The cost of living in Buenos Aires

windy

Registered
Joined
Jul 12, 2007
Messages
192
Likes
45
THE COST OF LIVING IN BUENOS AIRES

We have a lot of inflation in argentina so by the time you read this it will probably be out of date.
1)i will try to help as best i can with the expat list.
FOOD AND BERVERAGES Supermarkets are very cheap espcially for beers and wines. They also offer big discounts on certain days if you pay by credit card.
2)ACCOMMODATION. The cheapest way to stay in buenos aires is to rent an apartment.you can rent a fully furnished apartment for about u$s1000 per month.All bills included. I would reccomend www.myspaceba.com but there are many others.
3) PUBLIC TRANSport is very cheap. The subway is 30cents u$s for a journey of any distance.
Buses are equally as cheap but a little bit dificult if you don´t know the city too well.
A return train ticket to tigre is less than u$s1 for a journey of more than 20miles each way.
If staying in the city you really won´t need a car. The public transport is that good. Plus finding a place to park a car is a bloody nightmare and becomes expensive.
4)UTILITYS BILLS if you rent a furnished apartment all the bills will be included. Sometimes the owner puts a limit on the bills just to remind the tenant to turn off the ac when they go out.
But most bills are inexpensive in comparison to the US and Europe.
5) INCOME TAX now thats a grey area. Argentina is the biggest black economy i have ever seen.
So people are paid a certain amount in cash some in vouchers and some is taxed, it really is a different answer for every person.
MEDICAL INSURANCE We are a family of four and pay u$s300 per month for very good quality medical insurance.
SCHOOLS Public education is not great here so its best to pay and go private. Buenos aires is awash with bilingual fee paying schools and they are very cheap in comparison to europe or the states. Starting prices are from about u$s200 amonth but can go much higher.
NURSERYS care is about u$s200 for 3 hrs per day per month.
6) ENTERTAINMENT AND RESTAURANTS IN BUENOS AIRES are as good as any place you will ever visit.
Very affordable with loads of choice.many tango shows theatres and operas and thousands of great restuarants.
 
Hey, two of the most prestigious High Schools in the City are Public: Nacional Buenos Aires and Carlos Pellegrini. To pass the admission exam is not easy at all.And at college level the UBA remains the most respected in many areas, not to mention leading Universities in Córdoba, Rosario and La Plata.
Agree with what you say in the case of Grammar Schools, though, and most of the High Schools.
Sorry for the digression, just wanted to have my say about that part of the post!
 
Conrado said:
Hey, two of the most prestigious High Schools in the City are Public: Nacional Buenos Aires and Carlos Pellegrini. To pass the admission exam is not easy at all.And at college level the UBA remains the most respected in many areas, not to mention leading Universities in Córdoba, Rosario and La Plata.

Totally agree. They are known for being excellent schools/universities.
 
There's also the Instituto Nacional de Lenguas Vivas, for languages and literature - free and excellent.
 
I stand corrected, Very sorry if i caused any offence. I was only reffering to schools and not to any Universities. I think it great that Argentina offers free uni education. And the standard is very good.
 
I'm kind of curious what kind of medical insurance you have. I just got my first bill after the increase this month and am now paying 833 pesos for a single person (so a bit over $200 USD) with Swiss Medical.
 
$ 1100 pesos for a family of four does sound a little low. But maybe the prices are slightly lower in the province.
 
I am curious about this. When I signed up I was paying 270 pesos, now I am paying 360 pesos. It has slowly been increasing on me over the past few months, then it jumped like 50 pesos in the last bill. They sent me some kind of letter saying it was due to higher cost, inflation, whatever, but I am getting worried, are they going to stop increasing everyone's payments anytime soon or is it just going to get worse? Do you know anything? Sorry to be off topic!

citygirl said:
I'm kind of curious what kind of medical insurance you have. I just got my first bill after the increase this month and am now paying 833 pesos for a single person (so a bit over $200 USD) with Swiss Medical.
 
Back
Top