Comparison
Istanbul vs Buenos Aires
Two cosmopolitan capitals with serious currency stories. Buenos Aires is South America's European-feeling megacity; Istanbul straddles Europe and Asia. Here's the honest comparison.
Buenos Aires and Istanbul share an unusual feature: both have lived through repeated currency crises, and both reward foreigners earning in stable currencies. BA's post-2023 reforms under Milei have begun to normalise the parallel-rate gap; Türkiye's lira has stabilised somewhat after the 2024 monetary turn.
Cost-wise both cities are highly currency-sensitive. At the official rate in 2026, a couple's comfortable central lifestyle is roughly ~$2,500–$3,500/mo in Istanbul versus ~$2,000–$3,000/mo in Buenos Aires (Recoleta/Palermo). USD-earning foreigners typically have outsized purchasing power in both cities.
On residency: Argentina's rentista visa (passive-income proof) and digital-nomad visa exist but are less standardised than Türkiye's residence-permit regime. Türkiye's property-CBI route is unique on this comparison set.
Both cities reward USD earners
Currency volatility means foreigners earning in stable currencies typically have outsized local purchasing power. Both cities have seen this pattern repeatedly.
BA has European-megacity feel
Strong cafe culture, European architecture, late dinners, deep arts scene. The most European-feeling capital in the Americas.
Istanbul is closer to Europe and the Middle East
If your work or family is on those continents, BA's distance is a real factor. BA-Europe is a 12-14 hour flight.
Tax stories are both in flux
Argentina is mid-reform under Milei. Türkiye's proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption is announced but not yet law. Both warrant a tax advisor.
Side-by-side comparison
Couple, central, comfortable lifestyle (USD-earner)
~$2,500–$3,500/mo
~$2,000–$3,000/mo
Central 1-bed rent (foreigner-facing)
~$1,000–$1,400/mo
~$700–$1,400/mo
Eating out (mid-range, per person)
~$10–18
~$10–20
Public transport
~$50/mo pass
~$10–15/mo Subte
Private health insurance (adult)
~$80–250/mo
~$80–200/mo
Visa-free entry
60–90 days (most passports)
90 days (most passports)
Residency route
Short-term residence permit, CBI USD 400K
Rentista / digital-nomad / investor visas
Currency stability
TRY — moderately volatile (2024 turn)
ARS — historically volatile, reforms underway
Tax — favourable regime
Proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption
Standard worldwide-income for residents
Which city is right for you?
Better for
Istanbul
- Europe-Middle East-facing professionals
- Those targeting Turkish citizenship via property
- Foreigners wanting closer access to EU travel
- Russian-speakers using the largest existing community
Better for
Buenos Aires
- USD-earning remote workers wanting maximum purchasing power
- Spanish-fluent or Spanish-learning foreigners
- Those drawn to BA's cafe/arts/literary scene
- Foreigners comfortable with currency volatility
The honest take
BA-vs-Istanbul is rarely a cost decision and usually a region decision. BA suits foreigners whose lives can sit in the Americas (US-friendly timezones, Spanish, Latin culture) and who don't mind macroeconomic noise. Istanbul suits those whose lives touch Europe, the Middle East and the Russian-speaking world.
Both currencies are stories in themselves. Argentina's mid-reform period under Milei is gradually normalising the official-vs-parallel rate gap; Türkiye's 2024 monetary turn has slowed lira depreciation but left inflation elevated. USD-earning foreigners typically benefit in both cities — but plan budgets in your earning currency, not the local one.
Run the numbers for your situation