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Turkey

Transcontinental bridge (mostly Asia Minor; part of Thrace in Europe). **NATO** member and **EU candidate**—**not** EU/Schengen. Residence, tax, and currency rules change periodically—verify official notices before planning. · Primary language: Turkish is the official language (Latin script since 1928). English is increasingly common in Istanbul’s finance, tech, and tourism belts, Ankara’s diplomatic and corporate scene, Izmir, and Antalya’s resort economy; EF EPI typically places Türkiye in a **moderate** national proficiency band—plan on Turkish or certified translation for tax (GİB), migration (e-ikamet), property deeds, and much healthcare paperwork outside expat-heavy districts. Kurdish and other minority languages appear regionally; Arabic and Russian are heard in some business and visitor contexts.

Overview for US expats

Historic crossroads republic with **Istanbul** as a global hub, strong domestic healthcare capacity in major cities, and living costs on Numbeo typically **well below the US composite** (Apr 2026 snapshot) outside prime Bosporus districts—balanced by **inflation and currency volatility**, **earthquake** exposure in much of the country, and **political and neighbourhood** risk factors that weigh on stability metrics. **Dual citizenship** is **restricted** for naturalising adults in most cases—verify Nationality Law with counsel. English works in many professional pockets; Turkish unlocks bureaucracy, contracts, and deeper integration.

Istanbul is the largest metro

e-ikamet, work permits, and GİB obligations are national (Turkish / Republic of Türkiye) rules. We keep one country profile for Turkey and an Istanbul metro page for Bosporus-city context.

Istanbul overview →

Everyday life

Healthcare quality (1–5)
4
Cost of living (1–5, higher = more affordable)
5
Safety (1–5)
3
Ease of living in English (1–5)
3

Data points (where available)

Numbeo cost of living index
34.8
Safety index
54.2
Healthcare index
68.5

Schooling for families (1–5)

Early childhood
4
Primary (elementary)
4
Secondary (middle/high)
4

Why Turkey works well for expats

  • Cost of living and services often strong value in TRY terms versus US averages on Numbeo-style indices (Apr 2026 snapshot)—dining, domestic help, and intercity travel can be affordable outside luxury segments
  • Rich culture, cuisine, and geography: Bosporus ferries, Aegean and Mediterranean coasts, Cappadocia, and eastern highlands within domestic flight or rail reach
  • Major-city hospitals and private clinics in Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir handle a wide range of care; many expats combine **SGK** (when employed) with private insurance
  • Large expat, student, and remote-worker communities in Istanbul and coastal resorts—coworking and meetups are easy to find
  • US passport holders usually access straightforward **short-stay** entry options for scouting trips—confirm current e-Visa/exemption rules before booking

Tradeoffs and challenges

  • Turkish is essential for many government, tax, and property processes; national EF EPI band is moderate—expect less English in Anatolian cities and villages
  • Inflation, FX swings, and rent repricing in TRY can unsettle budgets—index-linked leases and local banking need planning
  • Earthquake risk is structural in much of the country—verify **building codes**, insurance, and municipal **ISKİ / AFAD** guidance for your neighbourhood
  • Not Schengen—travel to the EU uses standard visa rules; regional security and travel advisories affect parts of the southeast and Syrian border area
  • Traffic congestion, aggressive driving, and winter mountain passes reward defensive habits; Istanbul plate restrictions and toll motorways (HGS/OGS) add admin

Visa routes for US citizens

  • other

    Difficulty: easy

    US citizens may normally enter for **tourism or short business** with an **e-Visa** or **visa exemption** depending on passport type and purpose—rules, validity, and permitted activities are published by the **Ministry of Foreign Affairs** and **e-Visa** portal and **change**. An e-Visa or stamp is **not** permission to work for a Turkish employer or to reside long term. Confirm current reciprocity, onward-ticket, and accommodation-registration expectations before travel.

  • work permit

    Difficulty: medium

    Long-stay **residence permits** tied to **employment**: typically a Turkish employer obtains a work permit from the Ministry of Labour and Social Security while you apply for a matching **short-term residence** (e-ikamet) through the **Provincial Directorate of Migration Management**. US degrees and documents often require **apostille** and **sworn Turkish translation**. Processing times and document lists vary by province—budget several weeks to months.

  • digital nomad

    Difficulty: medium

    Türkiye has been marketed to remote workers via **short-term residence** categories when applicants show lawful means of support, health insurance, and address registration—**there is no single EU-style “digital nomad” product** with a fixed global income threshold in primary law; eligibility, fees, and renewal practice are province- and officer-dependent. Verify current **Migration Presidency / e-ikamet** guidance and counsel before assuming remote foreign income alone satisfies every office.

  • entrepreneur

    Difficulty: medium

    Incorporation (e.g. **Limited Şirket**) with the **Trade Registry**, tax number from **GİB**, and social registration where employees exist; residence must match an approved purpose (managing your enterprise, assigned work, etc.). Accountants and bilingual counsel are standard. **Turquoise Card** and other investment-talent routes exist for qualifying profiles—thresholds and sectors **evolve**; use **Investment Office** and migration portals only.

  • residence by investment

    Difficulty: medium

    Citizenship-by-investment and related real-estate thresholds have been **adjusted repeatedly** (minimum property values, holding periods, and currency conditions). **Do not** rely on blog summaries—verify current **Regulation** text, land-registry (TAKBIS) suitability, and Ministry-approved channels. Residence linked to qualifying investment is distinct from a tourist property purchase.

  • family reunification

    Difficulty: medium

    Family residence for spouses and dependent children of work-permit holders or certain other permit categories: typically proof of relationship, housing, health insurance, and stable income. US civil documents generally need **apostille** and certified Turkish translation; appointments via **e-ikamet** or provincial migration offices.

  • other

    Difficulty: medium

    **Student residence** for full-time study at recognised universities; **research** and other grounds listed in the Law on Foreigners and International Protection. Türkiye does **not** participate in the **EU Blue Card**. **Security context:** avoid border areas addressed in **US State Department** advisories; after major **earthquakes**, building safety and insurance markets remain live issues in affected provinces.

  • retirement

    Difficulty: hard

    No simple passive-income retirement visa identical to Portugal D7 or Panama Pensionado; long-stay retirees usually rely on another qualifying residence basis (e.g. property-linked where law allows, family, or lawful short stays within visa rules)—confirm with migration counsel rather than overstaying a tourist class permit.

Example cities to explore

Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Antalya, Bursa, Gaziantep, Trabzon

References and further reading

Next steps