Every year, surveys like InterNations Expat Insider and HSBC Expat Explorer rank the "worst countries for expats." And every year, the same countries appear: Saudi Arabia, China, India, Japan, Nigeria, Germany, UAE.
And every year, millions of people move to these countries anyway.
That contradiction is worth exploring. Because the surveys measure satisfaction โ and satisfaction is just the gap between expectation and reality. If you move to Japan expecting American-style friendliness, you'll be miserable. If you move expecting solitude, formality, and the world's most perfect train system, you might fall in love.
This is not a hit piece. It's an honest guide to seven countries with real expat challenges โ and a genuine attempt to explain why, for the right person, each one is worth it.
1. Saudi Arabia โ Social restrictions meet tax-free wealth
The challenges are real:
Saudi Arabia consistently ranks last or near-last in expat surveys for quality of life. The reasons are obvious: alcohol is illegal (completely), dress codes are enforced (though relaxing for women), social mixing between unrelated men and women was restricted until recently, LGBTQ+ rights are non-existent (and the legal penalties are severe), and the summer heat in Riyadh hits 50ยฐC (122ยฐF).
Entertainment options have expanded under Vision 2030 โ concerts, cinemas, mixed-gender events โ but Saudi Arabia remains one of the most socially conservative countries on Earth.
The honest assessment: If personal freedom, nightlife, and progressive social norms are important to you, Saudi Arabia will make you miserable. There's no sugarcoating this.
Why people keep moving there:
Money. Saudi offers some of the highest expat salaries in the world, and all of it is tax-free. A mid-level engineer earns $80,000โ$120,000 with housing allowance, annual flights home, and no income tax. Senior executives earn $200,000โ$500,000+. Compound that over 5โ10 years with minimal expenses, and you build generational wealth.
Who thrives: Financial planners with a 5-year exit plan. Couples saving for early retirement. Engineers and healthcare workers willing to trade social life for savings. People from conservative cultures who find Saudi's social structure familiar rather than restrictive.
2. China โ The Great Firewall meets career acceleration
The challenges are real:
The Great Firewall blocks Google, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube, and most Western social media. Using a VPN is technically illegal (though widely practiced). Air pollution in Beijing and other northern cities remains severe despite improvements. Mandarin is essential for any meaningful integration โ English rarely works outside international business settings. Government surveillance is pervasive. And geopolitical tensions create periodic waves of anti-foreign sentiment.
The zero-COVID era (2020-2023) traumatized the expat community, and trust in policy predictability hasn't fully recovered.
Why people keep moving there:
China's economy is the world's second largest, and for specific careers โ manufacturing, supply chain, certain tech sectors, Mandarin-language finance โ there's simply nowhere else that offers the same opportunities. Shanghai remains one of Asia's most exciting cities, with a food scene, arts culture, and energy that rivals any global capital.
Who thrives: Mandarin speakers (or those committed to learning). Supply chain and manufacturing professionals. People who find China's history and culture genuinely fascinating. Entrepreneurs with China-specific business models.
3. India โ Beautiful chaos
The challenges are real:
India overwhelms every sense simultaneously. Traffic is a contact sport. Pollution in Delhi reaches hazardous levels (400+ AQI) every winter. Bureaucracy is Kafkaesque โ a simple bank account can take weeks and multiple visits. Infrastructure varies wildly โ world-class airports alongside potholed roads. Stomach illness is almost guaranteed in the first few months. Personal space is a foreign concept. And the poverty, visible everywhere, is confronting.
The honest assessment: India breaks most expats in the first three months. The sensory overload, the pace, the unpredictability โ it's genuinely difficult. Culture shock here isn't a wave; it's a continuous tsunami.
Why people keep moving there:
Because nothing on Earth compares to India. The food โ not restaurant food, street food โ is the most complex and varied on the planet. The history stretches back 5,000 years and is visible in living temples, forts, and traditions. The people, once you break through the initial chaos, are among the warmest and most generous anywhere. Spirituality isn't a wellness trend; it's woven into daily life. And the cost of living ($800โ$1,500/month for a comfortable life) means your money goes extraordinarily far.
India also has a booming tech sector. Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Pune are genuine tech hubs with growing communities of international workers.
Who thrives: People with high chaos tolerance. Spiritual seekers who want depth, not retreats. Tech workers in India-specific roles. Food obsessives. Anyone who finds predictability boring.
4. Japan โ Lonely perfection
The challenges are real:
Japan is, by virtually every expat survey, the loneliest country for foreigners. Japanese social culture operates on clearly defined in-groups and out-groups, and foreigners are permanently out-group. Friendliness is universal โ genuine closeness is rare. The language barrier is severe (Japanese literacy requires 2,000+ kanji characters). Work culture, while improving, still normalizes extreme hours. And the bureaucratic rigidity โ fill this form in black ink, not blue โ tests patience.
The concept of tatemae (public face) vs. honne (true feelings) means that the warm smile from your colleague might mask complete indifference. Decoding social signals in Japan takes years, not months.
Why people keep moving there:
Because Japan works. The trains are precisely on time. The food is transcendent. The safety is unparalleled โ a wallet dropped in Tokyo has a 90%+ chance of being returned with all cash intact. The cultural depth โ from tea ceremony to manga, from ancient temples to cyberpunk Akihabara โ is inexhaustible. Healthcare is excellent and affordable. And the aesthetic sense โ in architecture, food presentation, garden design, packaging โ makes daily life feel curated.
Who thrives: Introverts who enjoy solitude. Japanese culture enthusiasts who've studied the language. People who value order, safety, and beauty over social warmth. Anyone who finds peace in ritual and routine.
5. Nigeria โ Infrastructure gaps meet explosive energy
The challenges are real:
Nigeria tests expats in ways that most countries don't. Power outages are daily โ generators are a household essential, not a backup. Traffic in Lagos is legendary (2โ4 hour commutes are normal). Security concerns are genuine โ gated compounds, security guards, and careful route planning are standard. Healthcare outside Lagos and Abuja's private hospitals is limited. The bureaucratic environment is unpredictable. And scam awareness must be constant.
The heat and humidity in Lagos are intense. Internet is improving but unreliable. And the sheer density of Lagos (24+ million people) creates a sensory experience that makes Mumbai look tranquil.
Why people keep moving there:
Nigeria is Africa's largest economy and most populous country. The energy โ business energy, creative energy, social energy โ is intoxicating. Lagos's music scene (Afrobeats went global from here), tech ecosystem (Flutterwave, Paystack, Andela), and entrepreneurial culture are unmatched on the continent.
For professionals in oil & gas, fintech, media, and development, Nigeria offers career opportunities that don't exist elsewhere in Africa. And the people โ Nigerians are famous for their warmth, humor, and hospitality โ make you feel genuinely welcome in ways that many "friendly" countries don't.
Who thrives: Entrepreneurs and hustlers who match Nigeria's energy. Oil & gas professionals (Port Harcourt). Fintech workers (Lagos). People from other high-intensity cities (Mumbai, Sรฃo Paulo, Cairo) who find the chaos familiar. Anyone who values human connection over infrastructure.
6. Germany โ Bureaucratic precision that drives you insane
The challenges are real:
Germany is the country that should be perfect for expats โ strong economy, excellent infrastructure, central European location โ but consistently underwhelms in satisfaction surveys. The reasons: bureaucracy (Bรผrgeramt appointments booked months in advance), social coldness (Germans don't do small talk, and making German friends takes years), the language barrier (despite high English proficiency, bureaucracy and social life require German), Sunday closures (Ruhetag means virtually everything is closed), and a general rigidity that can feel suffocating.
The tax system is complex and high (42% top rate). Finding an apartment in Berlin or Munich is a Hunger Games-level competition. And the weather โ gray skies from November through March โ affects mental health.
The honest assessment: Germany is the country most likely to make you feel like a competent adult who suddenly can't do anything. Opening a bank account, registering your address, getting internet installed โ every mundane task becomes a bureaucratic odyssey.
Why people keep moving there:
Stability. Germany offers something increasingly rare: a reliable, predictable, high-functioning society. The economy is Europe's largest. Healthcare is universal and excellent (โฌ100โโฌ400/month). Education is free through university โ even for foreigners. Workers' rights are among the strongest in the world (30 days vacation, strong protections against firing). Public transit works. Infrastructure is maintained. The social safety net catches you if you fall.
And Berlin โ despite everything โ remains one of Europe's most creative, diverse, and affordable capital cities. The startup scene is booming. The cultural life is extraordinary. And once you do make German friends, those friendships tend to be deep and lifelong.
Who thrives: Structured people who appreciate systems. Engineers (Germany is the engineering capital of Europe). Families who prioritize free education and healthcare. People who value stability over excitement. Anyone willing to invest 2-3 years in learning German and navigating the system.
7. UAE โ Wealth-building in a constructed reality
The challenges are real:
The UAE โ specifically Dubai and Abu Dhabi โ gets criticized as soulless, artificial, and culturally empty. Critics call it a shopping mall with a flag. The summer heat (45-50ยฐC) makes outdoor life impossible for 5 months. The social hierarchy is stark โ citizens (15% of population) at the top, Western expats in the middle, South Asian laborers at the bottom. Alcohol requires a license. Cohabitation of unmarried couples was illegal until recently. And everything feels transactional โ people come, make money, leave.
The lack of permanent residency (until recently) created a perpetual "guest worker" feeling. You could live in Dubai for 20 years and still not be a real part of the country.
Why people keep moving there:
Tax-free income. World-class infrastructure. Safety (among the lowest crime rates globally). A central geographic position connecting Europe, Asia, and Africa. And an increasingly diversified economy that offers genuine career opportunities in finance, tech, logistics, hospitality, and entrepreneurship.
Dubai's new Golden Visa (10-year residency for property investors and high earners) is changing the transience problem. The social scene, while transactional, is also incredibly international โ your neighbor might be from Nigeria, your colleague from France, your gym buddy from Australia.
Who thrives: Career-focused professionals in their 30s-40s building wealth. Entrepreneurs leveraging Dubai's business-friendly environment. Families who prioritize safety, modern infrastructure, and tax-free savings. People who enjoy international diversity without deep cultural integration.
Key Takeaways
- Every "worst" country has a clear value proposition โ money (Saudi, UAE), career (China, Nigeria), culture (Japan, India), stability (Germany)
- The surveys measure satisfaction gaps โ manage expectations, and the experience transforms
- Language is the #1 factor โ Japan, China, and Germany become dramatically better if you speak the language
- 2-3 years is the minimum for most of these countries to feel rewarding โ quick trips won't work
- Know yourself first โ introverts thrive in Japan, chaos-lovers in India, system-lovers in Germany
- Financial outcomes are best in Saudi and UAE โ tax-free income compounds powerfully over 5-10 years
- Nigeria and India offer the most growth โ personally and professionally, if you can handle the intensity
The meta-lesson
The "best" country for expats doesn't exist. There are only countries that are best for specific people with specific priorities. The countries on this list are challenging โ genuinely, honestly challenging. But they're also the countries that change people the most.
The easy destinations (Portugal, Thailand, Spain) are wonderful. But they're wonderful in comfortable, predictable ways. The hard destinations โ the ones on this list โ are where the real transformation happens. If you let them.
Not sure which type of expat you are? Take our quiz and find out. It's honest about trade-offs, not just sunshine.
Last updated: March 18, 2026
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