Cost of living, property prices, climate, safety, healthcare and lifestyle data for Corse. Real numbers from INSEE + Notaires de France, refreshed Q4 2025.
Corse is a region in France covering major cities including Ajaccio, Bastia, Porto-Vecchio and 2 more. As of Q4 2025, average property prices stand at €3,496/m², 27% above the France national average of €2,757/m². Over the last 5 years, prices grew +20.3%, and over 10 years +44.8% — a moderate appreciation.
Cost of living for a single person averages €1,700/month — 6% below the national mean. Corse scores 55/100 on regional safety, with low crime levels. The climate is warm mediterranean — 275 sunny days per year, summers averaging 30°C and winters 13°C. Healthcare is rated adequate, with 2 major hospitals serving the region.
For digital nomads and remote workers, average internet speed is 115 Mbps with limited fiber rollout. none coworking scene. Lifestyle index: 24/100 — quiet cultural and gastronomic offering. For families: 0 international schools (0 with IB programme).
Caterelo LifeTrend™ score for Corse: 56/100 — combining 12 weighted dimensions (safety, climate, cost, healthcare, lifestyle, digital, education).
Sources: INSEE + Notaires de France, Eurostat, Numbeo, Speedtest Global Index, IPCC AR6.
Living costs in Corse are moderate compared to the France national mean — 6% lower. A single person typically spends €1,700/month for total expenses including rent, utilities, food and transport. A family of four spends approximately €3,900/month.
The average net salary in Corse is €2,150/month, giving an estimated purchasing power of moderate. France's national minimum wage is €1,823/month. For relocators on remote/foreign income, Corse's cost-to-amenity ratio is one of the most relevant metrics — at €1,700/month for a high quality of life, this is fair value.
Sources: Numbeo cost of living database, Eurostat purchasing power parity, Quadros de Pessoal/INE/ISTAT national salary surveys.
Corse has a warm mediterranean climate. Summer averages 30°C, winter 13°C. The region records 275 sunny days per year — well above the EU average. There are typically 60 rainy days per year.
By 2050 (IPCC AR6 SSP2-4.5 moderate scenario), Corse is projected to warm by +2.0°C overall, with summers warming faster (+2.7°C). Expected additional heat days per year: +14. Drought risk: high. Fire risk: critical. Sea level risk: moderate.
Corsica island fire risk critical; water scarcity + wildfire + summer heat intensifying
Sources: IPCC AR6 WG1 (2021), EURO-CORDEX regional downscaling (~12.5km), JRC PESETA IV (EU impact assessment).
Corse scores 55/100 on regional safety. Crime levels are low. Walking alone at night is generally safe. Women's safety: safe.
Corse has typical urban safety levels — exercise standard precautions in major cities, especially around tourist areas and transit hubs.
Sources: Numbeo Safety Index 2025, Eurostat crime statistics, national police annual reports.
Healthcare quality in Corse is adequate. The region has 2 major hospitals. Emergency response time is rated average. Private healthcare availability: low. Average annual private health insurance: €1,100.
EHIC (European Health Insurance Card) holders are covered for emergency and necessary medical care during stays. Common practitioner language: French. French is the primary language in public healthcare; private clinics may have English-speaking staff in larger cities.
Sources: WHO European Health Report, OECD Health at a Glance, Euro Health Consumer Index, regional health authorities.
Average internet speed in Corse is 115 Mbps. Fiber availability is limited, mobile network patchy. Coworking presence: minimal. Startup ecosystem: minimal. English proficiency among the working population: low.
Digital infra in Corse is solid for remote work — most homes can support video calls and standard professional workflows.
Sources: Speedtest Global Index, DESI 2024 (EU Digital Economy & Society Index), EF EPI English Proficiency Index, Nomad List.
Corse has 0 international schools, of which 0 offer the International Baccalaureate (IB) programme. Education quality rating: none. The region's education hub is Nice (ferry/flight), with significant clustering of expat-oriented schooling.
For families with school-aged children, Corse has limited international schooling — most expat families opt for local public schools or homeschooling. Public education is generally free for residents and high-quality at primary level across France.
Sources: International Schools Database, IBO.org official register, regional ministries of education.
Corse offers a quiet lifestyle for relocators. The region hosts approximately 4 coworking spaces and 0 startup hubs, with 8 cultural events per year and 10 major venues. Gastronomy score: 76/100. Nightlife: moderate.
For digital nomads, Corse is less developed — best for self-sufficient nomads who prefer quieter regions. Time zone: UTC+1. No specific digital nomad visa, but EU citizens have free movement.
Families relocating to Corse find 0 international schools, of which 0 offer the International Baccalaureate programme. Education quality: none. Education hub: Nice (ferry/flight) — significant cluster of expat-oriented schooling.
Healthcare quality is adequate with low private availability. Average private health insurance: €1,100/year. EU EHIC card holders are covered for emergency care. Emergency response time: average.
Climate trajectory 2050: Corse is projected to warm by +2.0°C with 14 additional heat days per year. Drought risk: high. Fire risk: critical. Sea level risk: moderate. Source: IPCC AR6 SSP2-4.5 + EURO-CORDEX regional models.
Sources: Coworker.com, Startup Genome, TripAdvisor, Numbeo Quality of Life Index, regional tourism authorities.
The property market in Corse as of Q4 2025: average €3,496/m². Compared to the France national average of €2,757/m², Corse sits 26.8% above.
Over the last 5 years prices grew +20.3%, and over 10 years +44.8%. A solid appreciation pattern, broadly in line with France's strongest regions.
Gross rental yield is approximately 5.9%. A 2-bedroom apartment rents for an average of €1,200/month, against an estimated purchase price of €244,720 for a 70m² property — implying 5.9% gross yield before costs (taxes, vacancy, management).
Yield is moderate — typical for established Southern European markets.
Sources: INSEE + Notaires de France, Eurostat HPI (prc_hpi_q), national property portals (idealista, immobiliare, Imovirtual, Spitogatos, SeLoger, Njuškalo).
Buying property in Corse follows the standard France process. Beyond the listed sale price, expect:
Notaire fees (frais de notaire): 7–8% on existing properties (includes registration tax + stamp duty + notary), 2–3% on new builds. Estate agent: 3–7%. Mortgage cost: 0.5–1% origination. Total: 9–11%.
Mortgage for non-residents: typically 60–70% LTV, 3–5% fixed rates. Resident buyers: up to 80–85% LTV, 2.5–4%. Property purchase timeline: 6–10 weeks from offer to keys.
Rental yield potential: ~5.9% gross. A 2-bed at €1,200/month against €3,496/m² × ~70m² = €244,720 purchase = 5.9% gross before costs (taxes, vacancy, management). Net yield typically 60–70% of gross.
Sources: National notary federations, ministries of finance, official transfer tax schedules, INSEE cadastral data.
Corse's LifeTrend™ relocation score of 56/100 reflects a weighted blend of safety (22%), climate (18%), cost of living (18%), healthcare (13%), lifestyle (10%), digital infrastructure (10%), and education (9%).
Corse is a budget-conscious option. Cost of living and property prices are favorable, but healthcare access, digital infrastructure, or lifestyle amenities may be more limited than in premium regions. Best suited to relocators with strong remote work setups who don't need urban amenities.
For full data depth — buying cost calculator, side-by-side comparison with up to 89 other regions, AI relocation advisor, and live updates — explore the Caterelo app.
As of Q4 2025, the average price in Corse is €3,496/m². This is 27% above the France national average of €2,757/m². Source: INSEE + Notaires de France, calibrated against Eurostat HPI.
€1,700/month for a single person and €3,900/month for a family of 4. Average rent for a 2-bedroom is €700, groceries €300, utilities €155. Cost level: moderate (-6% vs France average).
Yes. Corse scores 55/100 on the regional safety index. Crime level: low. Night safety: safe. Women safety: safe. Source: Numbeo Safety Index 2025 + Eurostat crime statistics.
warm mediterranean. Summer averages 30°C, winter 13°C. 275 sunny days per year, 60 rainy days. By 2050, summer temperatures are projected to rise +2.7°C (IPCC AR6 SSP2-4.5).
Healthcare quality is adequate. Private health insurance averages €1,100/year. 2 major hospitals in the region. Emergency response: average. EHIC card accepted for EU citizens.
Average 115 Mbps. Fiber availability: limited. Mobile network: patchy. minimal coworking presence. English proficiency: low.
0 international schools, of which 0 offer the IB programme. Education rating: none. Education hub: Nice (ferry/flight). Source: International Schools Database + IBO.org.
Gross rental yield is approximately 5.9%. A 2-bed apartment rents for an average of €1,200/month. 1-bed: €800, 3-bed: €1,600, house: €2,080. Source: SeLoger / francebleu, updated 2026.
Average net monthly salary: €2,150. Purchasing power level: moderate. National minimum wage: €1,823/month. A coffee costs ~€3, meaning approximately 717 coffees per monthly net salary.
Corse has a Caterelo LifeTrend™ relocation score of 56/100. Mixed signals — best suited for relocators who prioritize affordability over premium amenities. Cost of living is at or above the country average.
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