Bon Azur

Bon Azur

By Mauritius Life7 July 20266 min read

Bon Azur is a benchmark for Mauritius life — here's what to know before you visit or relocate, from benefits and checklists to real examples.

What Is Bon Azur?

Bon Azur is a curated property and lifestyle platform focused on Mauritius — connecting discerning visitors, investors, and relocating professionals with the island's finest residential and hospitality offerings. It operates as both a discovery tool and a trusted guide for anyone weighing up Mauritius life seriously, not casually.

The name itself signals the intent: bon (good, in French) and azur (the deep blue of the Indian Ocean). Together they describe not just an aesthetic but a standard — one that informs every property listing, neighbourhood profile, and relocation resource on the platform.


The Mauritius Life Bon Azur Represents

Mauritius life means different things depending on where you stand. For a visitor, it is the east coast lagoon at low tide, a plate of dholl puri at a roadside stall, and the slow realisation that you have stopped checking your phone. For a relocating family or remote professional, it is something more structural: tax efficiency, a stable legal framework, international schools, and a community that already understands why you made the move.

Bon Azur sits at the intersection of both experiences. It does not pretend the island is frictionless — no place is — but it gives you the tools to navigate it intelligently.


Mauritius Life Benefits: Why the Island Attracts International Residents

The benefits of Mauritius life are well-documented, but Bon Azur presents them without the usual promotional fog:

  • Flat income tax of 15% — one of the most competitive rates globally for high earners.
  • No inheritance tax, no capital gains tax — significant for investors and estate planners.
  • The Premium Visa — allows remote workers and retirees to live in Mauritius for up to one year, renewable, without a local employer.
  • The Property Development Scheme (PDS) — foreign nationals who purchase qualifying property above USD 375,000 automatically receive Mauritian residency.
  • Political stability — Mauritius consistently ranks among Africa's most stable democracies and has the continent's highest Human Development Index score.
  • International schooling — English and French curricula are both widely available, with several institutions following the International Baccalaureate.
  • Healthcare — a dual public-private system, with private hospitals in Pamplemousses and Ebène meeting European standards.

These are not abstract advantages. They are the reasons a growing number of South African, French, British, and increasingly American professionals are making the move permanent.


Mauritius Life vs Alternatives: How Does It Compare?

The honest comparison matters. Mauritius life is frequently weighed against Dubai, Portugal, Malta, and the Seychelles. Here is how it holds up:

Mauritius vs Dubai

Dubai offers zero income tax and a larger expat infrastructure, but the cost of living is significantly higher, the climate is more extreme, and there is no pathway to permanent residency through property purchase alone. Mauritius offers a more liveable year-round climate, lower property entry points in many segments, and a clearer route to residency.

Mauritius vs Portugal (NHR Regime)

Portugal's Non-Habitual Resident regime has been progressively tightened since 2024. Mauritius, by contrast, has maintained consistent tax policy for over a decade. For families prioritising outdoor lifestyle alongside fiscal efficiency, Mauritius offers a warmer, less crowded alternative — though Portugal's European Union access remains a distinct advantage.

Mauritius vs Malta

Malta's Individual Investor Programme is expensive at entry. Mauritius residency through property purchase is more accessible. Both are English-speaking jurisdictions with common law heritage, but Mauritius offers a lower cost of living and a less congested environment.

Mauritius vs Seychelles

The Seychelles is smaller, more expensive, and has a less developed professional infrastructure. Mauritius has better schools, more diverse property options, and a larger international business community.

The conclusion is not that Mauritius wins every category — it is that Mauritius wins the right categories for a specific type of person: mobile, family-oriented, value-conscious, and unwilling to sacrifice quality of life for fiscal gain.


The Bon Azur Mauritius Life Checklist

If you are seriously considering the move, this checklist reflects what Bon Azur recommends working through before you commit:

  1. Determine your visa pathway — Premium Visa, PDS property purchase, or Occupation Permit (for business owners and investors).
  2. Establish your tax residency position — consult a dual-qualified adviser who understands both Mauritius and your home jurisdiction.
  3. Choose your region — the north (Grand Baie) is cosmopolitan and convenient; the east (Belle Mare, Trou d'Eau Douce) is quieter and reef-protected; the west (Tamarin, Black River) draws surfers and a younger creative crowd.
  4. Identify your property type — IRS, RES, PDS, or Smart City schemes each carry different ownership rights and price thresholds.
  5. Assess schooling — visit campuses before committing to a neighbourhood, not after.
  6. Open a local bank account — required for property transactions and easier to establish before you arrive.
  7. Understand the healthcare options — register with a private GP and identify the nearest private hospital to your chosen region.
  8. Plan your first 90 days — Mauritius rewards patience. Allow time to learn the roads, the markets, and the rhythms before drawing conclusions.

Bon Azur Examples: What Mauritius Life Actually Looks Like

Abstract benefits become real when you see how they play out:

Example 1 — The Remote Professional: A London-based consultant relocates to the east coast under the Premium Visa. She works European hours from a home office in Belle Mare, pays 15% flat tax on Mauritius-sourced income, and spends weekends sailing out of the Grand Port lagoon. Her cost of living is 35% lower than London; her quality of life, by her own account, is not comparable.

Example 2 — The Retiring Couple: A South African couple in their early sixties purchases a PDS villa in the Black River area. The purchase price exceeds the USD 375,000 threshold, triggering permanent residency. They have no inheritance tax exposure on the Mauritian asset, their children can visit on standard tourist visas, and they are twenty minutes from the best big-game fishing in the southern Indian Ocean.

Example 3 — The Relocating Family: A French family with three school-age children moves to Grand Baie. The children enrol in a French-curriculum international school. The parents run a European e-commerce business under a Global Business Licence. Within eighteen months, they describe the move as the most considered decision they have made as a family.


Why Bon Azur Is the Right Starting Point

The internet is not short of Mauritius content. What it lacks is curation — a platform that filters noise, presents verified property data, and gives you the contextual knowledge to ask the right questions of lawyers, banks, and schools.

Bon Azur fills that gap. Whether you are planning a first exploratory visit, comparing neighbourhoods for a long-term rental, or ready to begin the formal process of purchasing qualifying property and applying for residency, the platform is built to move with you through each stage — not to sell you on a decision you have not yet made.

Mauritius life, at its best, is deliberate. Bon Azur is designed for people who approach it that way.

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