What It Takes to Retire on Lake Como at 60 on $1 Million Without Touching Your Principal
What It Takes to Retire on Lake Como at 60 on $1 Million Without Touching Your Principal.
A $1 million portfolio at 4.5% yield produces $45,000 annually, falling short of what modest Lake Como retirement actually costs.
Italy taxes worldwide financial income at 26% and levies a 0.2% annual wealth tax on foreign assets, cutting meaningfully into US retiree yield.
A comfortable yield-only retirement on Lake Como requires between $1.35 million and $1.5 million, and working with just $1 million is only feasible with the help of Social Security, a partner, or a cheaper village.
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Someone in their late fifties with a $1 million portfolio sees a shimmering lake, a stone village, and a life that costs less than staying in California. They want to know if the math works, specifically the version where the portfolio keeps producing income forever and the principal never gets touched. Here is what actually has to line up.
Start with the currency. A million US dollars converts to roughly €873,533 at today's rate, and that number will move around a lot over a thirty-year retirement. Lake Como is not one market. Bellagio, Menaggio, and the Tremezzina stretch price like Aspen with a ferry schedule. Como city, Lecco, and smaller villages on the eastern shore price like a nice mid-sized Italian town. A tidy two-bedroom long-term rental away from the postcard frontage runs roughly €1,500 to €2,200 a month unfurnished.
A workable annual budget for a single retiree living well but not extravagantly looks like this: housing $22,000, utilities and connectivity $3,500, groceries $7,500, dining and wine $4,500, health coverage $3,000, transportation $4,000, travel back to the US and gifts $5,000, home maintenance and reserves $2,500, and Italian income and wealth taxes on the portfolio $5,000. That totals roughly $57,000 a year.
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Never touching principal means living on yield. Today, the 10-year Treasury pays 4.58%, the 52-week T-bill sits at 4.04%, and the national average 12-month CD yields just 1.65%, though top online banks pay meaningfully more. A blended portfolio of a Treasury ladder, investment-grade corporate bonds, and a dividend equity sleeve can realistically throw off 4.25% to 4.75% pretax without eating capital.
Call it 4.5% on $1 million, or $45,000 a year in gross yield. Against a $57,000 budget, that leaves a $12,000 gap. At 60, you have no Social Security until 62 at the earliest, and claiming that early permanently shrinks the check. There is no Medicare, and Medicare would not follow you to Italy anyway. The strict version of this scenario (one million dollars, age 60, principal untouched) does not quite cover a comfortable Lake Como life on its own.
It works if any one of the following is true: you are half of a couple pooling two Social Security streams later, you have a small pension or part-time remote income bridging to age 67, you accept a village further from the lake and a budget closer to $45,000, or you push the retirement date to 62 or 65 and let the portfolio compound first.
Italy taxes residents on worldwide income. Lake Como sits in Lombardy, which is not eligible for the 7% flat-tax regime available only in certain southern regions and small towns. Your Treasury interest, corporate bond coupons, and dividend income will be taxed in Italy under the treaty, generally at 26% on financial income, with credit for US tax paid.
The second bite is IVAFE, Italy's wealth tax on foreign financial assets held by residents, currently 0.2% annually on the value of the account. On a $1 million portfolio, that is another $2,000 a year, every year, whether markets are up or down. Combined with the elective residence visa requirement to demonstrate stable passive income (roughly €31,000 for a single applicant) and the voluntary SSN health enrollment fee that scales with income, the effective drag on a US retiree's gross yield is meaningful.
Inflation compounds the pressure. The Core PCE index sits in the 90th percentile of its trailing range, and CPI has climbed from 322.2 to 332.6 over the past year. A yield-only strategy has no built-in raise. Thirty years from now, that $45,000 of income buys materially less espresso.
To do Lake Como at 60 on yield alone, comfortably, in Lombardy, with Italian taxes and the wealth-tax drag priced in, and with a reserve for currency swings, the realistic portfolio target is closer to $1.35 to $1.5 million yielding around 4.5%, which produces $60,000 to $67,000 of gross income. A strict $1 million works if you claim Social Security into it later, share the budget with a partner, or accept a less lakefront village. The principal-preservation promise is real, but the price of admission on Como is a little higher than the round number in the headline.
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