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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
Rural Europe is going to become a lifestyle destination for millions, not just Europeans.

Thousands of historic towns sitting half-empty. Stone houses for €30-80K. Solid houses built for generations, realistically yours for under €200K. Often with incredible tax regimes.

The two things that were missing: internet and services. Starlink fixed the first. And these aren't the rural areas of the 90s, many towns close to larger cities are now perfectly served. People are moving back.

This is my "Starlink guide" to rural Europe: 10 places I'm considering for living or investment myself.

🧡
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
First, why Europe? Because nowhere else has 2,000 years of micro-cultures compressed into a continent the size of the US.

800-1,200 year-old communities, each with its own dialect, cuisine, architecture.

I moved to the beach outside Lisbon and proved it to myself.

You build your own fortress, everything changes.

I mapped 10 places I'd consider myself.

Here's what I found.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
1/ INTERIOR ALGARVE, PORTUGAL

If I wasn't near Lisbon, I'd be in the Algarve. No question. Warm climate. Huge international community, especially British. Some of the best sport and fitness centers in southern Europe.

A friend is opening a hotel there in April. I go down frequently. It's the easiest transition for anyone coming from northern Europe.

Interior Algarve is where the real value is. Move 15km inland and prices collapse while quality of life stays world-class.

Best for: Northern Europeans wanting sun + community. Families. Crypto holders.

Drawback: Car essential. Seasonal tourism. Portuguese bureaucracy.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
On the map: Monchique, SΓ£o BrΓ‘s de Alportel, Silves.

All 15-30 min from the coast.

300+ sunny days/year.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
What it costs:

Renovated farmhouse with pool: €180K-350K
Property: €1,000-1,800/sqm (vs €3,500+ on coast)
Rent: €500-700/month for a 2BR villa with land
Cost of living: €1,200-1,600/month (couple)
Healthcare: public system + private at €50-100/consultation

The tax setup:

D8 Digital Nomad Visa: €3,680/month income (2026)
IFICI (NHR 2.0): 0% tax on foreign income for 10 years. 20% flat on Portuguese income
0% long-term crypto gains (held 365+ days). Short-term: 28%
0% inheritance tax to spouse/children

Personally, I'd love to live here and could see myself doing it. You're still roughly 3 hours from Lisbon for anything you might need, and you can drive to Spain. Underrated combination.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
2/ RURAL CRETE, GREECE

Crete and Greece would be my second pick after Portugal. I love the culture. In my view, it's the epitome of southern Europe. The food, the pace, the light. If I wasn't already in Portugal, I'd be here.

Crete is an island the size of a small country. Outside Chania and Heraklion: olive groves, mountain villages, €300/month rent.

Best for: People who want the deepest Mediterranean lifestyle at the lowest cost. Writers. Couples without school-age children.

Drawback: Island logistics. Ferry/flight dependency. Greek bureaucracy. Winter isolation in small villages.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
On the map: Vamos, Apokoronas, Kissamos.

Between mountains and sea.

300 sunny days/year.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
What it costs:

Stone house with olive grove: €80K-200K
Property: €1,000-1,500/sqm rural (vs €2,500+ in cities)
Rent: €300-600/month rural villages
Cost of living: €1,000-1,400/month (single)
Groceries: €200-350/month (taverna meals €10-15)
Healthcare: Public ESY system + affordable private

The tax setup:

50% income tax exemption for new residents, 7 years
Non-dom flat tax: €100K/year lump sum on foreign income (requires €500K investment in Greek assets). Up to 15 years
Golden Visa: €400K min investment (less populated areas; €800K Athens/islands)
Crypto capital gains: flat 15%

I wouldn't easily pick an island for myself. But if I had to, Crete is the poetic on; I'd accept the trade-offs for it.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
3/ INLAND ISTRIA, CROATIA

I went to Croatia when I was younger for holidays. Haven't been back recently. But it's spiking online interest, and I can see why. EU since 2023, Euro adopted, Schengen access.

Istria looks, feels, and tastes like Tuscany. But at 40% of the price. Rolling hills, truffle forests, stone villages, world-class olive oil and wine. Truffle season (Oct-Jan) is a lifestyle event.

Best for: Foodies. People who want Tuscany quality at a fraction of the cost. Anyone who values EU access + proximity to Central Europe.

Drawback: Limited English in deep rural areas. Car required. Tourism-driven economy, quiet off-season.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
On the map: Motovun, GroΕΎnjan, Oprtalj.

Hilltop medieval towns.

As per this image, 1h from Trieste, Italy. MOre in general 1-2 hours to Slovenia, Italy, Austria by car.

260+ sunny days/year.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
What it costs:

Renovated stone house: €150K-350K
Property: €2,000-3,000/sqm inland (vs €3,800+ coastal)
Rent: €500-900/month for a rural house
Cost of living: €1,200-1,800/month (couple)
Coworking: €100-200/month in nearby Pula or Rovinj

The tax setup:

Digital Nomad Visa: 0% tax on foreign-source income while on the visa. Up to 18 months. Min income: €3,295/month
Corporate tax: 10% for companies under €1M revenue (18% above)
Standard income tax: 20-33% progressive (for residents)

There's something about Croatia and Istria in particular. I wouldn't be surprised if in 3-4 years everyone is talking about it.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
4. RURAL TUSCANY, ITALY

This is my #1 pick. I'm biased, but I love everything about Tuscany. The dialect, the people, the fiorentina steak. I have so many good memories there. I'm actively researching rural Tuscan towns for myself.

Skip Florence. Skip Siena center. Go to the valleys between. Wine, olive oil, artisan food. Daily life, not a holiday.

Best for: People who want legacy + beauty + food culture. Long-term buyers. Anyone willing to learn Italian and invest in restoration.

Drawback: Restoration costs can double purchase price. Italian bureaucracy legendary. Language barrier in rural areas. Cold winters in northern Tuscany.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
On the map: Val d'Orcia, Garfagnana, Lunigiana, Maremma. 260+ sunny days/year.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
What it costs:

Farmhouse to restore: €80K-200K | Renovated: €250K-500K
Property: €1,200-2,500/sqm rural (vs €4,000+ in Florence)
Rent: €600-1,000/month for a countryside casa
Cost of living: €1,500-2,200/month (single)
Healthcare: Italy's SSN, ranked #2 globally by WHO historically

The tax setup (short version):

Impatriati regime: 50% income tax exemption for 5 years (60% with minor children). Cap €600K/year. Must not have been resident 3 prior years
Non-dom flat tax: €300K/year lump sum on all foreign income (2026 new applicants; €100K if pre-2024). Up to 15 years

I'm heavily biased: this is the region of the world I like the most. I have so many memories here. I'll probably write a thread just on Tuscany. Reader is warned.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
By the way, I write about this every week on Substack.

Deep dives on relocation, tax, and building a life abroad.

Subscribe and you'll also receive The Ultimate Guide to Citizenship & Residency Programs in 2026: palombo.substack.com

Now, 6 more places to go.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
5/ ASTURIAS, NORTHERN SPAIN

A rural house for €50K. Groceries for €35/week. And you're looking at the Atlantic from the Picos de Europa.

Forget the Mediterranean clichΓ©. Asturias is lush, mountainous, coastal, and absurdly cheap. Think Ireland's landscape with Spain's food culture.

Best for: Outdoor people. Anyone who hates heat. Budget buyers who want Western European quality.

Drawback: Rainy climate (120-150 rain days/year). Less international community. Limited English. Slower pace may bore some.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
On the map: Cangas de OnΓ­s, Llanes, Ribadesella.

Mountains meet the Atlantic. Mild summers (22-25Β°C), wet winters. Sidra (cider) culture, Picos de Europa national park at your door.

2-hour flight to Madrid/Barcelona/London.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
What it costs:

Small rural house: €50K-150K
Property: €800-1,500/sqm rural
Rent: €350-600/month for a village house
Cost of living: €900-1,400/month (single)

The tax setup:

Spain Beckham Law: 24% flat tax on Spanish income up to €600K (first 6 years; 47% above). Consult a local advisor: enforcement occasionally aggressive.

Spain Digital Nomad Visa: ~€2,850/month minimum (2026)
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
6/ DORDOGNE, FRANCE

Dordogne is one of my favorite places in France. The food alone justifies the trip. But as a base? The combination of stone villages, weekly markets with foie gras, truffles, and wine at local prices, that pace of life is hard to beat anywhere in Europe.

Strong existing expat infrastructure (British, Dutch for decades). France's healthcare system ranked World #1.

Best for: Families (healthcare + schools). Francophiles. People who want proven expat infrastructure with deep cultural roots.

Drawback: French tax rates aggressive (progressive up to 45%). Language essential. Hospital 30-60min away. Car mandatory.
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Alessandro Palombo
@thealepalombo
On the map: Sarlat-la-CanΓ©da, Bergerac, PΓ©rigueux. TGV connections to Paris, Bordeaux.

250+ sunny days/year.
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