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Stephanie Synclair, 41, owns her own business and makes $80,000 a year. She lives in Atlanta but made Sicily her home away from home in 2022 when she bought a house there for around $62,000.

This is an installment of CNBC Make It’s Millennial Money series, which profiles people across the globe and details how they earn, spend and save their money.

Produced, Shot and Edited by: Mickey Todiwala
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I Bought A Home In Sicily For $62,000 – Now I Live In Both America & Italy

45 Comments

  1. Thank you for sharing. My dream is to immigrate. Your video is part of my research. All the best to you. 💚

  2. Is it possible to live in Italy full time? I have a friend who planned to move there several years ago in retirement but had to return to the US a few times a year for some weeks bc of Italian regulations. Perhaps that’s different now?

  3. I've visited Sicily – curious what part of Sicily you've settled in (by Taormina?) When I visited in 2019, their unemployment rate was about 50%.

  4. Good to see some African American person being financially educated and well off. We need such discipline and education among black americans.

  5. This should be everyone’s goal… living in USA is best if you live in part time and live some place else. Split your living time. Quality of life is better outside of USA.. Only the impoverished dreams to live in USA

  6. I'm so glad to hear this nice person (smart too) talk so good about Italians. Wish her much happiness.
    No one ever praises us.
    I never understood that and we are inventors of the world too. Our contributions are monumental.
    I love being Italian
    100% 🇮🇹🇺🇲

  7. She misses the point Italy is part of the EU, demographics are changing, kids are leaving and it's in deflation like Greece. So she needs to factor in all of that. Next few years may get ugly as NATO commitments increase taxes and Italian Government pays for ageing population. Good try though.

  8. The Sicilian peasants love rich Americans buying up their property. Yeah, they sure do love those rich Americans.

  9. I mean… they could have gone to a more "authentic" local market than Carrefour, but that actually is where the locals shop.

  10. Good luck with taxes, burocracy, corruption, sicilian's code of silence, political ignorance…Just few ones I can think of. The list is long

  11. We just spent 5 weeks in Italy and Portugal. We rented an apartment each week and bought groceries. Of all things on our trip groceries were equal or more expensive than in the US. I'd say the locals there buy 2 or 3 days worth of food per visit whereas we buy food for a week or more. We never saw milk bigger than a liter. Restaurants, bakeries, cafes, lodging, Uber and the sights were quite a bit less though, probably close to half if you get away from the tourist areas.

  12. If you make $80k, after taxes, even expensing 50% of it, factoring in plane fare for you and your son, the math doesn't add up.

  13. Yeah, there's something going on here besides what's in the video. Like how can she retire in Italy as an American without Italian citizenship? You can visit and invest of course, but to live there year round is different. And she's definitely making more than $80k to have all those expenses and still be a millionaire at 41.

  14. We are a 6 figure income couple and had very little saved and not much cash lying around the preverbal".
    '…don't have $500 for an
    emergency" that was us. The big thing was debt all kinds of it, cars mortgage (although our home isn't a high price one), student loans for our kids, and of course credit cards.
    One day we just got sick of being broke and went total scorched earth and became frugal overnight. Paid it all off, it took almost 5 years but now we have no debt and this year our savings rate is 50% on basically the same income that had us perpetually broke. So for us it is mainly staying out of debt and watching our spending, at first it was a real effort to save in our HISA and 401Ks but now it's actually fun watching our money grow. No car or vacation or neighborhood is worth being broke or financially unstable.

  15. Please stop saying gracias to Italian people. Really. That's Spanish.
    Also prices feel low because you come with American dollars. That's not cheap for the average wages in Sicily especially. Glad she's enjoying Sicily tho.

  16. Sicily is awful 🤣in fact, the whole of Southern Italy is a disaster…the further North you go, the more it changes. We had a vacation home in Florence but we sold it and bought another one near Bologna, it's paradise 👍

  17. 🤣🤣🤣👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿🙌🏿🙏🏿🙌🏿🤗🥰

    *Timothy Ward channel sent us to YOU🥰🤗 …From His
    FREEDOM…

    *."Ancestors"🙏🏿❤️🙏🏿
    Video 🤗

    Blessings 🙏🏿 From Brooklyn NY 🙏🏿

    🫂🙏🏿🫂

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