My fiancé was born in Romania but adopted to America when he was 7, we are thinking of moving there now that cost of living is so expensive in the U.S. Your video was so helpful and I really like your style 😊 thank you!
Hey!🧡🫂 yes I have heard how expensive it has become there, and having the possibility to move to Europe I wouldn’t think twice🤭, I wish you guys a great life, Romania is full of surprises and opportunities for those who are ready to take them! I am glad I can be of help 🧡 thanks for watching means a lot!
Wow Abby... very impressive and acurate informations... you got it right in all aspects ... a very helpful video for anybody who plans to come to this country
Thanks a lot for video. Very informative, especially as I hear a lot abt Romania n cheap cost of living but not much abt work n and how workers treatment.
Great content, just to clarify on the salary side your information is not accurate, the last time I checked official reports about 6 month the average salary in IT sector for developers with a few years of experience is about 1000 Euros and for mid-senior it goes to 2000 Euros, and 3000 Euros and more for senior developers with good skills and 6-10 years of experience. And this is all net.
Thank you sohrab☺️ and also for the input that is very good to know, you dont think that is a good salary compare to other industries?. I said IT is well paid, maybe not compare to other parts of Europe but someone that make €2000 in Romania is pretty good don’t you think?!
@@ViajaconAbyy Yes sure, compared to the low/medium cost of living. But don't forget once you're traveling abroad or buying cars/electronic devices which are priced almost the same all over the world then we're way behind.
Good luck trying to hire an IT professional in Romania for 1000 EUR! I do not know who made the statistics and how, but I know a lot of people working in this field and the salaries are much higher. They start around 1500 - 2000 EUR (net) and go quite high. For instance, a friend of mine (true, he has 20 years of experience) has a salary of 7,200 EUR (net).
Plumbers and truck drivers are also weel paid. In fact, constructions are well paid and you can get a lot of private offers if you're got on what you're doing.
Yeah, trains are a no go in Romania unless your absolutely have to. The focus in infrastructure is on highways. EU is starting to push more and more for railways to make a comeback but it will take time.
So, I am an it guy. My wife and I are going to move to Romania soon. We decided to settle down Bucharest first to learn Romanian culture and country itself. Do you think the capital is good idea for first time. By the way I am going to work from home but we are gonna move anyway. What we expect is silent, green, peaceful home but we want to access city opportunities too.
That is great news!! I am happy for you guys!. I would say that for what you want probably living in the outside areas of the capital would work, not in the city itself because it’s a big city and as all big cities there is not silence, peace and yes some green but not like in the outside areas. Everybody talks great about the capital, I am sure you will get to experience very well Romania from there!☺️ I wish you guys the best!
I'm from North America and have been living in Timișoara for over 3 years with my husband. Wasn't too thrilled with Bucharest the only time I've been there. It's a huge city. You might find Cluj, Timișoara, or Brașov more to your liking if you want some quiet with a city vibe in my opinion. All three have their own charm, small enough to get familiar with quickly but with all of the convenience of city life.
@@maxineschaffer5853 omg u thought I was the only one that was not in love with Bucharest, everyone talks great about it but I didn’t really find it as wonderful as people mention, and I agree those 3 cities are amazing!🧡
@@ViajaconAbyy thank you both for your advice. Actually, everything happened too fast to me that I couldn't make research about other cities. We just decided to start from Bucharest maybe then we visit these cities, who knows maybe the next step would be one of three. Thank you I am going to check them all. Actually, the main reason for Bucharest is I have been told that until I get my residence permit, my wife cannot apply for the visa. She is going to apply for a bachelor's university program as a solution. They say it would take extra 3 months for her after I get my residence permit. I live whole my life in İstanbul Turkey which is a very alive city but enough is enough I want some quiet. But at this point I am a bit afraid of I might be bored in too much quiet:D I want the middle of it. Let's see what is going to happen. Sorry, I wrote too much, too many emotions. Great videos! Keep it up!
As far as capitals go, I would say Bucharest isn't the greatest. Also consider that the east/south of Romania is not the same (...) as the western part. History still leaves its marks. Sibiu, Cluj, Timisoara, albeit being small provincial towns, are more charming, and with a bit more of a 'Western' attitude. Cluj is the most expensive, Timisoara is in the middle of flatland, so nothing to see outside of the city, Sibiu is the smallest but with great surroundings. But it is all about expectation management.
About parking in Romania, as a tourist, I tried to download that app and register, but it only accepts Romanian addresses. How are tourists supposed to pay for parking? There's really no alternative. So in the town that i was, I purchased a one month parking pass (you have to go to a town hall office), and that did it for me. And is not expensive. But the fact that the app doesn't accept foreign citizen info is SUPER ANNOYING.
Thank you for this useful information. I'm a Master degree holder and I'm planning to go for PhD program in Romania. Hope it's going to be a good place of study for me
Looking to move to Romania next year with 3 kids. Is $2,000/month would be enough? So it will be me and my small kids… Looking for Pitesti nearby my sis in law.
Hello! I’m from Romania. Yes,2000 is enough.Because generally people here don’t earn so much. 300 to 400 (can also be less)would be for rent, and maybe that same amount for food if you don’t look at your money. Not sure how healthcare costs for foreigners, but I paid 300 for the whole year for public one. And utilities can be between 100 and 200
My wife and I really like your videos. We are coming to Bucharest next week and will be in the country three months or so. We work remotely and would love to be in a city outside of Bucharest after that first month but are not sure about the internet. Is it fast and reliable throughout most of the country? My wife loves nature so we were thinking about Brasov. Any info is greatly appreciated, thanks
Hi Evan! Thank you so much for the feedback I am so happy I get to show you more of the country you are soon visiting! :D I think Brasov is beautiful and specially if your wife loves nature that is a great place to be. Regarding the internet I never had problem and I use Vodafon for my home's wifi and in my phone so hopefully you have a similar experience, I only lose signal when I am high in the mountains or in very randome roads that are not very populated. If you guys have any other questions that I can help you with feel free to let me know. Big hug and i wish you the best time in Romania!
Me and my wife plan to retire to Timisoara next year. Can you let me know which is the best private healthcare for that city. Like which one has best clinics and hospital. Thanks
Not sure if this is the best but is the one I go to when I need something and they have many clinics in the city and I always had a great experience, try to find them online and see for yourself everything they offer: Regina Maria
I’m from Timisoara. Yes, Regina Maria seems just fine. They also have apps for scheduling Appointments making it easier if you don’t speak the language.
I don't think the private health care is preferred by 'many' in Romania, and the public health care, at least in most Transylvanian cities, is even better than many places in Europe. Everyone pays health insurance as deducted from the salary and anytime in need can make an appointment to the local hospital. Make an appointment, present ID and health card and that's all. They take good care of patients in general. Obviously for more complicated procedures, like operations, will be scheduled for a later date, but that is everywhere. Doctors are mostly good and nice in recent years, facilities are good to excellent, at least in Transylvanian cities. Bucharest lacks services in general, people are colder and less respectful than the provinces and that also applies when comes to hospitals. But the hospitals have all sort of modern equipment, doctors are well prepared and is normal, given that 30-40% of French doctors are Romanian educated and other west European countries hired many Romanian medical personnel. Despite lower salaries costs of living are also lower, specially the houses, while the qualified foreigners, joining corporations in Romania, are paid almost the same salaries like in western countries. The above is a correction statement, not an invitation to foreigners, but are welcome those who can contribute to the society.
May i know your nationality? Im Filipina and working abroad and waiting for my long stay visa in Romania ... I got offer of 6k and my boyfriend Romanian said that its fine... But what do you think?
I am from Venezuela!🤗 6K in the Romanian currency? That is like €1200 so yeah it’s definitely good here in Romania, think that nurses can get €800! So whatever your job is I think is paying you pretty good!.
Hello ! Thank you for the informative video :) Just wanted to enquire about teachers are there job opportunities ? Any idea about the pay scale for one ? TIA!
Hello!. I will link a website that is very helpful to calculate this information about salary, but keep in mind that teaching in English could be a plus and paid more than the normal Romanian teacher. www.erieri.com/salary/job/primary-school-teacher/romania
Hi there. I live in Bucharest, but this applies everywhere. Education here is state owned (70%) and private owned (30%). Order is kindergarden, school, high-school, university. For everything state owned before university, starting teachers get about 2500 lei net ( less than 600 euro, which is insufficient). It is not an option. If you are a starting professor at a state university ( order is teaching assitent, lector, professor after min 10 years) it is starting at 6000-7000 lei net. For everything private owned, starting positions are around 4000-5000 lei net, which is enough. So go for private owned, not state owned. An advantage foreigners have, is if they get a foreign language job like French, German, Italian, English or an exotic language. Private kindergardens are pretty common here because state kindergardens are insufficient, so a foreigner teaching the basics for their language can easily get a job.
How high is the cost of property in Romania. Would it be feasible to make a living by owning and renting property there if you moved there with some money?
Romania has the highest home ownership in the world, with 96% of its residents owning either a property or land. The Romanians generally don't like renting unless perhaps still being a student or on holiday. A Romanian's ultimate goal in life is owning his own place, the rent culture is looked down upon.
Hi do you or anyone here happen to know if they have birthtimes written on certificates of live birth at the civil offices or hospitals if born in the 80s? Thank you
Ohh guys, forget about moving to romania to get a job. You can move to Italy, spain or portugal and get the same life quality for the same money or even better in some cases. I’ve been travelling to romania every year and yes is nice when you’re in holiday and all I can say is if you’re planning to move there have a good and strong business plan. you’ll do well and much better to have your own business. and BTW beautiful Abby the train are disgusting and most of the roads. If you want to make money Bucharest is ideal but car traffic will kill you. you need 15000 lei monthly in a passive income ( or generated from a business) to have the same standard of life with a $8000 canadian dollar in Canada and I mean $8000 net after you paid your taxes. You see, in Canada the average Joe makes $3000 net and his or her life is pretty shitty, when you spend 70% or more on rent, unless you have a partner or roommate, and that’s optimistic when millions of people their pay checks are actually $2000 a month, so the bottom line is românia is still a better option, and you’re in europe where any flight anywhere with a backpack will cost you 30 euros.
I must make a remark here. the income I've mentioned above is for a family of two living in Canada and involves leasing two cars and sharing a home. however if you're single take 30% less from that amount. The bottom point is living on your own is always harder regardless which country you're residing. Same for romania I believe 15K per month per couple gives you some flexibility to travel one week, 3 - 4 times a year within EU @@ViajaconAbyy
Hi I’m a student and I’m applying to study in bucharest Romania. Can you tell me about how much monthly salary I would get if i work as a student and also what would be my total monthly expenses including food, all bills and the rent .
Hi, this is very personal because depends on your lifestyle, what you do, etc... For one person Food and bills are not expensive here, also if you want to rent just a room you can find it as low as €150 sharing the apartment or house. I would say you could spend about €400 with all the expenses and bills but that really would be up to you. I wish you all the best in your journey in Bucharest!
My son, who is 17 yo, worked over the summer in a hotel at the front desk, receptionist. His salary was about 4200 lei per month, aprox 900 USD, which is more than ok for a kid. On top of the salary there were food vouchers and 2 meals per day. So quite good money.
So glad that quality people want to move in Romania and Europe, but PLEASE, leave the second amendment in the US. That's one of the reasons we can walk alone all night long, anywhere we want (even in the forest). Thanks and WELCOME !
Romania is too much bad about salary. No good salary here. I came here 2021 but now, I feel like bad why I came here. Romania country had lot of problems with language. Lot of romanain can't Speek English.
Well, that depends. If you expect the old lady working as a cashier to speak English, you are right. But other than that, I haven't really met someone from here, that didn't even tryed at least to speak English. I mean yea, not everyone is fluent, but most of the people know the language, and even those who don't speak it, at least understand it and they can help you though some random signs. I've been living for the past year in Germany and here you can really say that without German, you are fuck#d. There are only 2 types of people here: those who speak it perfectly and those who don't even know a word. And even those who speak it, don't want to use it. I'm comming back to my broken, but perfect enough country. At least the people are friendly. 👀
My fiancé was born in Romania but adopted to America when he was 7, we are thinking of moving there now that cost of living is so expensive in the U.S. Your video was so helpful and I really like your style 😊 thank you!
Hey!🧡🫂 yes I have heard how expensive it has become there, and having the possibility to move to Europe I wouldn’t think twice🤭, I wish you guys a great life, Romania is full of surprises and opportunities for those who are ready to take them! I am glad I can be of help 🧡 thanks for watching means a lot!
Crazy to see how many people from different countries, especially more developed ones are wanting to come an live here, which is nice.
Yes!🤩
We love Romania❤️🙌🏽
Wow Abby... very impressive and acurate informations... you got it right in all aspects ... a very helpful video for anybody who plans to come to this country
I am glad you validate this info!🫶🏼 thank you
Thanks Abby..for your information
I live in the united states and want to transfer as a crane operator to romania
That is great!🤗 wish you all the best!
Hi! Just discovered your channel! I’ve been thinking about studying business in Romania for a while. What’s your business about?
Thanks a lot for video. Very informative, especially as I hear a lot abt Romania n cheap cost of living but not much abt work n and how workers treatment.
You’re very welcome🫂 I am glad I could give you a different perspective of what is already out there🧡
Thank you Abyy. Very interesting information.
Glad it was helpful!🧡
Thank you so much for sharing such great experience
It's my pleasure🫶🏼🫶🏼🫶🏼
I’m in the United States and been looking to move to Romania would love to talk to you more
You can text me on Instagram🧡
Great content, just to clarify on the salary side your information is not accurate, the last time I checked official reports about 6 month the average salary in IT sector for developers with a few years of experience is about 1000 Euros and for mid-senior it goes to 2000 Euros, and 3000 Euros and more for senior developers with good skills and 6-10 years of experience. And this is all net.
Thank you sohrab☺️ and also for the input that is very good to know, you dont think that is a good salary compare to other industries?. I said IT is well paid, maybe not compare to other parts of Europe but someone that make €2000 in Romania is pretty good don’t you think?!
@@ViajaconAbyy Yes sure, compared to the low/medium cost of living. But don't forget once you're traveling abroad or buying cars/electronic devices which are priced almost the same all over the world then we're way behind.
Good luck trying to hire an IT professional in Romania for 1000 EUR!
I do not know who made the statistics and how, but I know a lot of people working in this field and the salaries are much higher. They start around 1500 - 2000 EUR (net) and go quite high.
For instance, a friend of mine (true, he has 20 years of experience) has a salary of 7,200 EUR (net).
These are salaries from 2016.
Plumbers and truck drivers are also weel paid. In fact, constructions are well paid and you can get a lot of private offers if you're got on what you're doing.
That is good to know thank you🧡
Yeah, trains are a no go in Romania unless your absolutely have to. The focus in infrastructure is on highways. EU is starting to push more and more for railways to make a comeback but it will take time.
You’re right!😅 it would be so nice when it happens, right now is a struggle😂
I use trains each month and it is not that bad
So, I am an it guy. My wife and I are going to move to Romania soon. We decided to settle down Bucharest first to learn Romanian culture and country itself. Do you think the capital is good idea for first time. By the way I am going to work from home but we are gonna move anyway. What we expect is silent, green, peaceful home but we want to access city opportunities too.
That is great news!! I am happy for you guys!. I would say that for what you want probably living in the outside areas of the capital would work, not in the city itself because it’s a big city and as all big cities there is not silence, peace and yes some green but not like in the outside areas. Everybody talks great about the capital, I am sure you will get to experience very well Romania from there!☺️ I wish you guys the best!
I'm from North America and have been living in Timișoara for over 3 years with my husband. Wasn't too thrilled with Bucharest the only time I've been there. It's a huge city. You might find Cluj, Timișoara, or Brașov more to your liking if you want some quiet with a city vibe in my opinion. All three have their own charm, small enough to get familiar with quickly but with all of the convenience of city life.
@@maxineschaffer5853 omg u thought I was the only one that was not in love with Bucharest, everyone talks great about it but I didn’t really find it as wonderful as people mention, and I agree those 3 cities are amazing!🧡
@@ViajaconAbyy thank you both for your advice.
Actually, everything happened too fast to me that I couldn't make research about other cities. We just decided to start from Bucharest maybe then we visit these cities, who knows maybe the next step would be one of three. Thank you I am going to check them all.
Actually, the main reason for Bucharest is I have been told that until I get my residence permit, my wife cannot apply for the visa. She is going to apply for a bachelor's university program as a solution. They say it would take extra 3 months for her after I get my residence permit.
I live whole my life in İstanbul Turkey which is a very alive city but enough is enough I want some quiet. But at this point I am a bit afraid of I might be bored in too much quiet:D I want the middle of it. Let's see what is going to happen. Sorry, I wrote too much, too many emotions.
Great videos!
Keep it up!
As far as capitals go, I would say Bucharest isn't the greatest. Also consider that the east/south of Romania is not the same (...) as the western part. History still leaves its marks. Sibiu, Cluj, Timisoara, albeit being small provincial towns, are more charming, and with a bit more of a 'Western' attitude. Cluj is the most expensive, Timisoara is in the middle of flatland, so nothing to see outside of the city, Sibiu is the smallest but with great surroundings. But it is all about expectation management.
About parking in Romania, as a tourist, I tried to download that app and register, but it only accepts Romanian addresses. How are tourists supposed to pay for parking? There's really no alternative. So in the town that i was, I purchased a one month parking pass (you have to go to a town hall office), and that did it for me. And is not expensive. But the fact that the app doesn't accept foreign citizen info is SUPER ANNOYING.
Thank you for this useful information. I'm a Master degree holder and I'm planning to go for PhD program in Romania. Hope it's going to be a good place of study for me
For sure!🤗🧡 I hope it goes well!
Looking to move to Romania next year with 3 kids. Is $2,000/month would be enough? So it will be me and my small kids… Looking for Pitesti nearby my sis in law.
I don’t have kids and I am not really sure what the cost of living with 3 kids would be😮💨 sorry I can’t help
Hello! I’m from Romania. Yes,2000 is enough.Because generally people here don’t earn so much. 300 to 400 (can also be less)would be for rent, and maybe that same amount for food if you don’t look at your money. Not sure how healthcare costs for foreigners, but I paid 300 for the whole year for public one. And utilities can be between 100 and 200
My wife and I really like your videos. We are coming to Bucharest next week and will be in the country three months or so. We work remotely and would love to be in a city outside of Bucharest after that first month but are not sure about the internet. Is it fast and reliable throughout most of the country? My wife loves nature so we were thinking about Brasov. Any info is greatly appreciated, thanks
Hi Evan! Thank you so much for the feedback I am so happy I get to show you more of the country you are soon visiting! :D I think Brasov is beautiful and specially if your wife loves nature that is a great place to be. Regarding the internet I never had problem and I use Vodafon for my home's wifi and in my phone so hopefully you have a similar experience, I only lose signal when I am high in the mountains or in very randome roads that are not very populated. If you guys have any other questions that I can help you with feel free to let me know. Big hug and i wish you the best time in Romania!
Me and my wife plan to retire to Timisoara next year. Can you let me know which is the best private healthcare for that city. Like which one has best clinics and hospital. Thanks
Not sure if this is the best but is the one I go to when I need something and they have many clinics in the city and I always had a great experience, try to find them online and see for yourself everything they offer: Regina Maria
@@ViajaconAbyy gracias
I’m from Timisoara. Yes, Regina Maria seems just fine. They also have apps for scheduling Appointments making it easier if you don’t speak the language.
I don't think the private health care is preferred by 'many' in Romania, and the public health care, at least in most Transylvanian cities, is even better than many places in Europe. Everyone pays health insurance as deducted from the salary and anytime in need can make an appointment to the local hospital. Make an appointment, present ID and health card and that's all. They take good care of patients in general. Obviously for more complicated procedures, like operations, will be scheduled for a later date, but that is everywhere. Doctors are mostly good and nice in recent years, facilities are good to excellent, at least in Transylvanian cities. Bucharest lacks services in general, people are colder and less respectful than the provinces and that also applies when comes to hospitals. But the hospitals have all sort of modern equipment, doctors are well prepared and is normal, given that 30-40% of French doctors are Romanian educated and other west European countries hired many Romanian medical personnel.
Despite lower salaries costs of living are also lower, specially the houses, while the qualified foreigners, joining corporations in Romania, are paid almost the same salaries like in western countries.
The above is a correction statement, not an invitation to foreigners, but are welcome those who can contribute to the society.
May i know your nationality? Im Filipina and working abroad and waiting for my long stay visa in Romania ... I got offer of 6k and my boyfriend Romanian said that its fine... But what do you think?
I am from Venezuela!🤗 6K in the Romanian currency? That is like €1200 so yeah it’s definitely good here in Romania, think that nurses can get €800! So whatever your job is I think is paying you pretty good!.
@@ViajaconAbyy yes… what do you think as a expat perspective?
@@rookiecastillo i like it, I think the best city for expats is bucharest because of the variety that it offers!. What city are u going to?
@@ViajaconAbyy bucharest… i visited the place last july and it feels so safe
@@rookiecastillo that is great! Yeah I also feel safe and really like that city! Good luck and I hope one day we can meet there🧡
Hello ! Thank you for the informative video :) Just wanted to enquire about teachers are there job opportunities ? Any idea about the pay scale for one ? TIA!
Hello!. I will link a website that is very helpful to calculate this information about salary, but keep in mind that teaching in English could be a plus and paid more than the normal Romanian teacher. www.erieri.com/salary/job/primary-school-teacher/romania
@@ViajaconAbyy Thank you so much for your prompt response, appreciate it. Thanks for sharing the link as well, was helpful !😊
Hi there. I live in Bucharest, but this applies everywhere. Education here is state owned (70%) and private owned (30%). Order is kindergarden, school, high-school, university. For everything state owned before university, starting teachers get about 2500 lei net ( less than 600 euro, which is insufficient). It is not an option. If you are a starting professor at a state university ( order is teaching assitent, lector, professor after min 10 years) it is starting at 6000-7000 lei net. For everything private owned, starting positions are around 4000-5000 lei net, which is enough. So go for private owned, not state owned. An advantage foreigners have, is if they get a foreign language job like French, German, Italian, English or an exotic language. Private kindergardens are pretty common here because state kindergardens are insufficient, so a foreigner teaching the basics for their language can easily get a job.
460 euros, without taxes, after taxes you get like 300 euros from which 100 euros are meal tickets (this can be used to buy food and etc) the lowest
Thank you for the feedback!🧡
@florian florian really? I have no idea in this field!
No, to be fair the meal tickets are not part of the salary, never heard of this before.
@@manadog they have this in US too
💙💛❤️Romania 🙌👏
hi madam! been here in romania for 2 months.. would u know if id be allowed to change job/employer without d temporary residence permit? thank u
Hi! I am sorry i haven’t had that experience to be able to tell you, would be best to go to the immigration organizations to ask.
How high is the cost of property in Romania. Would it be feasible to make a living by owning and renting property there if you moved there with some money?
Is not that highly, depends on the city but in Timisoara you can rent with €450 a nice apartment 1/1.
Romania has the highest home ownership in the world, with 96% of its residents owning either a property or land.
The Romanians generally don't like renting unless perhaps still being a student or on holiday. A Romanian's ultimate goal in life is owning his own place, the rent culture is looked down upon.
Hi do you or anyone here happen to know if they have birthtimes written on certificates of live birth at the civil offices or hospitals if born in the 80s? Thank you
I personally don’t know 🥲
Ohh guys, forget about moving to romania to get a job. You can move to Italy, spain or portugal and get the same life quality for the same money or even better in some cases. I’ve been travelling to romania every year and yes is nice when you’re in holiday and all I can say is if you’re planning to move there have a good and strong business plan. you’ll do well and much better to have your own business. and BTW beautiful Abby the train are disgusting and most of the roads. If you want to make money Bucharest is ideal but car traffic will kill you.
you need 15000 lei monthly in a passive income ( or generated from a business) to have the same standard of life with a $8000 canadian dollar in Canada
and I mean $8000 net after you paid your taxes. You see, in Canada the average Joe makes $3000 net and his or her life is pretty shitty, when you spend 70% or more on rent, unless you have a partner or roommate, and that’s optimistic when millions of people their pay checks are actually $2000 a month, so the bottom line is românia is still a better option, and you’re in europe where any flight anywhere with a backpack will cost you 30 euros.
Thank you for your input🧡
I must make a remark here. the income I've mentioned above is for a family of two living in Canada and involves leasing two cars and sharing a home. however if you're single take 30% less from that amount. The bottom point is living on your own is always harder regardless which country you're residing. Same for romania I believe 15K per month per couple gives you some flexibility to travel one week, 3 - 4 times a year within EU @@ViajaconAbyy
What about production line workers ?
I am sorry I don't have that answer right now, if i meet someone on that field i will let you know
Hii
Can i get part time jobs as an undergraduate student in Romania ?
Hey! It depends on what you look for, but if your visa allows you to work then pretty sure you can find something!
Ask Romaniac
Hi I’m a student and I’m applying to study in bucharest Romania. Can you tell me about how much monthly salary I would get if i work as a student and also what would be my total monthly expenses including food, all bills and the rent .
Hi, this is very personal because depends on your lifestyle, what you do, etc... For one person Food and bills are not expensive here, also if you want to rent just a room you can find it as low as €150 sharing the apartment or house. I would say you could spend about €400 with all the expenses and bills but that really would be up to you. I wish you all the best in your journey in Bucharest!
You should ask Romaniac, they know better
@@tanasaflorin3699 Yes, specially becsuse they are also students, great recommendation :D
@@ViajaconAbyy why always come to romania?? Romanians dont want immigrants🤮🤮
My son, who is 17 yo, worked over the summer in a hotel at the front desk, receptionist. His salary was about 4200 lei per month, aprox 900 USD, which is more than ok for a kid. On top of the salary there were food vouchers and 2 meals per day. So quite good money.
Trains and railway stations are the darkest part of Romania better in India...
How Now,indian train is full of people😂😂😂😂😂
Hlo I need to know about security guard jobs
Hello, I have no reference on that sorry!
♥️💛💙
🫂🧡
Well salary is 1000 € starting next year! How much do you get in the west 1500?? 🖤💛
Where are you from??
Venezuela :)
So glad that quality people want to move in Romania and Europe, but PLEASE, leave the second amendment in the US. That's one of the reasons we can walk alone all night long, anywhere we want (even in the forest). Thanks and WELCOME !
Here in Romania you can’t walk alone at night??🤔
Stupid take. We actually need a second amendment. You just don’t understand its purpose. Look at UK now.
And Romanians hate train transport,because someone whant to faliment state company,and not invest in.
Makes sense I guess
☝️👏❤️🇷🇴🙌
🫂👋🏼✨
Romania is too much bad about salary. No good salary here. I came here 2021 but now,
I feel like bad why I came here.
Romania country had lot of problems with language. Lot of romanain can't Speek English.
I am sorry you had such a bad experience😥
Well, that depends. If you expect the old lady working as a cashier to speak English, you are right. But other than that, I haven't really met someone from here, that didn't even tryed at least to speak English. I mean yea, not everyone is fluent, but most of the people know the language, and even those who don't speak it, at least understand it and they can help you though some random signs. I've been living for the past year in Germany and here you can really say that without German, you are fuck#d. There are only 2 types of people here: those who speak it perfectly and those who don't even know a word. And even those who speak it, don't want to use it. I'm comming back to my broken, but perfect enough country. At least the people are friendly. 👀
Prashant, you know that old saying ' when in Rome'
@@bogdanpali You are right, young generations in Romania can convers in English language.
Where did you come from? You knew about the salaries before moving to Romania, why are you complaining now? 😂
Stop coming to Romania!!!
Mind your own business.
Exactly
🤣
Rubbish
Sure! 😂
@@ViajaconAbyytears of greeting ?!
Great content, how can I connect you on private talk?
Thank you!. You can text me on Instagram or email me! :)
@@ViajaconAbyy your email please, thanks