More people are embracing maritime travel as a viable retirement option, a way of combining adventure, security, and medical services at a cost that can be surprisingly more affordable than a traditional nursing home.
Villa Vie Residences, a US-based cruise line, is making this dream a reality with its permanent residency-at-sea programme. In October 2024, the company launched its first cruise aboard the Odyssey, which promised passengers a round-the-world journey. Residents can choose to purchase a cabin, rent one, or lease it for life through the “Endless Horizons” programme, which allows them to live comfortably while exploring 425 ports across 147 countries over a three-and-a-half-year voyage.
Cruise ship retirement revolution
The company’s latest innovation is the “Golden Passport”, a new offering that opens the scheme to more passengers. Prices vary by age, starting at €85,305 for those over 90 and rising to €341,223 for those aged 55 to 60. The passport covers meals, housekeeping, laundry, annual medical checkups, as many alcoholic beverages as you like with meals, and all fees, including port taxes and service charges. Residents can also invite family and friends onboard for a daily fee of €110.
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“As people retire, one of their biggest fears is outliving their money. With the Golden Passport, that uncertainty disappears — one payment secures a lifetime of adventure,” says Mikael Petterson, Founder of Villa Vie Residences. While the percentage of inheritance tax creeps up in many countries, more options to enjoy one’s money while still alive are beginning to appear.
Currently, the Odyssey is the only ship operating as a permanent residence, but the Golden Passport will be transferable across Villa Vie’s future fleet. Each complete journey is expected to last approximately three and a half years, with residents able to stay onboard longer if desired.
Kathy Villalba, the company’s CEO, has stressed the unique opportunity: “Life moves fast, and the most common regret people share is not travelling the world when they had the chance. The Golden Passport makes that dream possible and affordable in a way never seen before in the cruise industry.”
Cruise ship retirement cheaper than living on land
Sharon Lane, a former high school foreign language teacher from California, purchased an interior villa aboard the Villa Vie Odyssey, the world’s first perpetual cruise, since she claimed it was cheaper to live at sea than remain in the Golden State. “Not only was it affordable to me, it would actually cost me less money to live here like this, have everyone taking care of me instead of me taking care of everybody,” Lane told NBC Los Angeles.
The voyage has become one last blowout, the ultimate extravagance, a last prize from life, free from world politics and the tax man, and a way to take a see the world one port at a time.
