This article examines the personal outcomes of overseas residence in later life,
by analysing some findings from the first large-scale, comparative study of the
retirement of British citizens to southern Europe. Four study areas are
compared: Tuscany in Italy, Malta, the Costa del Sol of Spain, and the
Algarve region of Portugal. The analysis focuses on the expressed reasons for
moving to and residing in the areas, the reported advantages and
disadvantages, and the respondents' predictions of whether they would stay or
leave in response to adverse and beneficial events. Overall the subjects give
very positive reports, but there are considerable differences among the four
areas. The associations of individual variation in well-being with both a
person's ‘temporal commitment’ to the area and to facets of their social
integration are analysed. The onset of severe incapacity, sufficient to prevent
the continued running of a home, is the event most likely to cause people to
leave their adopted areas of residence.