Türkiye Relocation

Comparison

Istanbul vs Athens

Two ancient capitals at the eastern edge of Europe. Athens is in the EU and Schengen; Istanbul is bigger, denser and materially cheaper. Here's the honest comparison.

Istanbul and Athens sit a short flight apart but live in different administrative worlds. Athens is an EU and Schengen member with full access to the Single Market; Istanbul is outside both and runs its own visa, banking and tax regimes. For relocators that decision — EU residency now or Türkiye flexibility — usually drives the choice more than cost.

Cost-wise Istanbul is materially cheaper. A couple's central comfortable lifestyle typically lands around ~$2,500–$3,500/mo in Istanbul versus ~$2,800–$4,000/mo in Athens (rents in central Athens neighbourhoods like Koukaki, Pagrati and Kolonaki have risen sharply since 2022). Food, transport and utilities are broadly similar; private healthcare and international schooling favour Istanbul on price but Athens on EU-credentialed services.

On tax: Greece's 7% flat-rate pension regime for foreign retirees and the 50% income exemption for inbound professionals are well-established but require relocation paperwork. Türkiye's proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption (announced 2026) could be more generous but is still proposed — verify with a tax advisor before committing.

Athens gives you EU + Schengen

Day-one Schengen mobility, EU healthcare reciprocity and easier access to EU banking — important if your work or family already spans Europe.

Istanbul is roughly 20–35% cheaper

Especially on rent, eating out and private healthcare. Athens has caught up since 2022 but Istanbul still wins on monthly burn rate.

Greek 7% pension regime is real

Foreign-pension retirees who tax-domicile in Greece pay a 7% flat rate on foreign income for 15 years. A serious draw if your income is pension-heavy.

Two very different city scales

Istanbul is 16M people across two continents; Athens metro is ~3.7M. If you want a quieter, walkable Mediterranean capital, Athens wins on lifestyle.

Side-by-side comparison

CategoryIstanbulAthens

Couple, central, comfortable lifestyle

~$2,500–$3,500/mo

~$2,800–$4,000/mo

Central 1-bed rent

~$1,000–$1,400/mo

~$900–$1,500/mo

Eating out (mid-range, per person)

~$10–18

~$15–25

Public transport pass

~$50/mo

~$32/mo (€30)

Private health insurance (adult)

~$80–250/mo

~$70–180/mo

International school (per child/year)

$15K–$45K

€10K–€22K

Visa-free / Schengen

Outside Schengen — 60–90 days for most

Schengen rules apply (90/180)

Residency route

Short-term residence permit, CBI USD 400K

FIP / Golden Visa (€250K–€800K depending on area)

Tax — favourable regime

Proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption

7% flat for foreign pensioners; 50% inbound exemption

Climate

4 distinct seasons, humid summers

Hot dry summers, mild winters

Which city is right for you?

Better for

Istanbul

  • Cost-prioritising remote workers and freelancers
  • Foreigners who want a true megacity with deep services
  • Property-investor route to Turkish citizenship
  • Passport holders facing Schengen friction

Better for

Athens

  • Foreign retirees targeting the Greek 7% pension regime
  • EU-mobile professionals who need Schengen day-one
  • Smaller, walkable Mediterranean lifestyle seekers
  • Families wanting EU-credentialed schooling at moderate fees

The honest take

The choice between Istanbul and Athens usually comes down to passport politics and tax preference more than raw cost. If you already hold an EU passport or have an EU job that wants you on EU soil, Athens is the easier life — Schengen mobility, EU banking, no visa renewals. If your passport struggles in Schengen or your work is fully remote and outside the EU, Istanbul gives you more for less and keeps the 90/180 cap off your back.

On tax, both jurisdictions have headline regimes built for inbound foreigners, but with different shapes: Greece's 7% pension flat rate and 50% inbound-professional exemption are written into law and well-tested; Türkiye's proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption is more generous on paper but still proposed. Treat the Turkish regime as directional and confirm with a tax advisor before relocating around it.