes both in the USA and Portugal and what the experience was like?
Thanks for watching @JaySingh-ci6tl but we send our stuff to an accountant in the U.S. and an accountant in PT and they do the filings. The timing is different here in PT - you file by a certain date (April 30?) but you don’t know for sure what you owe until PT tells you and then you have to pay by Aug 31. We’re glad to have people working with us who know what they are doing because it would be very complicated otherwise…and I’m sure we’d do it wrong. We know there are expats here who file their own taxes here in PT and the U.S. but we’re not them :)
During our lives, we moved to several different countries (Mexico, Chile, Mauritania...) Our experience of moving to Portugal that is different than the others is that the bureaucratic challenges here have been much more difficult. Opening a bank account, going through the residency process, exchanging our drivers licenses, etc. has been much more challenging than it was for us in those other countries. Our observation is that things we think might be difficult, occur relatively easily. Other things we think should be no problem end up taking much more time and effort. We wanted to be based in Portugal so that we could travel more easily, and, ironically, we can still not leave the country after 16 months in the residency process. That said, we do love Portugal and continue to enjoy being here.
Wow @catherinewhitby3649 and that's really a drag. We have experienced hardly any real difficulties although some things seemed to take a bit longer than we hoped. But getting our visas, and then our residency cards, were - for us - drama free. I can't imagine the patience it's requiring of you. Best of luck!
@TheUnretirees On reflection, we think it is taking longer for these processes no matter what country you are entering. Greater global migration, plus the necessity of governments to regulate more (eg., more banking regs due to money laundering prevention measures) has complicated the process. But we are still positive about our experience. Our Portugal move is still a win!
@@catharinewhitby3649 Our immigration services are processing 400,000 immigrant applications, it is chaos, it will still take months to regularize, given the boom in immigrants in recent years.
Learning alot! Thanks! Can you talk about medical coverage? Thanks for sharing! Can you also add the pros and cons for families? Also as far as daily living is it the same like they have dishwashers, air-conditioning, heating. I just read that those aren't normal there. Difference in culture. Enjoying your videos!
Thanks for watching @marlonicup10. In terms of medical coverage, we can only speak to our experience. As part of the residency qualification, we were required to have private insurance. We also signed up with Serenity, which is a medical concierge service that helps set appointments with English-speaking doctors and navigates the system. For appointments we've had, it's been OK. We haven't had any urgent needs, more in the check-up and blood work line of things. For families -- well, we didn't have kids with us so we don't know things about schools and the like, sorry. For daily living -- we have a dishwasher, washer/dryer, heating (electric wall heating) -- I'd say the dryer seems to be unusual but the other stuff seems common. Where we live, we don't need air conditioning since it rarely gets above 26 C (80 F). We do need de-humidifiers where we live since it gets damp overnight. Different aged buildings and homes would have different things -- older homes may only have heat in some rooms / one room and no a/c or dishwasher, but newer homes and buildings would likely have all the amenities. I'd say the only thing that seems unusual is the dryer -- we have one, but most of our neighbors hang clothes out on the line. Thanks again!
@@TheUnretirees We have several networks of hospitals and private clinics spread across the country, CUF, Lusíadas, LUZ, Affidea... one of the most used health insurances and here they are much cheaper than in the USA are Multicare, Medicare, Allianz, médis, etc. We have a public network throughout the country that is free for all nationals, no one here dies due to lack of medical care or because they don't have health insurance or money, unlike in your country, as they say, I don't know if it's true. Public service in specialties can take time, we are having problems, one of them due to the huge increase in immigrants in recent years and health tourism, who come to take advantage of our free service
Very useful !! Of course, I’m too an Expat, but I lived dating and marriage years in Argentina. That was from 1974 to 2017, when I became a widower due to the terrible safety conditions in Argentina. The Numbeo indexes of QOL and comparisons between cities proved very accurate. One clear indicator of safety issues and robbery is the presence of iron bars on the windows, visible through a lot of computer apps. These bars are never decoration! As a 72 y. o. I'm really happy with the north of Portugal (not the Lisbon area) having lived in Uruguay, Brazil, the US, Germany, the UK, etc.. Safety is really very very important for me. Let's say that I hold an EU pass. Since 2021 I'm renting an apartment near to the Coimbra Stadium. In Nazaré you got the world-famous waves. Surfing is a pending issue for me, but first, for 2026, comes calisthenics 😅. No joke, I celebrated my 70 years doing 10 Km in a Marathon time here in hilly Coimbra 🤣. The problems you talk about are not present here in Coimbra, so I like it a lot. But I must recognize languages help me a lot. My mother´s language was german, my father was my mother´s french teacher, and my neighbors in Argentina were italian. Spanish and English came for school 😄. I agree totally about what say about different countries in your vid !
you can choose in your box the spoken language for most sport emission, if yours is in Portuguese you can just change it ton English, i did that for the Olympic games ; )
LOL, in the US, I never knew how to turn off or on the SAP button for Spanish (not being a Spanish speaker I never needed it), but I don't know where I can change it! We watched most of the Olympics on Eurovision and that was in English, but - for example- we have Sport and DAZN and they seem to be in Portuguese (except the NFL on DAZN). Maybe I need to explore this more :)
i see you live in Nazaré, oh yeah that is a SMALL town , i think 15k people in that region, probably the same has in a NY block, so you will not have much store or services available. But one thing is indeed, bureaucracy here is quite tiring
Yes, Nazaré is not NYC for sure, but we have a fair amount of things here, and then Leiria and Caldas da Rainha are a short drive so there's much more there. In terms of bureaucracy, we just haven't hit the bumps that others had (knock on wood). Thanks for watching!
Thanks for watching and you can be a dual-citizen carrying both US and Portugal passports. It’s not true of every country in Europe, but it is possible here…in fact, we’re counting on it. While we want to gain a Portugal passport, we would not give up our U.S. citizenship for it.
need sheets? go to IKEA! need bulbs? go to IKEA! need someone to fix your sink? ask a local HW shop :) in general, ask google, google knows *everything*. less junk food, more fresh fish! winwin!
No doubt, IKEA is the answer for a lot of things -- but it's an hour away from here, so it's not ideal unless we're saving up for a several things we need. But we have spent a lot of time and a lot of € at IKEA! Good idea to ask the local HW store for recommendations as well. Thanks for watching and your information!
Restaurant chains? Really? I've lived in several countries (I'm in Brazil now) and even if you know the country you are moving to very well, if you decide to settle definitely, it takes time to absorb all the nuances. Last but not least, and this point is paramount, learn the lingo!!!!!!!!!
I know, and like I said I'm not proud of missing a restaurant chain or two. But you are right -- it takes time to take in all the nuances and great things when you move to a new place! Appreciate your thoughts @euricofrade6728 and thanks for watching
Hello, welcome You are in another country, another language, another culture, another reality. The world is very diverse, you don't want to have everything here like in your home country, which is huge. Unfortunately you find all the junk food you are used to in bigger cities and shopping centers (Mac, CFQ, Starbuks and the like). Unfortunately, these chains are spreading here too. We have a very rich and varied cuisine, especially outside the cities, as we have a lot of tourism and there too our gastronomy is being adulterated. We have a very varied and rich bakery, each location has characteristic varieties, we don't just have the famous pastel de nada, we have much more and much better, but this one has become the international star. In Europe we like football, you in the USA like another sport, that's how the world is, a lot of diversity, maybe you should become more European, since you're here. It's a cultural shock, but try to learn some of the Portuguese language and don't isolate yourself in a bubble, live with nationals, the majority welcome and accept immigrants well, we don't use expatriates, but as everywhere there are friendly people and others less so, There are good people and others who are less good. Accept the culture and integrate, making comparisons is not the best option, we are different, we have different laws, different ways of living and being in life, as is normal, I hope you enjoy being here and your Portuguese followers can be useful, ask your doubts and questions, we like to help...
Thanks for watching and there is nothing here that we’d disagree with. We love living here and all the new and different things to discover, and cuisines to try. And at the same time, it’s ok to miss certain things from an old place - it’s part of the human experience. But we did pick Portugal and we prefer it to the U.S. and have enjoyed this experience and the people and admit we have a lot of learning to still do! Appreciate you watching and your thoughts!
Yes -- I agree with you there. But when I watch, for example, the Premiere League football, it's Portuguese commentators. Same with watching golf, but it's all good. Thanks for watching @AntonioSilva-es8tb !
Most of your negatives is because you dont live in a big city or close ( with big popolation like Porto or Lisbon ) , and with more stuff and you compare big city stuff, with low popolacion places and low stuff in general in Portugal . It dosen t make sence you have a lot of Starbucks and other stufff in lisbon , Porto or near , just live a litle close to a big city , easy fix . If you go to Montana or inside Rural U.S.A is like New York? Yes outside Lisbon or Porto is diferent. Im Portuguese.
Cheap they say 😂😂😂 you guys move to a new country and culture but don’t know anything about the country nor the population. Yes, I do understand that comparing is the first thing to do… but things are not cheap… for you probably is… but not for us. De qualquer forma, aprendam Português lol…
Thanks for watching @PedroSabido122 and our comments about costs are clearly made relative to what costs are in the United States. Sorry you got bothered by something we made so clear. It would be the same if you moved to the United States and said "things are so expensive here". No offense intended.
@@TheUnretirees yeah I understood, but you guys come to Portugal saying it’s cheap, it’s wonderful it’s this it’s that… yeah cool but not for the Portuguese which live here 😅😅 we have been having lower and lower purchase power 😅 “Futebol” é “Futebol” não é “soccer”. Meu… como é que falam do shacke shack ou Starbucks… ainda por cima na Nazaré… 😂😂 enfim
Portugal why? Portugal 1st World Country - USA 3rd World Country. USA apart from money, predatory health care system, beggars, super unsafe, guns, and nasty political scene. So massive no.
@@arturpires532 Queres comparar com um país onde se tiveres um braço partido tens de pagar 6000 dólares, isso é predatório. Achas normal estares na rua e levares um tiro do nada, seres processado por salvar uma vida, ou até tiroteios nas escolas. Fora a parte política, o ataque constante de ambos lados nem podes ter um diálogo. Se achas que isso não é um país de terceiro mundo então descreve-me um. Fora que o meu comentário é realista, por alguma razão eles estão cá, até referem isso no video
Found your channel last week and am enjoying the videos. Well done and thank you for sharing your experiences.
Thanks for watching @cynthiahudson7528 !
Excellent, thought provoking video!!
Thank you!!
Marion & Jan 😁👍🏼
Thanks for watching @retirementbudgettravel699 !
Well, overall living in portugal is much cheaper for you due to your higher income (not for us with a 700 euros minimum salary) . Anyways, thank you for helping a younger generation of portuguese who are strugling to start a life here, with the amount of people who recently came to enjoy our contry, making the house market totaly inaccessible. Next year, renting and house prices will continue to rise, as well as groceries pricing, since you find it so cheap. Thanks
Thanks for watching @anarchie771 and we do understand that Portugal has lower salaries and we'd love to see that increase. We have empathy for anyone looking for housing - but this is not just a Portugal issue. In the US, for example, in any major city, at the minimum salary, with what you end up with after taxes it is difficult/impossible to afford housing unless you have one, two or three roommates. But let's not forget that the government of Portugal has put together programs to attract people like us to move here because - whether they are right or wrong - the government has determined it is better for Portugal to have an increase in immigration. I understand that there are people who disagree with this invitation by Portugal to move here. Best of luck, and, like you, we'd love to see the Portugal economy grow, tourism and industry grow, and salaries grow.
O nosso salário mínimo é 825 não 700 está na lei
People around the world don’t seem to realize that you can’t buy a house with average wages in the USA either right now. You can’t even afford rent if you are making minimum wage.
We're a little over 2 years living here in Portugal. It does get easier. I've noticed that the last 8-10 months, I've started getting a better feel and understanding of how things work. I've mostly mastered grocery shopping now, and even getting my head wrapped around the bureaucracy a bit. It is tough to learn a brand new bureaucracy, especially in a new language. I see people with wildly unrealistic expectations for settling in. There are so many new things to learn, but that's part of the adventure.
Also, I see a lot of people pick a "charming town" or some small coastal town that is really pretty, but often lacking the important amenities needed for daily life. They get caught up in the romance of a small, charming home near the sea, then later discover all the downsides. Make sure you live in a place with enough shops and stores, and a private hospital. A little planning goes a LONG ways.
Thanks for watching and adding your thoughts @grizfan93. We do love Nazaré and it has most everything we need but we still need to go to Leiria or Caldas da Rainha for some things, including private doctor / hospital. But for us it's been great.
@@TheUnretirees Nazaré is a great town, I've visited there a few times. But, that's one of the costs to living in a town like that; lack of access. That's fine if you understand and accept the fact that you will need to travel for a lot of things. Unfortunately, not everyone seems to be aware of this, or willing to actually accept the tradeoff.
Love your videos! Especially because we live in NY close to border of CT and thinking to move to Portugal.
Thanks for watching and we were almost neighbors!! Lots of things to like about Portugal, for sure!
Hello from Canada is difficult to find a pet friendly apartment in that area. I plan to move in the next 5 months
Thanks for watching. In our area, lots of people who rent have dogs. It may not be true in all locations, but Portugal tends to be a pet-friendly place as far as we can tell.
Thank you for your very informative videos. Any chance of you doing a video of filing your taxes both in the USA and Portugal and what the experience was like?
Thanks for watching @JaySingh-ci6tl but we send our stuff to an accountant in the U.S. and an accountant in PT and they do the filings. The timing is different here in PT - you file by a certain date (April 30?) but you don’t know for sure what you owe until PT tells you and then you have to pay by Aug 31. We’re glad to have people working with us who know what they are doing because it would be very complicated otherwise…and I’m sure we’d do it wrong. We know there are expats here who file their own taxes here in PT and the U.S. but we’re not them :)
You guys are in Nazaré! Thats exactly where we would like to move ❤
We love it here! Thanks for watching!
During our lives, we moved to several different countries (Mexico, Chile, Mauritania...) Our experience of moving to Portugal that is different than the others is that the bureaucratic challenges here have been much more difficult. Opening a bank account, going through the residency process, exchanging our drivers licenses, etc. has been much more challenging than it was for us in those other countries. Our observation is that things we think might be difficult, occur relatively easily. Other things we think should be no problem end up taking much more time and effort.
We wanted to be based in Portugal so that we could travel more easily, and, ironically, we can still not leave the country after 16 months in the residency process. That said, we do love Portugal and continue to enjoy being here.
Wow @catherinewhitby3649 and that's really a drag. We have experienced hardly any real difficulties although some things seemed to take a bit longer than we hoped. But getting our visas, and then our residency cards, were - for us - drama free. I can't imagine the patience it's requiring of you. Best of luck!
@TheUnretirees On reflection, we think it is taking longer for these processes no matter what country you are entering. Greater global migration, plus the necessity of governments to regulate more (eg., more banking regs due to money laundering prevention measures) has complicated the process. But we are still positive about our experience. Our Portugal move is still a win!
@@catharinewhitby3649 Our immigration services are processing 400,000 immigrant applications, it is chaos, it will still take months to regularize, given the boom in immigrants in recent years.
Yes, yes, yes….things are less expensive in Portugal….but the taxes are ridiculous
We hear this objection a lot so just did a comparison video (including taxes). Very surprising! Thanks for watching.
Great video. Maybe sometime you could do video of what your expenses are in Portugal compared to the US?
We may do that! Thanks for watching @sailingwanderlust22 !
Learning alot! Thanks! Can you talk about medical coverage? Thanks for sharing! Can you also add the pros and cons for families? Also as far as daily living is it the same like they have dishwashers, air-conditioning, heating. I just read that those aren't normal there. Difference in culture. Enjoying your videos!
Thanks for watching @marlonicup10. In terms of medical coverage, we can only speak to our experience. As part of the residency qualification, we were required to have private insurance. We also signed up with Serenity, which is a medical concierge service that helps set appointments with English-speaking doctors and navigates the system. For appointments we've had, it's been OK. We haven't had any urgent needs, more in the check-up and blood work line of things. For families -- well, we didn't have kids with us so we don't know things about schools and the like, sorry. For daily living -- we have a dishwasher, washer/dryer, heating (electric wall heating) -- I'd say the dryer seems to be unusual but the other stuff seems common. Where we live, we don't need air conditioning since it rarely gets above 26 C (80 F). We do need de-humidifiers where we live since it gets damp overnight. Different aged buildings and homes would have different things -- older homes may only have heat in some rooms / one room and no a/c or dishwasher, but newer homes and buildings would likely have all the amenities. I'd say the only thing that seems unusual is the dryer -- we have one, but most of our neighbors hang clothes out on the line. Thanks again!
@@TheUnretirees We have several networks of hospitals and private clinics spread across the country, CUF, Lusíadas, LUZ, Affidea... one of the most used health insurances and here they are much cheaper than in the USA are Multicare, Medicare, Allianz, médis, etc. We have a public network throughout the country that is free for all nationals, no one here dies due to lack of medical care or because they don't have health insurance or money, unlike in your country, as they say, I don't know if it's true. Public service in specialties can take time, we are having problems, one of them due to the huge increase in immigrants in recent years and health tourism, who come to take advantage of our free service
Very useful !! Of course, I’m too an Expat, but I lived dating and marriage years in Argentina. That was from 1974 to 2017, when I became a widower due to the terrible safety conditions in Argentina. The Numbeo indexes of QOL and comparisons between cities proved very accurate. One clear indicator of safety issues and robbery is the presence of iron bars on the windows, visible through a lot of computer apps. These bars are never decoration! As a 72 y. o. I'm really happy with the north of Portugal (not the Lisbon area) having lived in Uruguay, Brazil, the US, Germany, the UK, etc.. Safety is really very very important for me. Let's say that I hold an EU pass. Since 2021 I'm renting an apartment near to the Coimbra Stadium. In Nazaré you got the world-famous waves. Surfing is a pending issue for me, but first, for 2026, comes calisthenics 😅. No joke, I celebrated my 70 years doing 10 Km in a Marathon time here in hilly Coimbra 🤣. The problems you talk about are not present here in Coimbra, so I like it a lot. But I must recognize languages help me a lot. My mother´s language was german, my father was my mother´s french teacher, and my neighbors in Argentina were italian. Spanish and English came for school 😄. I agree totally about what say about different countries in your vid !
Wow and thanks for all your information and guidance! We’ve had some good times in Coimbra!!
you can choose in your box the spoken language for most sport emission, if yours is in Portuguese you can just change it ton English, i did that for the Olympic games ; )
LOL, in the US, I never knew how to turn off or on the SAP button for Spanish (not being a Spanish speaker I never needed it), but I don't know where I can change it! We watched most of the Olympics on Eurovision and that was in English, but - for example- we have Sport and DAZN and they seem to be in Portuguese (except the NFL on DAZN). Maybe I need to explore this more :)
The FedEx Cup? What's that? Never heard of it.
It’s the season-ending PGA Tour golf tournament. It just happened a couple of weeks ago so it was still on my mind :). Thanks for watching!
i see you live in Nazaré, oh yeah that is a SMALL town , i think 15k people in that region, probably the same has in a NY block, so you will not have much store or services available. But one thing is indeed, bureaucracy here is quite tiring
Yes, Nazaré is not NYC for sure, but we have a fair amount of things here, and then Leiria and Caldas da Rainha are a short drive so there's much more there. In terms of bureaucracy, we just haven't hit the bumps that others had (knock on wood). Thanks for watching!
Is it allowed to have a Passport from the US and also one from Portugal...or do you have to let go of your US passport?
Thanks for watching and you can be a dual-citizen carrying both US and Portugal passports. It’s not true of every country in Europe, but it is possible here…in fact, we’re counting on it. While we want to gain a Portugal passport, we would not give up our U.S. citizenship for it.
need sheets? go to IKEA! need bulbs? go to IKEA! need someone to fix your sink? ask a local HW shop :) in general, ask google, google knows *everything*. less junk food, more fresh fish! winwin!
No doubt, IKEA is the answer for a lot of things -- but it's an hour away from here, so it's not ideal unless we're saving up for a several things we need. But we have spent a lot of time and a lot of € at IKEA! Good idea to ask the local HW store for recommendations as well. Thanks for watching and your information!
@@TheUnretirees Ask the Portuguese how they do it, not everyone uses ikeas, leroy... we have small stores and specialized people who solve problems
@@TheUnretireesu know u can order online and have it delivered,right?
Restaurant chains? Really? I've lived in several countries (I'm in Brazil now) and even if you know the country you are moving to very well, if you decide to settle definitely, it takes time to absorb all the nuances. Last but not least, and this point is paramount, learn the lingo!!!!!!!!!
I know, and like I said I'm not proud of missing a restaurant chain or two. But you are right -- it takes time to take in all the nuances and great things when you move to a new place! Appreciate your thoughts @euricofrade6728 and thanks for watching
Hello, welcome
You are in another country, another language, another culture, another reality. The world is very diverse, you don't want to have everything here like in your home country, which is huge. Unfortunately you find all the junk food you are used to in bigger cities and shopping centers (Mac, CFQ, Starbuks and the like). Unfortunately, these chains are spreading here too. We have a very rich and varied cuisine, especially outside the cities, as we have a lot of tourism and there too our gastronomy is being adulterated. We have a very varied and rich bakery, each location has characteristic varieties, we don't just have the famous pastel de nada, we have much more and much better, but this one has become the international star. In Europe we like football, you in the USA like another sport, that's how the world is, a lot of diversity, maybe you should become more European, since you're here. It's a cultural shock, but try to learn some of the Portuguese language and don't isolate yourself in a bubble, live with nationals, the majority welcome and accept immigrants well, we don't use expatriates, but as everywhere there are friendly people and others less so, There are good people and others who are less good. Accept the culture and integrate, making comparisons is not the best option, we are different, we have different laws, different ways of living and being in life, as is normal,
I hope you enjoy being here and your Portuguese followers can be useful, ask your doubts and questions, we like to help...
Thanks for watching and there is nothing here that we’d disagree with. We love living here and all the new and different things to discover, and cuisines to try. And at the same time, it’s ok to miss certain things from an old place - it’s part of the human experience. But we did pick Portugal and we prefer it to the U.S. and have enjoyed this experience and the people and admit we have a lot of learning to still do! Appreciate you watching and your thoughts!
I'm Portuguese and I watch NFL. NFL Gama Pass will allow you to watch with American commemtators
Yes -- I agree with you there. But when I watch, for example, the Premiere League football, it's Portuguese commentators. Same with watching golf, but it's all good. Thanks for watching @AntonioSilva-es8tb !
@@TheUnretirees Do commentators in the USA speak Portuguese?
Most of your negatives is because you dont live in a big city or close ( with big popolation like Porto or Lisbon ) , and with more stuff and you compare big city stuff, with low popolacion places and low stuff in general in Portugal . It dosen t make sence you have a lot of Starbucks and other stufff in lisbon , Porto or near , just live a litle close to a big city , easy fix . If you go to Montana or inside Rural U.S.A is like New York?
Yes outside Lisbon or Porto is diferent.
Im Portuguese.
Fair enough @pedroeu2013 and I don’t disagree.
Ahahah😂
Yout football is fake!
You toss a brown egg with your hands and you call it football!! 😅
lol, yeah I don’t understand why it’s called football either. Thanks for watching!
Please learn portuguese!
Who says we aren't learning Portuguese? Thanks for watching!
Cheap they say 😂😂😂 you guys move to a new country and culture but don’t know anything about the country nor the population.
Yes, I do understand that comparing is the first thing to do… but things are not cheap… for you probably is… but not for us.
De qualquer forma, aprendam Português lol…
Thanks for watching @PedroSabido122 and our comments about costs are clearly made relative to what costs are in the United States. Sorry you got bothered by something we made so clear. It would be the same if you moved to the United States and said "things are so expensive here". No offense intended.
@@TheUnretirees yeah I understood, but you guys come to Portugal saying it’s cheap, it’s wonderful it’s this it’s that… yeah cool but not for the Portuguese which live here 😅😅 we have been having lower and lower purchase power 😅
“Futebol” é “Futebol” não é “soccer”.
Meu… como é que falam do shacke shack ou Starbucks… ainda por cima na Nazaré… 😂😂 enfim
@@PedroSabido122 Comentário idiota! Claro que eles falam da sua experiência.
Portugal why? Portugal 1st World Country - USA 3rd World Country. USA apart from money, predatory health care system, beggars, super unsafe, guns, and nasty political scene. So massive no.
Thanks for watching @FranciscoCorreia10 and for your thoughts.
Que comentario preconceituoso! Até parece que vivemos num paraíso cá.
@@arturpires532 Queres comparar com um país onde se tiveres um braço partido tens de pagar 6000 dólares, isso é predatório. Achas normal estares na rua e levares um tiro do nada, seres processado por salvar uma vida, ou até tiroteios nas escolas. Fora a parte política, o ataque constante de ambos lados nem podes ter um diálogo. Se achas que isso não é um país de terceiro mundo então descreve-me um. Fora que o meu comentário é realista, por alguma razão eles estão cá, até referem isso no video
Lol. You can't change a light bulb by yourself ?
Changing the lightbulb wasn’t the problem. Finding the lightbulb replacement for a non-standard size (not at Leroy Merlin) was the issue.
@@TheUnretirees Sorry. My bad. I didn't understood.
“Fake news…”
MAGA folks.
lol, no.
too verbose
Ok