
What Is Ready Live Paradise?
Ready Live Paradise is a structured relocation service designed specifically for people who are seriously thinking about moving to Mauritius — not just visiting. It pulls together the planning, paperwork, and practical knowledge that most families spend months trying to piece together on their own, and organises it into a clear, step-by-step process. Think of it less as a travel agency and more as a knowledgeable friend who has already done the move and can walk you through it honestly.
If you have been searching for move to Mauritius reviews and finding mostly glossy brochures or vague forum threads, this is meant to fill that gap.
Who Is This For?
Most people who come to Ready Live Paradise are British adults between their late thirties and early sixties. Some are approaching retirement and want their money to go further. Others are remote workers or small business owners who have realised they can work from anywhere — and have started asking why they are still paying UK rates for grey skies. A fair number are families who have had enough of the school run, the cost of living, and the general grind, and want something quieter and warmer before their children leave home.
What they share is this: they are past the daydreaming stage. They want a realistic picture, a sensible timeline, and someone to tell them what they are actually signing up for.
The Honest Move to Mauritius Timeline
One of the most useful things Ready Live Paradise provides is a travel guide timeline — a month-by-month breakdown of what actually needs to happen and in what order. Here is a simplified version of how most successful moves unfold.
Months 1–3: Research and Decision
- Clarify your visa route (retirement, Premium Visa, or work permit)
- Get a realistic picture of monthly costs in Mauritius versus your current outgoings
- Visit Mauritius for at least two to three weeks — not as a tourist but as a prospective resident, looking at neighbourhoods, schools, and supermarkets
Months 4–6: Paperwork and Property
- Begin your visa application with the correct supporting documents
- Start the property search in earnest — renting first is almost always the right call
- Sort out your UK affairs: tax residency, pension access, healthcare gaps
Months 7–9: The Practical Stuff
- Arrange shipping or storage for belongings
- Open a Mauritian bank account (this takes longer than you expect)
- Register children at schools if applicable
Month 10–12: The Move Itself
- Arrive, ideally outside the cyclone season (roughly November to April)
- Give yourself three months before you judge whether it is working
This is a rough guide. Some people move faster; others take two years. What matters is doing the steps in roughly the right order.
MoveToMauritius Pricing: What Does It Actually Cost?
People often ask about movetomauritius pricing before they know what they are comparing it against. The honest answer is that the cost of the service itself is modest relative to what it saves you — in time, mistakes, and the kind of expensive wrong turns that come from acting on incomplete information.
Beyond the service, here is what life in Mauritius actually costs for a British family:
- Rent: A comfortable three-bedroom house in a good residential area typically runs between £900 and £1,800 per month depending on location and whether it has a pool
- Groceries: Broadly comparable to the UK for imported goods; significantly cheaper for local produce, fish, and vegetables
- Schooling: International schools range from around £400 to £1,200 per child per month
- Healthcare: Private health insurance for a couple in their fifties runs roughly £150–£300 per month
- Utilities: Lower than the UK for most households, though air conditioning pushes electricity bills up in summer
A couple living comfortably — eating well, running a car, keeping active — can generally do so for £3,000 to £4,500 per month. That figure surprises most people who have been living in London or the South East.
Best Time to Visit: Planning Your Recce Trip
If you are using a trip to Mauritius to assess whether you actually want to live there, timing matters more than it does for a holiday. Best time to visit examples vary depending on what you are trying to assess.
May to October is the dry, cooler season. Temperatures sit between 18°C and 26°C, humidity is manageable, and the island is at its most liveable. This is the best time to visit if you want to experience everyday life — not the intense heat of summer. It also gives you a realistic sense of what a normal week feels like.
November to April is hotter and more humid, and cyclone risk is real (though most cyclones pass without serious damage). If you visit in this period, you will get a sense of the more challenging side of the climate — which is worth knowing before you commit.
Best time to visit cost-wise: flights and accommodation are generally cheaper in the shoulder months of May and October. Avoid August if budget is a concern — it is peak season for French and Mauritian diaspora visitors.
The MoveToMauritius Checklist: What Most People Forget
The movetomauritius checklist that Ready Live Paradise uses covers the obvious items — visa, property, flights — but the things people most often forget are:
- UK tax residency rules. The day you leave the UK is not automatically the day you stop being a UK taxpayer. Get proper advice.
- Driving licence conversion. Your UK licence is valid for a limited period; converting it requires a test.
- Pet relocation. Mauritius has strict import rules for animals. Start this process very early — at least six months ahead.
- Pension access. If you are under 57, check the rules around accessing UK pension funds before you factor them into your budget.
- Wills and lasting power of attorney. Sorting these before you leave is much simpler than doing it from abroad.
- A return plan. Not because you will need it, but because knowing you have thought it through makes the move feel less like a leap in the dark.
Things to Do In Mauritius: Building a Life, Not Just a Holiday
Things to do in reviews of Mauritius tend to focus on beaches and water sports. Those are real and genuinely good. But what people actually want to know before moving is whether there is enough to build a life around.
The honest answer is yes — with some caveats.
- Outdoor life is excellent year-round: hiking, cycling, open-water swimming, golf, sailing
- Food is one of the island's genuine strengths — Creole, Indian, Chinese, and French influences make for an unusually varied local food scene
- Culture and community exists but takes effort to find; it rewards people who are curious and willing to engage with Mauritian life rather than just recreating a British one in a warmer setting
- Healthcare is adequate for routine care; serious specialist treatment often means travelling to South Africa or back to the UK
- Connectivity has improved significantly — fibre broadband is available in most residential areas, which matters if you are working remotely
The people who thrive here are not the ones who wanted to escape. They are the ones who wanted to arrive somewhere.
What Move to Mauritius Reviews Actually Say
The most consistent themes in genuine move to Mauritius reviews from British residents are these:
What people are glad about: the pace of life, the weather, the sense of space, lower cost of living, the quality of fresh food, feeling safer, and — perhaps most commonly — the feeling that time belongs to them again.
What people found harder than expected: bureaucracy (it is real and requires patience), the distance from family, the adjustment period, and the fact that Mauritius is a small island — which is peaceful until it feels limiting.
Neither list should put you off or push you forward on its own. Together, they give you an honest picture of a move that works well for people who go in with open eyes.
Ready Live Paradise exists to make sure yours are open before you book the flight.
Frequently asked questions
What is Ready Live Paradise?+
Ready Live Paradise is a relocation service for British adults and families planning a permanent or semi-permanent move to Mauritius. It provides structured guidance covering visas, property, timelines, costs, and practical checklists.
How long does it take to move to Mauritius from the UK?+
Most people complete the process in nine to twelve months from the decision to move. Visa applications, property searches, and sorting UK financial affairs each take longer than expected, so starting early is important.
What is the best time to visit Mauritius before deciding to move?+
May to October is the dry, cooler season and gives the most realistic picture of everyday life. Temperatures are comfortable, humidity is lower, and you can assess neighbourhoods, schools, and infrastructure without the intensity of the summer heat.
How much does it cost to live in Mauritius as a British family?+
A couple living comfortably in Mauritius — including rent, food, a car, and private health insurance — typically spends between £3,000 and £4,500 per month. This is significantly less than equivalent living costs in London or the South East of England.
Do I need a visa to live in Mauritius long-term?+
Yes. British nationals need a long-stay visa to live in Mauritius permanently. The main routes are the Premium Visa (for remote workers and retirees with sufficient income), a work permit, or residency through property investment. Each has different requirements.
What do people who have moved to Mauritius say about the experience?+
Common positives in move to Mauritius reviews include a slower pace of life, lower costs, better weather, and a stronger sense of personal time. Common challenges include bureaucracy, distance from family in the UK, and the adjustment period in the first few months.
What is often forgotten on a move to Mauritius checklist?+
Frequently overlooked items include UK tax residency rules after departure, driving licence conversion requirements, pet import regulations (which require at least six months' preparation), pension access rules for those under 57, and updating wills before leaving the UK.
Is Mauritius suitable for families with children?+
Yes, many British families move to Mauritius with children. International schools are available across the island, with fees ranging from roughly £400 to £1,200 per child per month. The lifestyle — outdoor, safe, and community-oriented — suits children well, though school choice requires careful research.
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