Moving to Cordoba

A step-by-step guide for people who actually plan to stay in Cordoba, Argentina. Not a vacation itinerary.

Monthly cost

$1,063

solo, city centre

Livability

61/100

decent

Safety

63/100

Know your neighborhoods

PR timeline

2 yrs

citizenship: 2y

How to move to Cordoba

Visas, residency, and the paperwork you can't avoid

Argentina Rentista Visa

Some paperwork

Duration: 1 year (renewable)

Proof of regular foreign income. Argentina's low cost of living makes this very popular.

Visa difficulty by nationality

EUeasy
USeasy
RUeasy
UAeasy

2 years

to permanent residency

2 years

to citizenship

Work permit accessibility: moderate

What it costs to move to Cordoba

First-month sticker shock, decoded

Day-one setup cost

First month's rent$447
Security deposit(1 month)$447
Agency fee$447
Furniture & setup$750
Total to move in$2,091

$447

1-bed, city centre / mo

Cheaper than 94% of 97 cities

$852

3-bed, city centre / mo

Monthly burn (solo)

$1,063/mo

Rent + groceries + transport + utilities. No avocado toast budget.

Housing friction

Easy

1–2 weeks, relaxed market

  • Garantía or caución insurance
  • 1–2 months' deposit
  • Less competition than Buenos Aires
  • University city — seasonal fluctuations

First month in Cordoba

The to-do list nobody gives you at the airport

  • Apply for Argentina Rentista Visa

    1 year (renewable). Proof of regular foreign income. Argentina's low cost of living makes this very popular.

  • Open a local bank account

    Bring a Spanish-speaking friend or prepare for mime-based banking

  • Get a local SIM card

    ~$15/mo for 10GB+

  • Find an apartment

    Expect 1–2 weeks, relaxed market. Housing friction: Easy.

  • Have $2,091 ready for move-in costs

    First month + 1mo deposit + furniture

  • Register with local authorities

    Most countries require address registration within 30 days

  • Get health insurance

    Private insurance ~$55/mo until residency kicks in

  • Start learning basic Spanish

    Not strictly necessary, but your landlord will like you more

Language in Cordoba

Can you order coffee without pointing?

Spanish

primary language

High

English proficiency

Most people speak English well enough. You can survive without learning Spanish, but your landlord will like you more if you try.

Will the government leave you alone?

Democracy, freedom, and regime vibes

6.5/10

democracy index (EIU)

🏚️ Flawed democracy

regime type

#46 of 163

Global Peace Index (lower = more peaceful)

Travel advisory: Level 1Exercise normal precautions

Is Cordoba safe?

Crime stats for people who read footnotes

⚠️

Know your neighborhoods

4.3

homicides per 100k

Crime index: 61/100

Elevated. Research neighborhoods carefully before signing a lease.

Weather in Cordoba

What the thermometer actually says

29°C

summer highs

6°C

winter lows

27 Mbps

average download speed

If you get sick

Healthcare access for new arrivals

System: Free public hospitals open to everyone, including foreigners

Before residency: Public hospitals treat everyone free — citizens, residents, tourists, undocumented immigrants. No questions asked. Quality varies by hospital but major public hospitals in Buenos Aires are genuinely good. Private insurance (~$50/mo) gets you into shinier clinics with shorter waits. (private insurance ~$55/mo)

The honest take

What we'd tell a friend

Going for it

  • Cordoba rent: $447/mo. Your friends won't believe you.
  • Cordoba hits 29°C in summer. Properly warm.
  • Cordoba's tech and social scene runs on English. Day-one functional.

Think twice about

  • Homicide rate in Cordoba: 4.3/100k. Study the neighborhoods first.
  • Democracy 6.5/10 in Argentina. Cordoba's rule of law is inconsistent.
  • Cordoba's bureaucracy speaks Spanish. Get to A2 before you need a lease.

This is the settler summary. For the full data dump:

Full Cordoba profile →