Stop Overpaying for Life—Move to Vietnam (E192) episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 31, 2026 · 1H 5M

Stop Overpaying for Life—Move to Vietnam (E192)

from El Podcast · host Evan Eh, Jesse Wright, El Podcast, El Podcast Media

A long-term expat breaks down the real economics, trade-offs, and lifestyle realities of retiring abroad—arguing Vietnam and Southeast Asia offer unmatched value if you fully commit. Guest Bio Evan Eh is a YouTuber and long-term expat who has lived abroad for 15+ years across Mexico, Australia, China, and Vietnam. He creates content helping North Americans relocate overseas, with a focus on cost-of-living arbitrage, lifestyle design, and practical logistics of living in Southeast Asia. Topics Discussed Retiring abroad (Vietnam, Thailand, Mexico, etc.) Cost-of-living arbitrage and purchasing power Snowbirding vs full relocation Healthcare systems abroad vs U.S./Canada Cultural differences and integration challenges Dating, community, and expat life Visa systems and common misconceptions Best and worst countries for expats Trade-offs: family, distance, and long-term decisions Main Points 1. Cost Arbitrage Is Real—and Powerful $2.5K–$3.5K/month can deliver a much higher quality of life in Vietnam vs North America. Weak local currencies (like Vietnamese dong) massively boost purchasing power. However, the benefit disappears if you frequently fly back home. 2. Full Commitment Beats “Snowbirding” The biggest gains (financial + lifestyle) come from fully relocating, not splitting time. Snowbirding reduces savings, slows integration, and limits upside. Best use of snowbirding: short-term “scouting phase,” not long-term strategy. 3. Southeast Asia vs Latin America Mexico: easier cultural transition, closer to U.S. Vietnam/Asia: bigger upside financially + stronger long-term growth energy. Thailand: world-class but getting more expensive. Malaysia: modern and affordable but lacks “retirement vibe.” 4. Lifestyle Trade-Offs Are Inevitable You gain affordability, freedom, and adventure… But may lose proximity to family, healthcare systems, and familiarity. Many retirees eventually drift back toward home as they age. 5. Healthcare Abroad Is Often Better Value Tiered systems: cheap public → mid-tier private → world-class elite. Example: knee surgery ~$1,300 vs $30K+ in U.S. High-end hospitals exist across Southeast Asia at a fraction of Western cost. 6. Most People Overthink Logistics Visa concerns, legalities, and risks are often exaggerated. The real constraint is mindset and willingness to act. Many people never move because they “catastrophize” unknowns. 7. The Ideal Profile Typically men in their 50s $2.5K–$3.5K/month income Seeking higher quality of life, not extreme frugality 8. Vietnam’s Unique Advantage Young population, rapid growth, optimism Strong sense of forward momentum Creates a “high-energy” environment missing in the West Top 3 Quotes 1. “Your purchasing power… is shocking. You can exponentially raise your quality of life.” 2. “If you’re sitting around getting stressed about things you don’t control… you’re just being anxious.” 3. “The absolute first step is to buy a plane ticket and go see for yourself.” 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us. Thanks for listening!

A long-term expat explains how retiring abroad—especially in Vietnam and Southeast Asia—can dramatically increase your quality of life through cost-of-living arbitrage. But the biggest gains only come with full commitment, as trade-offs around family, healthcare, and distance make “snowbirding” a weaker long-term strategy.

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Stop Overpaying for Life—Move to Vietnam (E192)

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This episode was published on March 31, 2026.

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A long-term expat breaks down the real economics, trade-offs, and lifestyle realities of retiring abroad—arguing Vietnam and Southeast Asia offer unmatched value if you fully commit. Guest Bio Evan Eh is a YouTuber and long-term expat who has lived...

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