Inspired by the video “Why People Choose to Move to Bulgarian Villages?” from the YouTube channel A Taste of Bulgaria.
In a world that's constantly speeding up, there are people who choose to press "pause." They step off the fast-paced carousel of city life to find a different rhythm — one that's attuned to nature, the changing seasons, and an authentic way of living. And sometimes, unexpectedly even for them, this leads them to... a Bulgarian village. These are not nostalgic stories of grandparent's yards; these are real tales of Germans, South Africans, Dutch, and others, who left the security of the West in search of meaning and belonging among the rural landscapes of Bulgaria.
The Freedom Money Can't Buy
“In the city, even your balcony is the size of a pizza box,” jokes one of the interviewees in the video. “Here, I have endless fields, birds, silence... and freedom.”
This freedom comes in many forms — working remotely with a strong internet connection but sipping your coffee under a walnut tree; growing your own vegetables instead of buying them wrapped in plastic; living slowly, but with a full heart. After years of living in megacities, the heroes of this story find that true luxury isn't in expensive neighborhoods, but in simplicity. It brings independence, balance, and deep inner peace.
A Place Where People Greet You by Name
The Bulgarian village offers not only nature but also warmth between its people — that rare, authentic, and unintrusive closeness often missing in big cities. “You don’t feel like a foreigner. Everyone knows you — and if they don’t, they’ll invite you for rakia to get acquainted,” says Franci from Germany, who lives in the southern part of the country. Community isn't an obligation, it's a sense of belonging. You help when needed, and you receive help when you seek it.
A Home with a Soul — Not a Mortgage
Many newcomers share that in their home countries, owning a property would have been out of reach. In Bulgaria, they find not just a house but a fresh start. Some restore old village houses, others build with available materials, while others buy cheap properties with potential.
“Here, you’re a craftsman, gardener, and homemaker. There’s work, but there’s also satisfaction — so at the end of the day, it all makes sense,” says one of the foreigners who’s been living in the Elena Balkan for five years.
A Return to Yourself
The village teaches you. You learn to sync with the weather, the soil, and the light. You fall into a rhythm — but not the one of the clock, rather the one of nature.
“We knead bread just like our grandmothers did. We plant on Lazarus Day and harvest on the Feast of the Assumption. This is not folklore for tourists — this is real life,” shares a Dutch woman who chose a small village in the Rhodope Mountains.
Many foreigners move with their families. They want their children to grow up in freedom, not behind screens. To chase butterflies, help in the garden, and learn with curiosity, not pressure. “Our daughter knows when potatoes are planted and how a nightingale sounds. This is childhood worth having,” says Cleen from South Africa.
These people have chosen to reconnect with what’s real — the bond with the land, with themselves, and with others. They've chosen to replace city stress with a meaningful, fulfilling life among nature... the noise with contemplation. And Bulgaria, with its nearly forgotten villages, turns out to be the perfect place for this.
Not because it's cheap — but because it's rich in what the world increasingly struggles to offer: space, silence, belonging, and acceptance.
If you feel that the city no longer provides what you need, perhaps something in these stories will resonate with you. Because the choice to return to a simpler life is not a step backward. It’s the courage to return to yourself.
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