More Americans are relocating to Europe, driven across the Atlantic by the rising cost of living, inflated house prices, a surging dollar and political rancor at home.

Italy, Portugal, Spain, Greece and France are among the most popular destinations. Sotheby’s International Realty said requests from Americans looking to move to Greece rose 40% in the April-to-June period compared to a year earlier. In France and Italy, U.S. demand is the highest it’s been in at least three years, according to Knight Frank real estate specialist Jack Harris. And Americans made up 12% of Sotheby’s Italian revenue in the first quarter, compared to just 5% in the same period a year ago. 

Retirees and the wealthy have traditionally been the prime American buyers of real estate in Europe. But relatively cheap housing—particularly in smaller cities and towns—and the rise of remote work have made the continent alluring to a wider range of people, including those who are younger and find themselves priced out of the housing market at home. Growing crime rates in some U.S. cities and political divisions have also led Americans to look across the pond for a quieter lifestyle, buoyed by a euro that just dropped to parity with the U.S. dollar for the first time in more than 20 years.

‘Bella Vita’
For Atlanta-based Stephanie Synclair, 40, buying a home in Italy was a long-time dream that came true this April.

Paying $3,000 a month to rent a four-bedroom house for herself and her son in Atlanta, she found it impossible to scale up and become a homeowner as prices skyrocketed, even though she had $300,000 of cash on hand.

She turned to Italy, a country she always loved, and was able to buy a 3,100-square-foot house in Mussomeli, Sicily, as well as a smaller home next door and an 800-square-foot storefront—all for 60,000 euros. 

“I would never have looked to buy in Italy if the market in the U.S. hadn’t been so crazy,” the entrepreneur said. She plans to work remotely and imagines a “bella vita” of good food and wine, along with a local literary club and art space she plans to launch in her storefront, “reminiscent of Paris’s art scene in the 1920s.”

The average price of a home in Atlanta reached $404,575 as of June 30, up 19% from the previous year, whereas an 800-square foot property in the Palermo region of Sicily cost 86,560 euros on average, according to real estate platforms Zillow and Idealista. 

“The rising cost of living has made it more expensive to live in any major U.S. city than in European cities,” said Michael Witkowski, vice president of U.S.-based expat consultancy ECA international. “Expensive home prices as well as a strong U.S. dollar and political tensions are all contributing factors to the growing allure of Europe.”

Retire At 50
To be sure, it's not always easy to pick up and move to another country. There are visa requirements, and the tax situation can be complicated and costly. The U.S. taxes all its citizens regardless of where they live, and working remotely for an American company while in another country can create tax headaches for you and your employer.

To address some of these issues, Italy will begin offering a remote-worker visa for foreigners later this year, which Synclair is hoping to get.  The government also introduced a program in 2019 to sell one-euro homes in rural areas to foreign buyers who would pay for renovations and boost the local economy. 

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