Home / The Market / Upgrade: A Roman goddess inspired this couple to leave Seattle and retire to Italy, where you can live on $3,000 a month

Upgrade: A Roman goddess inspired this couple to leave Seattle and retire to Italy, where you can live on $3,000 a month

It was a goddess that inspired Sunny Bertollini to move to Italy.

The 50-year-old herbalist, and her husband, Mark Hinshaw, a 72-year-old retired architect, had been coming to Italy on vacation for years. On one trip, they visited an ancient temple to Salus, a Roman goddess of health and well-being — and Bertollini, who says she has “always been a pagan,” was overcome by the experience. “I touched the ancient frescos, and had what I would call an epiphany. … It became quite clear that this is the direction my life would go. … It was a magnetic draw,” she says.

So Bertollini (you can’t miss her, decked out in her almost entirely completely white wardrobe) and Hinshaw, who had already been contemplating retirement, sold their apartment in the heart of Seattle and moved to the town of Santa Vittoria in Matenano in Le Marche, an east-central region of Italy, in 2017. “It’s Tuscany without the tourists,” Bertollini, who is half-Italian, says of the region, which sits between the Adriatic Sea and more popular travel destinations like Tuscany and Umbria.

Le Marche “is one of Italy’s best-kept secrets,” observes Lonely Planet of the area. “With a string of charming hilltop towns and a landscape ranging from snow-capped Apennine peaks to dreamy beaches and otherworldly caves, it’s the perfect place to experience Italy without the crowds.” The publication also notes that this “relatively tourist-free” region offers “deeply traditional food — blessed with bounty from the mountains, farmland and sea” and a varied, seasonal cuisine and truly distinctive wines.”

iStock

Adriatic seashore at Ancona.

Here’s what Hinshaw and Bertollini’s lives are like in Santa Vittorina, from the costs to the health-care and visa issues and what they miss most about the U.S.:

Costs: The couple reports expenses of about $ 2,400 a month (though this doesn’t include a mortgage or rent, because they bought their house in Santa Vittorina outright). Bertollini says she spends about $ 50 a week on groceries; $ 55 a month on home internet; $ 55 a month on gas for the couple’s car; about $ 22 to $ 66 on electricity, depending on the season; and about $ 20 a month each for cellphone service. Other expenses include about $ 160 a month for health care (see below) and roughly $ 70 a month on car insurance. Travel can be pricey, with plane tickets back to the U.S. sometimes $ 1,000 or more; Hinshaw and Bertollini also travel around Italy and nearby countries and pay for train and bus tickets when they do, they say. One big difference the couple noticed is that gas heating in colder months is much more expensive than it was for them in the U.S. at roughly $ 275 a month.

(For its part, International Living estimates that you can live on less than $ 2,000 a month in Le Marche.)

Sunny Bertollini

A view from a window at the couple’s home.

Health care: “The health care has been phenomenal,” Hinshaw, who needed an angiogram recently, says — and as MarketWatch reported earlier this year, the Italian health-care system gets excellent ratings from outside sources. But the couple notes that there tends to be a difference in the quality of care depending on where you live; others say the same, with the Guardian noting that there are “regional differences in the standard of some state-run hospitals, with facilities in northern Italy being considered better than those in the south.” The couple says that they pay nearly $ 1,900 a year for insurance as residents not from the European Union.

Residency: It’s not easy for Americans to get residency here, says Hinshaw: “I think a lot of Americans who fall in love with Italy are so used to moving between states and think, ‘Well you just pack up and move,’ ” he says. “Well, not exactly. It takes years of prep, and many types of documents and submissions. It’s a focused process that can go sideways.” Here are details on how to get residency in Italy as an American.

Sunny Bertollini

Mark Hinshaw at a café.

Daily life: America, it is not. “The pace is different,” says Bertollini. “Mark and I have a rule — we call it the Rule of Three Things. You can get the first thing done for sure and probably the second thing. If you get the third thing done, you are lucky.” Part of this is that people in town stop to say hello and catch up, she says: “Everything is about relationships with everyone else. … This is very much a community.”

Italians, she points out, do not live by the Rule of Three Things. “They say instead, ‘Anything you can do today, could be done tomorrow.’ Americans tend to have huge to-do lists, but if you try to rush an Italian, they just say, ‘Piano, piano,’ which translates roughly to “Easy does it.”

Sunny Bertollini

Grapes from a nearby vineyard.

Cons: The couple says that it took a year or so to get adjusted to life here, as things can be slow-moving and bureaucratic. And though they live in an area with “great food,” they also miss dim sum and barbecue and getting takeout whenever they want it, Hinshaw says. Bertollini points out that she has expanded her cooking repertoire to include a number of new cuisines since moving here.

Language: “I thought I knew some Italian before I got here,” jokes Hinshaw — but the dialect where they live is different from what his formal lessons taught him. But, he says, it’s a huge advantage in quickly learning a language to be around people speaking it all the time. “I am finally understanding entire concepts, not just words,” he says. “It is actually fun now.”

Bottom line: Though moving here has been an adjustment from their faster-paced working life in America, they say they love it. “My favorite thing is the tranquility,” says Bertollini. “I pick up a frantic energy in the U.S. … Here there are stressors, but there is a measure of tranquility that I cannot find in the U.S.”

Let’s block ads! (Why?)

MarketWatch.com – Top Stories

About

Check Also

: ‘We shouldn’t be complacent’: Suicide deaths fell during the 2020 pandemic — but what caused the decline?

Preliminary estimates suggest that suicide deaths declined amid the unprecedented mental-health and economic challenges last …