Overview for US expats
Affordable, Spanish–Guaraní bilingual republic with a growing expat footprint around **Asunción** and the **Triple Frontier** trade corridor. **Numbeo Apr 2026-style** snapshots show **cost of living well below the US composite** and **safety perceptions below** Chile or Uruguay in the same surveys. **IPS** social insurance, **MSPyBS** public facilities, and private **mutualistas** / clinics form a mixed health system—major cases may still route to Asunción or cross-border hubs. **SENACISA** governs driving credentials; **right-hand traffic**. Heat, seasonal flooding, and **city-level** crime variation (especially in dense border commerce zones) deserve informed neighbourhood and transport choices.
Asunción and Ciudad del Este are major metros
Residencia categories, Migraciones filings, SET tax steps, IPS enrollment, and SENACISA driving rules are national Paraguayan matters. We keep one country profile for Paraguay and separate Asunción and Ciudad del Este pages for capital and Triple Frontier context.
Everyday life
- Healthcare quality (1–5)
- 4
- Cost of living (1–5, higher = more affordable)
- 6
- Safety (1–5)
- 3
- Ease of living in English (1–5)
- 2
Data points (where available)
- Numbeo cost of living index
- 28.4
- Safety index
- 54.2
- Healthcare index
- 52.8
Schooling for families (1–5)
- Early childhood
- 3
- Primary (elementary)
- 3
- Secondary (middle/high)
- 3
Why Paraguay works well for expats
- Territorial tax system for many foreign-sourced income scenarios—**verify** residency facts and US worldwide reporting with a **cross-border CPA**
- Low cost of living versus US baselines on Numbeo-style indices; domestic help, dining, and local services often inexpensive in PYG
- Mercosur associate context: regional bus and flight links to Buenos Aires, São Paulo, and Santa Cruz corridors
- Friendly day-to-day culture; **Guaraní** heritage visible in music, place names, and bilingual signage
- Residence-by-deposit/investment options have attracted global attention—still require **strict compliance** with **Migraciones** and banking rules
Tradeoffs and challenges
- English is thin outside thin professional layers; **Spanish** (and some **Guaraní** awareness) matters for bureaucracy and healthcare
- Numbeo safety index typically **moderate-to-low** nationally—petty theft, scams, and road safety vary sharply by city and district; read **travel.state.gov** and local advisories
- Landlocked logistics; imports and vehicle costs can bite despite low local service prices
- Administrative pace at **Migraciones**, **SET**, and banks can be slow; document apostille and translation lead times into your timeline
- Path to citizenship is **not** automatic after residence—language, integration, and legal tests may apply; dual nationality rules need counsel
Visa routes for US citizens
other
Difficulty: easy
US passport holders may enter **visa-free** for tourism or short business for a period determined at the border—commonly **up to 90 days**; verify current **Migraciones** and **US Embassy Asunción** guidance. A stamp is **not** authorisation to work locally or to skip **residencia** steps if you intend to live, bank, and contract formally.
work permit
Difficulty: medium
Residence tied to a **local employment contract** and employer sponsorship: work permits and **cédula de identidad para extranjeros** follow **Ministerio del Interior / Dirección General de Migraciones** rules. Contracts and social-security enrolment with **IPS** interact with payroll—use Spanish-language HR and counsel.
other
Difficulty: medium
**Permanent residence** routes include categories such as **deposit/investment** with a Paraguayan bank under amounts and procedures published in law and **Migraciones** circulars (figures are set in **guaraníes** and **update**—confirm current tables before planning). **Rentista**-style and **pensioner** bases may exist when lawful recurring income from abroad is documented; thresholds and document checklists **change**—verify official texts rather than forum summaries.
entrepreneur
Difficulty: medium
Company formation (**MIPRO** / registry channels), **RUC** with **SET**, and sector licences must align with an immigration purpose that matches real activity. **Mercosur** citizens have streamlined routes that **do not** automatically apply to US nationals—map your case to the non-Mercosur tables on **Migraciones**.
family reunification
Difficulty: medium
Family reunification with Paraguayan citizens or qualifying residents when dependency, marriage/partnership, and maintenance conditions in current immigration law are met. US civil documents typically need **apostille** and sworn **Spanish** translation.
digital nomad
Difficulty: hard
Paraguay does **not** market a standalone national **digital nomad visa** comparable to Costa Rica or Estonia. Remote workers paid only by foreign employers usually need a published **residencia** basis (e.g. investment/deposit, rentista-style income, local employment, or family)—**confirm** with **Migraciones** before assuming tourist entry covers full-time remote work.
retirement
Difficulty: medium
No EU-style passive “retirement visa” label in common marketing, but **pensioners** may qualify under **independent-means** or **rentista**-style categories when stable retirement income and health coverage meet published requirements—amounts and renewals **evolve** in guaraníes; verify **Migraciones** checklists.
Example cities to explore
Asunción (Centro, Villa Morra, Carmelitas), Luque / San Lorenzo corridor, Ciudad del Este, Encarnación, Pedro Juan Caballero, Coronel Oviedo, Villarrica
References and further reading
- Dirección General de Migraciones (Paraguay)
- SET – Subsecretaría de Estado de Tributación
- IPS – Instituto de Previsión Social
- MSPyBS – Ministerio de Salud Pública y Bienestar Social
- BCP – Banco Central del Paraguay
- SENACISA – licencias de conducir
- US Embassy Asunción
- US State Department – Paraguay travel information
- EF English Proficiency Index
- Numbeo – Paraguay cost of living, safety, healthcare
- World Bank – Paraguay overview