

Moving to Mauritius: 2026 guide for Americans
For Americans, Mauritius can be a very strong expatriation project if the goal is quality of life, climate and a premium island base. But distance and tax structure make this a move for organized profiles, not improvised relocators.
Before departure
- Choose the right residence framework
- Budget for housing, healthcare and mobility
- Take the 183-day threshold seriously
Mauritius appeals to Americans who want a stable island environment, strong climate upside, a readable permit framework and a life that feels cleaner and calmer than many large cities. In 2026, the success of the move depends on choosing the right permit logic — Premium Visa, work-linked residence, retirement or investment — and on treating tax, healthcare and daily infrastructure as core design questions rather than afterthoughts.
Stay, permits and relocation setup
For Americans, Premium Visa can be a clean long-stay route, especially for remote earners or externally funded lifestyles. But true expatriation often needs a deeper residence logic than a long-stay label alone.
Budget for moving to Mauritius
- Decent apartment
- Basic transport
- Controlled daily life
- Good air-conditioned housing
- Car, private care, more margin
- Durable expat life
- Villa or premium residence
- Services, leisure and higher comfort
Relocating to Mauritius costs more than many new arrivals expect. The island can still be very attractive, but the budget must include better housing, transport, private healthcare, services, the possible need for international schooling and the cost of correcting a bad location choice.
Internet, admin and practical life
Mauritius can work well on internet and day-to-day digital basics in the right areas, but the broader expat question is not just speed: it is neighborhood quality, local services, transport time, healthcare access and whether the island can actually support your daily life year-round.
Average speed: 40 Mbps
Tax, residence and income structure
Income brackets, contributions, deductions
Residency, treaties, exit tax
Compare your tax across countries
Real estate, investments, residency
Tax residency: generally you are taxed in the country where you spend more than 183 days per year. Double tax treaties avoid being taxed twice.
For Americans, Mauritius expatriation should always be planned through both local residence logic and continuing U.S.-side obligations where relevant. The 183-day threshold is a meaningful local marker, not a detail.
Key steps to make the move work
Before moving
- Define the real project: trial stay, Premium Visa, work, retirement or investment
- Assess tax, health and a full annual budget
- Choose the right area based on daily life, not postcard appeal
On arrival
- Test housing, internet and actual travel times
- Set up banking, healthcare and practical life
- Check whether the chosen area works year-round
After settling
- Reassess potential tax residence
- Confirm the chosen permit still fits
Advantages and watchpoints
Advantages
- Attractive tropical climate
- Clear residence frameworks
- French and English are useful daily
- Potentially high quality of life
- Premium environment in good areas
Challenges
- Cost of living can rise quickly
- It is an island, not a large metropolis
- Healthcare and housing need careful choice
- Tax after 183 days
- A car is often useful
Yes, but it should be structured through the right permit and tax logic from the beginning.