Chile
Source: WhereNext Global Relocation Index 2026 · CC BY 4.0
Worth Considering — strongest in safety and healthcare.
83% data coverage·19.8M population·Public-domain data
Per-field freshness (5 dimensions)
Chile at a glance
Quick answer
Chile ranks #43 of 95 countries on the WhereNext composite score (51/100), with strongest scores in safety and healthcare and watch areas in career and infrastructure. Estimated 2026 single-person cost of living in Chile is around $1,650/month. Composite score uses 7 dimensions (cost, safety, healthcare, education, career, lifestyle, infrastructure) sourced from World Bank ICP, UNDP HDI, IEP Global Peace Index, OECD PISA, and EF EPI.
Last updated: May 2026 · Cost-of-living estimate is a 2026 single-person model based on the WhereNext cost index. Use the Cost of Living tool for city-level detail.
Key facts
- Rank #43 of 95 composite score 51/100 across the WhereNext 7-dimension framework.
- ~$1,650/mo estimated single-person cost of living, including rent, utilities, food, and transport.
- Strongest: Safety 87/100 normalized — top strength out of 7 dimensions.
- Watch area: Career 7/100 — lowest dimension; verify against your priorities.
- Coverage: 83% of dimensions population 19.8M · public-domain data sources (World Bank, UNDP, IEP, OECD, EF EPI).
Composite score
Above peers
- Chile
- 51/100
- South America avg
- 44/100
- Global avg
- 47/100
Compared against 3 regional neighbors and 95 indexed countries globally.
Source: WhereNext 7-dimension composite (World Bank ICP, UNDP HDI, IEP GPI, OECD PISA, EF EPI, Eurostat) · updated
Annual climate — Santiago (Chile)
Each vertical band shows the monthly low-to-high temperature range. Green = comfortable (5-25°C); amber = hot (>25°C); grey = cold (<5°C).
Verified · Climate-Data.org + WhereNext city-monthly-climate dataset
Santiago
| City | Month | High | Low | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Santiago | Jan | 30°C | 13°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Feb | 29°C | 12°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Mar | 27°C | 10°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Apr | 22°C | 7°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | May | 18°C | 5°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Jun | 14°C | 3°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Jul | 14°C | 2°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Aug | 16°C | 3°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Sep | 18°C | 5°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Oct | 22°C | 7°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Nov | 25°C | 9°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
| Santiago | Dec | 28°C | 12°C | Comfortable (5–25°C) |
Honest expectations: when Chile is the wrong fit
Most country guides only sell the upside. These are the specific triggers that mean Chile is probably not for you — drawn from recurring expat complaints and verified policy realities.
Do not choose Chile if you wanted Buenos Aires-style cultural depth at Santiago prices.
CostSantiago is more expensive than Buenos Aires (USD-pegged) and culturally less expat-vibrant; Valparaíso + Viña del Mar offer more colour but lower job density.
Do not choose Chile if you cannot tolerate Andes earthquake exposure.
SafetyChile sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire; M5+ earthquakes are routine; M7-8 hits decade-scale. Building codes are world-class but psychological adjustment is real.
Do not choose Chile if you need fast-track residency for non-employer-sponsored applicants.
VisaChilean residency overhaul (2022) tightened DN/professional routes; employer-sponsored visa is now the most reliable path. Investment thresholds + processing remain in flux.
Will you find your people in Chile?
Community density signals — quant + qualitative. Loneliness is a top-three relocation-failure factor; this section flags whether Chile has the expat scene to match your profile.
Expat density
High7.8% foreign-born
English proficiency
38/100 (EF EPI)
Coworking density
Medium
Top nomad hubs
Santiago, Valparaiso
Adult community vibe
Active
Family expat community
Small
What recurring expats complain about
“Chilean reserve is real — friendships develop slowly with locals; expat community in Santiago is dense but US/EU-skewed and parallel to Chilean society.”
Best neighborhoods for community
- · Santiago: Providencia, Las Condes, Vitacura (families), Lastarria/Bellas Artes
Internet reality in Chile
Median speed is a misleading single metric. What remote workers actually need to know: do Zoom calls survive peak hours, what happens during outages, what’s the mobile backup like.
Peak-hour Zoom quality
Good
Power outage frequency
Rare
Mobile backup
Good
Coworking fallback
Decent
Recommended eSIM providers
Movistar CL · Entel · WOM
What to actually expect
Santiago + Valparaíso + Concepción have FTTH; rural Patagonia + Atacama use 4G LTE. Earthquake-resilient infrastructure design means brief outages on M5+ events are normal.
Safety reality in Chile
7 dimensions of safety, each scored separately so a single weak axis doesn’t drag the cross-dimensional view. Per Global Peace Index + WHO + national crime statistics.
GPI 2025verified Apr 2026HDR 2024 (HDI 2023 data)verified Apr 2026- Strong
Overall public safety
Extremely seismically active (2010 earthquake magnitude 8.8); excellent disaster preparedness.
- Moderate
Political stability55/100
Functioning institutions; periodic political volatility but expat life largely unaffected.
- Caution
Natural disaster resilience40/100
High exposure (earthquake, tsunami, volcano). The score reflects raw frequency — countries with strong infrastructure (e.g. Japan) handle this well, but plan for periodic disruption.
- Moderate
Women's safety65/100
Generally safe but solo travel at night calls for normal urban precautions.
- Moderate
LGBTQ+ safety62/100
Legal but social acceptance varies regionally. Larger cities significantly more open.
- Strong
Emergency healthcare quality72/100
Adequate urgent care in major cities; private hospitals usually preferred for complex needs.
- Excellent
Terrorism risk
No active terrorism advisory; statistically negligible risk.
National averages only. Within-country variation is large — Mexico City vs Mérida differ massively. Cross- reference at the city / neighbourhood level before relocating.
Verify with current government advisories
Static-data signals don’t reflect this week’s situation. Cross-check against your home government’s current travel advisory before any irreversible commitment.
What life in Chile is actually like
Daily rhythm and cultural texture
Santiago sits in a bowl between the Andes and the coastal range, and the mountains are the first thing you see every clear morning — snow-capped from May through October, a constant reminder that you can be skiing at Valle Nevado or Portillo within 90 minutes. The city itself is a patchwork of barrios with distinct identities: Providencia is leafy, walkable, and family-oriented; Las Condes is corporate and upscale; Lastarria is bohemian with independent bookshops and wine bars; and Bellavista below Cerro San Cristobal is the nightlife zone where restaurants don't fill until 10 PM. Chilean meal rhythms are distinctive: lunch (almuerzo) between 1-2 PM is the main meal, often a menu del dia at a local restaurant for CLP 5,000-7,000 (€5-7). Dinner is late — 9 PM at the earliest — and la once, the peculiar Chilean tea-time around 7 PM involving bread, avocado, cheese, and tea, replaces proper dinner for many families. Wine is woven into daily life: a bottle of excellent Carmenere or Sauvignon Blanc from the Maipo or Casablanca valleys costs CLP 3,000-5,000 at the supermarket. Weekends draw Santiaguinos to the coast — Valparaiso's colorful cerros and the beach town of Vina del Mar are under two hours away. The terremoto (earthquake) cocktail — sweet fermented wine with pineapple ice cream — captures the dark Chilean humor about their seismic reality. Chileans use a uniquely mangled Spanish full of slang (cachai, po, weon) that baffles other Latin Americans. The social fabric is warm but class-stratified, and your comuna (neighborhood) signals your social position immediately.
Who thrives here — and who struggles
Chile is ideal for professionals in mining, renewable energy, and fintech — Santiago's startup ecosystem is Latin America's most mature by institutional standards, and the mining sector in the Atacama pays globally competitive salaries. Retirees seeking political stability, modern infrastructure, and dramatic geography with a lower price tag than Southern Europe find strong appeal. Wine enthusiasts and outdoor adventurers have a country that stretches from the world's driest desert to Patagonian glaciers. Chile is NOT for anyone who expects cheap Latin American living — Santiago's cost of living approaches Southern European levels, and imported goods carry steep markups. It's wrong for those who need easy social integration: Chilean friendships form through established social circles (often from school), and breaking into those groups as a foreigner takes significant time. Anyone allergic to earthquakes should look elsewhere — Chile averages a major seismic event every decade.
Reality check: the first 6 months
The RUT (Rol Unico Tributario) is your tax ID and essential for everything from signing a phone contract to opening a bank account at BancoEstado or Banco de Chile. Obtaining it requires your temporary residency card, which can take weeks after your visa approval. Santiago's air quality deteriorates badly in winter (June-August) due to thermal inversion trapping smog in the valley — alertas ambientales restrict driving and outdoor exercise. Apartment hunting happens through portalinmobiliario.cl, with deposits of one month's rent and a requirement for a Chilean guarantor (aval) that frustrates newcomers. The cédula de identidad (national ID card) replaces your passport for domestic purposes but requires an in-person appointment at the Registro Civil that books out weeks in advance. Chilean Spanish is fast, slang-heavy, and drops terminal consonants — formal Spanish classes provide a foundation but daily comprehension takes months of immersion. Utility connections and internet installation (VTR, Movistar) involve long wait windows and missed appointments that test patience.
Chile at a glance
What works well here
- ✓Most stable economy in South America
- ✓Incredible geographic diversity
- ✓Excellent wine and food scene
- ✓Growing tech and startup ecosystem
Friction to expect
- !Santiago suffers from severe air pollution in winter
- !High cost of living compared to regional neighbors
- !Earthquake-prone country
Practical nuances
- LGBTQ+ safety
- Same-sex marriage legalized in 2022. Santiago has a growing LGBTQ+ scene. Generally safe and progressive by Latin American standards, though machismo culture persists.
- Driving & licensing
- Drives on the right. International Driving Permits are accepted. Chilean license can be obtained with a local address and simple exams. Santiago traffic is congested.
- Healthcare system
- All workers must contribute to either Fonasa (public) or an Isapre (private insurer). The private system is significantly better for speed and comfort.
- Walkability & transit
- Santiago has an excellent, modern metro system. The city center is walkable, and cycling infrastructure is expanding. Inter-city buses are comfortable and affordable.
Healthcare-system facts · Source: WHO Global Health Observatory + national health-ministry publications · Last verified Apr 18, 2026 · Verify coverage and eligibility with the public-system administrator or a licensed health insurer before relying on it.
Tax overview
- Personal income tax
- 0% - 40%
- Corporate tax
- 27%
- Sales / VAT
- 19% (IVA)
- Wealth & crypto
- No wealth tax. Crypto is treated as a digital asset; gains are subject to income tax upon realization.
Tax rates and special regimes · Source: OECD Tax Database + national tax authority publications + treaty texts · Last verified Apr 18, 2026 · Verify against your own circumstances with a licensed cross-border tax advisor before filing.
See our tax calculator to model your specific situation.
Where expats settle in Chile
Decision Snapshot
The numbers that matter most for your relocation decision.
Scored 0–100 using institutional data: World Bank (cost, governance), WHO (healthcare), OECD PISA (education), Global Peace Index (safety), Open-Meteo (climate), and 22 more — not crowdsourced surveys. See the full methodology.
$1,650
High Value
6.3 homicides per 100k
UHC index: 84
3 pathways
Temporary Residence Visa
Avg 16°C / 61°F
GDP/capita PPP: $36,181
$8,252/yr
5.0 months of local costs · 2023
Key Caution
Career scores 7/100, which is 47 points below the global average. Research this area carefully before committing.
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The honest take
What's great
- Safety — scored 87/100(well above average)
- Healthcare — scored 86/100(well above average)
- Affordability — scored 82/100(well above average)
Watch out for
- Career — scored 7/100(47 below average)
- Infrastructure — scored 33/100(25 below average)
Is this place viable for you?
Quick decision check — Chile
Strengths
- Safety87/100
- Healthcare86/100
- Affordability82/100
Likely blockers
Career market is narrower than average
Re-rank destinations against your prioritiesInfrastructure trails comparable destinations
Re-rank destinations against your priorities
How Chile Scores
Seven dimensions, weighted by what matters to relocators.
Best Cities in Chile
Flagship cities first, then researched, then modeled — sorted by cost.
Santiago
La Serena
Concepcion
Valparaiso
All 4 Cities in Chile
Tradeoffs and Risks
Every country has tradeoffs. Here is what the data shows.
What works well
Areas to research
Regional comparison
Similar Countries
Countries with a similar data profile across all seven dimensions.
Relocation Checklist — Chile
Checklist is for guidance only. Requirements may vary based on nationality, visa type, and personal circumstances. Consult an immigration professional.
Make Chile real
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- public-domain data
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Chile advisor intro
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Tell us what you're trying to figure out about a move to Chile — tax, visa, schools, or housing — and we'll personally vet one human who works that country regularly. WhereNext may earn a referral fee; that's disclosed before any handoff. WhereNext does not provide legal, tax, immigration, property, or school-placement advice.
About Chile
Chile, officially the Republic of Chile, is a country in western South America. It is the southernmost country in the world and the closest to Antarctica, extending along a narrow strip of land between the Andes Mountains and the Pacific Ocean. According to the 2024 census, Chile had an enumerated population of 18.5 million. The country covers a territorial area of 756,102 square kilometers (291,933 sq mi), sharing borders with Peru to the north, Bolivia to the northeast, Argentina to the east, and the Drake Passage to the south. It also administers several Pacific islands, including Juan Fernández, Isla Salas y Gómez, Desventuradas, and Easter Island, and claims about 1,250,000 square kilometers (480,000 sq mi) of Antarctica as the Chilean Antarctic Territory. The capital and largest city is Santiago, and the official and national language is Spanish.
Deep Research
Detailed data for thorough due diligence. Expand any section below.
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Capital
Santiago
Population
19.8M
Region
South America
Languages
Spanish
Currency
Chilean Peso (CLP)
Timezone
CLT (UTC-3/-4)
GDP per capita (PPP)
$36,181
Unemployment
9.0%
Healthcare System
Healthcare System
UHC Coverage Index
84
Physicians per 1,000
3.5
Life expectancy
81.4 years
Homicide rate
6.3 per 100k
Climate & Environment
Climate & Environment
Average temperature
16.2°C / 61°F
Annual rainfall
342 mm
Visa Pathways
Visa Pathways
Temporary Residence Visa
For workers with a contract, investors, or retirees with provable income.
Digital Nomad Visa
Recently introduced visa allowing remote workers to reside for up to 1 year.
Subject to Contract Visa
Employer-sponsored work visa tied to a specific Chilean employer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Chile a good country to move to?
Chile scores 51/100 overall and ranks #43 out of 95 countries in our data-driven analysis. It excels in safety and healthcare. Whether it's right for you depends on your priorities — use our free personalization quiz to see how it ranks for your specific profile.
What is the cost of living in Chile?
The estimated monthly cost of living in Chile is approximately $1,650 for a single person with a moderate lifestyle. This is calibrated against a US baseline of ~$3,000/month. GDP per capita (PPP) is $36,181. Cost data is sourced from World Bank, and national statistical agencies.
Is Chile safe to live in?
Chile is relatively safe, scoring 81/100 on our safety index. This score combines the Global Peace Index, political stability data from the World Bank, and homicide rate statistics. The homicide rate is 6.3 per 100,000 people.
How is healthcare in Chile?
Chile has strong healthcare system, scoring 83/100. The WHO Universal Health Coverage index is 84. There are 3.5 physicians per 1,000 people. Healthcare quality can vary significantly between cities and rural areas.
Do I need a visa to move to Chile?
Visa requirements for Chile depend on your citizenship and intended length of stay. Chile offers various visa categories including tourist, work, and residence permits. Common pathways include Temporary Residence Visa, Digital Nomad Visa, Subject to Contract Visa. Always check with the official embassy or consulate for current requirements.
Chile Guides & Articles
Suggested citation
CC BY 4.0This dataset is free to redistribute, quote, and embed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. The composite form below preserves source lineage so AI assistants can cite both WhereNext and the underlying institutional publishers.
WhereNext composite — WhereNext Chile Relocation Profile 2026 (2026-04-21). Derived from: World Bank ICP (cost of living); WHO Global Health Observatory (healthcare quality); OECD PISA + UNESCO UIS (education); Yale EPI (environment); IEP Global Peace Index (safety); EF EPI (English proficiency); World Bank Doing Business + WGI (governance, infrastructure). Available at https://getwherenext.com/country/cl?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
WhereNext. (2026). WhereNext Chile Relocation Profile 2026. Retrieved from https://getwherenext.com/country/cl?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
WhereNext. "WhereNext Chile Relocation Profile 2026." WhereNext, 21 Apr 2026, https://getwherenext.com/country/cl?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. Accessed via https://getwherenext.com/country/cl?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
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Next step
Anchor Chile as your destination. Visa, cost, healthcare, and school tools inherit the same context so you don't re-enter it.
Essentials for moving to Chile
Two recurring questions in every relocation case: medical cover when local insurance hasn't kicked in yet, and how to pay or receive money across currencies without the typical 4% bank-card markup. Defaults we'd pick first.
Health insurance abroad
Travel medical insurance for nomads + relocators
Monthly subscription medical insurance that covers 180+ countries. No commitment; cancel anytime. The default pick if you're moving abroad without an employer plan.
Cross-border money + banking
Real exchange rates + multi-currency account
Hold 40+ currencies, send money at the mid-market rate, get local bank details in USD/EUR/GBP. The default pick for cross-border payments and saving on FX fees while you set up local banking.
Important Notice
WhereNext provides data-driven insights for informational purposes only. Scores and rankings are algorithmically generated from public institutional data and may not reflect your individual circumstances. This tool does not replace professional advice for immigration, legal, tax, or financial matters.