Why Vancouver Retirees Are Quietly Choosing Bucerías, Mexico
There's a quiet migration happening on Mexico's Pacific coast — and a surprising number of the people arriving have British Columbia plates and West Coast accents. The town of Bucerías, just north of Puerto Vallarta, has earned a nickname that says it all: "B.C.-rias."
It isn't a coincidence. For a Vancouverite facing one of the least affordable cities on earth, the math of retiring in the Riviera Nayarit has become almost impossible to ignore. Here's the honest, data-backed breakdown of why.
The hard truth about Vancouver
Vancouver isn't just expensive — it's officially in a category researchers call "impossibly unaffordable." In the 2025 Demographia International Housing Affordability report, Vancouver ranked the 4th least affordable major housing market in the world, with a median home price equal to 11.8 times the median household income. Only Hong Kong, Sydney, and San Jose scored worse.
For a retiree, that number is brutal. Your home equity is enormous — but so is the cost of staying. Property taxes, maintenance, and the simple cost of living in one of North America's priciest cities eat into a fixed income every month. That's exactly why so many people run the same calculation: what if I sold, and bought somewhere the sun shines all winter?
The math that changes everything
As of early 2025, the median sale price of a condo in the Bucerías market was about $437,910 USD — and the market currently favors buyers, with rising inventory and properties spending longer on the market (room to negotiate). For someone selling a Vancouver home worth several multiples of that, the gap can fund a beachfront condo and a comfortable cushion.
Then there's income. Canadian pensions stretch dramatically further south of the border. In 2026, the maximum Canada Pension Plan benefit is up to $1,507.65 CAD/month, plus Old Age Security of up to $743.05/month (ages 65–74). That income funds a modest existence in Vancouver — but a genuinely good life in Bucerías. (Figures shown are maximums; actual amounts vary by contribution history.)
"But can a foreigner even own property in Mexico?"
Yes — safely and legally. This is the first question every Canadian buyer asks, and the answer is well-established. Mexican law restricts direct foreign ownership within 50 km of the coast (which includes Bucerías). The solution, used for decades, is the fideicomiso: a bank trust authorized by Mexico's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE).
A Mexican bank holds title as trustee, while you — the foreign buyer — are the named beneficiary with full rights to use, rent, renovate, sell, and pass the property to your heirs. The trust is established by public deed, runs for a renewable 50-year term, and is a normal, government-regulated part of buying on the coast. In short: all the benefits of ownership, through a structure the Mexican government created specifically for this purpose.
"What about my health care?"
For retirees, this is the deal-breaker question — and the Riviera Nayarit answers it well. The Puerto Vallarta–Bucerías corridor is served by full-spectrum private hospitals with bilingual staff: Hospital CMQ Premiere in Puerto Vallarta (24/7 emergency, ICU, advanced cardiac and robotic surgery, MRI/CT) and Hospital San Javier Riviera Nayarit in Nuevo Vallarta, roughly 10–15 km away. High-quality, English-speaking care, minutes from home, at a fraction of U.S. costs.
"Will I be the only Canadian there?"
Hardly. Canadians — especially British Columbians — have wintered in Bucerías since the 1980s and today make up a very large share of the seasonal population. (Again: "B.C.-rias.") You're not pioneering; you're joining an established community with the restaurants, services, and social fabric that come with it. Curious what daily life looks like? Read our guide to living in Bucerías, Mexico.
And getting there just got easier
The final piece fell into place for the winter of 2025: the first-ever direct flights between Canada and the Riviera Nayarit region. Air Canada launched weekly Vancouver–Tepic service in December 2025, joining WestJet's Calgary route — on top of the long-running Vancouver–Puerto Vallarta connection. A nonstop flight home for the holidays is no longer a layover marathon.
The takeaway
Put it together and the picture is clear. Vancouver gives you world-class equity locked inside an impossibly expensive city. Bucerías offers a beachfront home you can actually afford, a pension that finally breathes, a legal path to ownership, real health care, an established Canadian community, and a direct flight back whenever you want it. That's why the move isn't loud or trendy. It's just... sensible — and it's happening one B.C. retiree at a time.
Thinking about your own move? HOMIA builds and sells boutique beachfront residences in Bucerías and the Riviera Nayarit, and guides Canadian and U.S. buyers through the entire fideicomiso process — in English, with zero buyer fees. Talk to our team →


