Price Comparison: How $1,500 a Month Buys a Comfortable and Stress-Free Island Lifestyle in Bohol
The numbers have been crunched. The apartments have been sized. The math is not close — and the gap between what your money does in a high-cost city versus what it does on a Philippine island is wide enough to make you sit with it for a while.
The premise of this piece is simple. Take $1,500 USD. That is approximately ₱87,000 Philippine pesos at current exchange rates, roughly £1,180 British pounds, about €1,380, or somewhere in the neighborhood of ¥229,000 Japanese yen. Now ask one question: what kind of life does that money purchase, month to month, as a single adult, in five different cities on this planet?
The answer, depending on where you’re sitting right now, will either confirm something you already suspected, or it will stop you mid-paragraph and make you open a browser tab you weren’t planning to open today.
This is not a fantasy. These numbers are drawn from current cost-of-living data, expat reports on the ground, and the kind of honest accounting that people actually do when they’re deciding whether to stay or go. Every city below has been given a fair representation of what a liveable, non-miserable existence actually costs — not the budget-travel extreme, not the luxury tier, but the middle: a decent apartment in a walkable area, good food, healthcare provision, transportation, and enough left over to feel like a human being rather than a financial hostage.
San Francisco — Where $1,500 Is a Punchline
London — Functionality, at a Price That Slowly Grinds You Down
Tokyo — Small, Orderly, and More Expensive Than It Looks
Seoul — The Best Deal in the Group. Still Not Close.
Bohol — Where the Same Money Becomes a Different Life Entirely
I spent six years in London feeling financially behind. I moved to Bohol on $22,000 a year remote income and felt wealthy. The city was not making me poor. It was making me feel poor, which is worse.
Marcus, 42 — London to Bohol, 2024The Side-by-Side: What You Actually Get for Your Money
For $1,500 per month, your apartment looks like this:
A shared room in a flat with 2–3 other people. No private kitchen. Neighbourhood with significant street homelessness. 40+ minute commute to central areas.
A bedsit in Zone 3–4 — one room with a combined sleeping/living area, shared bathroom or tiny ensuite. About 15 square metres. Thin walls.
A 1K apartment — 18 to 22 square metres. A single room plus a small kitchen alcove. Clean, functional, and approximately the size of a large hotel room. Permanently.
A gosiwon — a private room of approximately 6–9 square metres with a wall-mounted TV and a small desk. Shared laundry. More like a capsule hotel than an apartment.
A furnished one or two-bedroom apartment with a living room, a full kitchen, a proper bathroom, and — depending on location — a garden, a terrace, or an ocean view. Fresh air moving through the rooms. A motorbike parked outside. Space to breathe. Room for guests. Your own front door, which opens onto a beach road, or a quiet barangay street, or a hillside with a coconut grove, depending on the week you decided to leave.
The Numbers, All Together — Monthly Cost of Living Comparison
| Expense Category | San Francisco | London | Tokyo | Seoul | Bohol |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (own space) | $1,200* | $1,070 | $460 | $430 | $130–240 |
| Groceries | $280 | $225 | $230 | $255 | $125 |
| Transport | $110 | $220 | $118 | $58 | $45 |
| Utilities + Internet | $80 | $175 | $158 | $118 | $100 |
| Healthcare | $180 | $0 (NHS) | $144 | $80 | $145 |
| Dining out + Social | $140 | $138 | $144 | $145 | $200 |
| Total / Month (USD) | ~$1,990 | ~$1,828 | ~$1,254 | ~$1,086 | ~$745–860 |
| Saved from $1,500 | −$490 | −$328 | +$246 | +$414 | +$640–755 |
* San Francisco figure represents a shared room, not a private apartment. All Bohol figures in USD equivalent at ₱58 to $1. Figures reflect 2025–2026 data and represent realistic mid-range living costs, not budget minimums or luxury levels.
The Argument This Math Is Actually Making
The case is not that Bohol is paradise or that the cost differential solves every problem. Living abroad has genuine costs — family distance, career interruption, bureaucratic friction, cultural adjustment — that do not appear in any spreadsheet but are as real as any utility bill.
The case is this: for a single person running a remote income, a freelance career, a pension withdrawal, or a modest investment return, the difference between living in Bohol and living in a major Western or East Asian city is not just financial comfort. It is a fundamentally different relationship to money itself.
In San Francisco or London, $1,500 a month is not a life — it is a deficit. Every month, the gap between what you earn and what the city costs is a source of low-grade anxiety that becomes background noise so persistent that people stop hearing it as anxiety and start hearing it as normal. The resignation to financial tightness is so widespread in high-cost cities that it has become cultural.
In Bohol, $1,500 a month is comfortable. Not extravagant. Not without consideration. But genuinely, materially comfortable, with savings capacity, with a life that includes good food and outdoor time and occasional travel and the quiet satisfaction of a bank balance that moves in the right direction.
I was earning $95,000 a year in San Francisco and felt financially precarious. I moved to Bohol on $22,000 a year remote income and felt wealthy. The city was not making me poor. It was making me feel poor, which is worse.
Marcus, 42 — San Francisco to Bohol, 2023That distinction — between being financially constrained and being made to feel financially constrained — is worth sitting with. The high-cost city is not just taking your money. It is shaping your relationship with scarcity, your sense of what you deserve, your assessment of what a normal life should cost. Relocating, for many people, is not just a budget decision. It is a recalibration of what life is allowed to feel like.
What the Numbers Don’t Capture
The figures above are accurate, and they are not the whole story.
They don’t capture the morning you wake up in a Bohol apartment and the sea is 200 metres away and there is no commute and no alarm set and breakfast is a mango that cost ₱20 and tastes like the actual thing rather than the refrigerated version of the thing. They don’t capture the particular quality of being somewhere that your money is not being extracted from you as a condition of existence.
They also don’t capture the hardships. The internet outages during a client call. The bureaucratic afternoon at the Bureau of Immigration that costs a day. The craving for things the island simply doesn’t have — specific foods, specific cultural events, specific social configurations that require a city’s density to exist. The guilt of distance from aging parents that sits underneath the savings account and does not respond to good exchange rates.
The numbers make the argument financially. The lived reality makes it more complicated, and more human, than any table can represent. What the table gives you is a starting point — the unsentimental data that says: the arithmetic of high-cost urban life is not neutral. It is a choice, and it has an alternative, and the alternative is closer than most people think.
What you do with that information is your own calculation to run.
Move2Bohol — bohol-coconuts.com/move2bohol
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