Données Clés sur le Coût de la Vie
| Catégorie | Indice | USD est. | Niveau |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coût de la Vie | 44.8 | 55% cheaper than NYC | Modéré |
| Rent (1-bed city) | 16.4 | —/mo est. | Cheap |
| Groceries | 32.6 | —/mo est. | Cheap |
| Restaurants | 42.4 | —/meal est. | Modéré |
| Local Pouvoir d'Achat | 44.6 | ×2.23 expat stretch | |
| GNI per Capita | $34.3k | Banque Mondiale PPP | |
| Inflation Rate | 4.3% | Annuel 2026 |
Logement & Loyer
Santiago's upscale neighborhoods—Las Condes, Vitacura, and Ñuñoa—offer 1-bedroom apartments at $500–$900/month, with 2-bedrooms from $800–$1,300. Budget-friendly areas like Pio Nono, Lastarria, and Providencia rent 1-bedrooms for $400–$650. Furnished corporate apartments (apartotels) range $700–$1,200/month. Coastal towns like Viña del Mar and Valparaíso are 20–30% more expensive; Concepción and Puerto Montt offer rents from $250–$400. Expat clusters concentrate in Las Condes for international schools and business amenities, Vitacura for nightlife, and Ñuñoa for bohemian culture and affordability.
Alimentation & Restaurants
Monthly groceries cost $120–$200 for single-person households shopping at Jumbo, Carrefour, or local farmers markets. Chilean wine is exceptional value: premium bottles cost $4–$8; grapes, avocados, and seafood are locally cheap. Dining out ranges from $4–$7 at casual restaurants to $12–$20 at mid-range establishments. Street empanadas cost $1–$2. Budget $300–$450/month for groceries plus 2–3 restaurant meals weekly.
Transport
Santiago's Metro system is modern and affordable: single rides cost 800 pesos ($1 USD), and unlimited monthly passes run roughly $30–$35. Buses integrate with the same card system. Taxis and ride-sharing (Uber, Cabify, Beat) are reliable: average trip costs $3–$6 within Santiago. Car ownership is moderately expensive; used vehicles start at $5,000–$8,000. Most expats in central Santiago use Metro and occasional taxis; those in outer areas or suburbs prefer car ownership given the relatively low fuel costs ($1.20–$1.40 per liter).
Santé & Qualité de Vie
Chile's healthcare system combines public (Fonasa) and private (Isapre) options. Public healthcare is affordable but can have wait times; private insurance ranges from $80–$180/month. Routine doctor visits cost $25–$45 privately; dentistry runs $20–$50 for basic procedures and $200–$400 for crowns. Major private clinics like Clínica Las Condes and Clínica Alemana offer English-speaking staff and modern facilities. Most expats use private insurance, making healthcare costs manageable.
Analyse Clé
Chile combines Latin America's strongest institutions with a 1.58x expat value score—your Western income stretches furthest when paired with first-world infrastructure and minimal bureaucracy. The digital nomad visa (requiring only $2,700/month income proof), near-zero capital gains tax on foreign income, and proximity to Patagonia's outdoor adventures make Chile unmatched for active remote workers and early retirees seeking development plus adventure.
Notre Verdict for Chile
Chile offers strong value for money at CoL 44.8 — significantly below NYC and most Western cities. Digital nomads and expats from high-cost countries benefit most from this gap.
Idéal pour
- Digital nomads & remote workers on foreign income
- Budget-conscious expats maximising lifestyle quality
Moins adapté pour
- Those requiring Western-standard amenities everywhere
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