Διεθνή

What It Takes to Retire on the Amalfi Coast at 60 Without Touching Your Principal

Quick Read

  • Covering roughly $80,000 in annual expenses without selling assets requires between $1.8M and $2.0M generating between 4.0% and 4.5% yield through Treasury ladders and dividend equities.

  • Italy’s 7% flat tax slashes a typical portfolio income tax bill from $20,000-plus to roughly $5,600 for retirees who elect it in year one.

  • Claiming Social Security at 67 offsets up to $50,000 in annual costs for a couple and permanently reduces the required portfolio to around $1.1M.

  • A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.

People imagine a cliffside terrace and the math working itself out. The phrase “without touching your principal” rules out the usual 4% drawdown framing and forces a pure yield problem. Here is what it takes to make that version of the Amalfi Coast work at 60.

An elevated view of the Amalfi Coast showing densely packed colorful buildings, including white and pastel homes with red-tiled roofs, built into steep green cliffs above the Mediterranean Sea. A winding coastal road with vehicles and multiple stone arch bridges curves along the shoreline. Hazy blue mountains are visible in the distance under a bright sky.
Aleh Varanishcha / Getty Images

What it really costs to live there

The Amalfi Coast spans several distinct markets. Positano and Ravello are priced for wealthy buyers. Amalfi town, Minori, Maiori, Vietri sul Mare, and inland villages are where residents actually live. A long-term unfurnished rental on a one-year lease runs €1,400 to €2,000 monthly. At a conversion rate of 0.8613 EUR per USD, housing costs roughly $22,000 to $28,000 yearly if you rent. Buying a modest two-bedroom with a sea view costs €500,000 to €900,000, plus notary, agency, and Italian property tax (IMU) on non-primary residences.

A comfortable two-person budget breaks down as follows in current euros: groceries €8,000 to €10,000, utilities €3,500, car with insurance and fuel €4,500, dining and social life €7,000, travel home and visitors €6,000, clothing €3,000, and reserves for appliances and surprises €5,000. Healthcare requires separate attention: elective residence visa holders pay roughly €2,000 per person annually for Italian public system access, plus €1,500 to €2,500 per person for private supplements. Pre-Medicare, that bridge matters.

Total: roughly €60,000 to €72,000 yearly, or about $70,000 to $84,000.

Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement

Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.

The yield-only math

Without touching principal, every euro must come from interest, dividends, or Social Security. At 60, Social Security is unavailable. The earliest claim is 62; waiting to 67 or 70 changes the answer materially. Bridge years run on portfolio yield alone.

Today’s yield environment supports this plan. The 10-year Treasury sits at 4.47%, the 30-year at 4.93%, and the intermediate 5 to 7 year part of the curve at 4.16% to 4.28%. A laddered Treasury and investment-grade bond sleeve combined with dividend-focused equities can realistically generate 4.0% to 4.5% cash yield without selling.

Targeting $80,000 of pre-tax portfolio income: at 4% yield, you need $2,000,000 invested. At 4.5%, roughly $1,780,000. Once Social Security begins, the requirement drops. The current national Social Security flow translates to typical retired-worker benefits in the low-$20,000s per person at full retirement age, so a couple claiming at 67 might offset $40,000 to $50,000 of the gap. That trims required principal to roughly $1.0M to $1.2M after age 67. The hard number is the bridge from 60 to 67: you need the full $1.8M to $2M working at yield.

The 7% flat tax

Italy offers a regime that transforms this scenario from tight to comfortable. Foreign retirees who transfer residency to qualifying southern Italian towns with populations under 20,000, in regions including Campania, can elect a 7% flat tax on all foreign-source income for up to nine tax years. Amalfi, Positano, Ravello, Minori, Maiori, Praiano, and most inland villages qualify. US dividends, interest, pension distributions, and Social Security can be taxed at 7% in Italy rather than progressive rates exceeding 40%.

On $80,000 of portfolio income, that is roughly $5,600 of Italian tax versus potentially $20,000 or more under standard rates. The US-Italy tax treaty and foreign tax credit prevent double taxation, but the regime must be affirmatively elected on your first Italian return and you cannot have been an Italian tax resident in the prior five years. Many expats default into the standard regime and pay multiples more than necessary.

What can break the plan

Currency is the quiet risk. Your portfolio earns dollars; you spend euros. US CPI sits at 334.0, near a 12-month high, and core PCE is running at the 90th percentile of its trailing year, which supports US yields but pressures the dollar over long horizons. A 15% adverse EUR/USD move raises your effective cost of living by 15%. Keep one to two years of spending in euro-denominated cash or short bonds to smooth this.

Healthcare access in your 80s on a steep coastline is the other risk. The Amalfi Coast is vertical. Many couples eventually relocate to Salerno or Sorrento for hospital proximity, worth pricing now rather than discovering later.

The number

To retire on the Amalfi Coast at 60 without touching your principal, you need roughly $1.8 million to $2.0 million in invested assets, structured for 4.0% to 4.5% blended cash yield across Treasury ladders, investment-grade bonds, and dividend equities, plus €100,000 to €150,000 in euro liquidity to neutralize currency risk during bridge years. Elect the 7% southern Italy flat tax regime in your first residency year, claim Social Security at 67 to permanently lower required portfolio yield, and live in qualifying small towns rather than postcard ones. The principal stays intact, income covers expenses, and the cliffside terrace becomes a Tuesday.

Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement

Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.

And no, it’s got nothing to do with increasing your income, savings, clipping coupons, or even cutting back on your lifestyle. It’s much more straightforward (and powerful) than any of that. Frankly, it’s shocking more people don’t adopt the habit given how easy it is.