Corail Bleu

Corail Bleu

By Mauritius Life7 July 20267 min read

Corail Bleu is Mauritius-Life's curated relocation and lifestyle platform. Discover benefits, checklists, and real examples for living in Mauritius.

Corail Bleu: Your Guide to Mauritius Life

Corail Bleu is the lifestyle and relocation platform operated by Mauritius-Life, designed to help internationally mobile professionals, families, and retirees navigate every stage of building a life in Mauritius β€” from first research to settled residency. Where most relocation services stop at property listings, Corail Bleu goes further: it curates the practical, financial, and cultural knowledge that determines whether a move actually works.

The name reflects the island's defining geography β€” the coral reef that frames the lagoon, separates the calm from the open ocean, and quietly structures everything that happens on shore. Corail Bleu does the same for relocation: it provides the structure beneath a decision that can otherwise feel overwhelming.


What Is Mauritius-Life and How Does Corail Bleu Fit In?

Mauritius-Life is an independent information and advisory platform focused exclusively on Mauritius as a destination for relocation, residency, and long-term living. It covers visa pathways, tax frameworks, property acquisition rules for foreigners, schooling, healthcare, and the day-to-day texture of island life.

Corail Bleu is the editorial and resource layer within that platform β€” the place where guides, checklists, real-life examples, and curated comparisons live. Think of Mauritius-Life as the broader service and Corail Bleu as its most substantive content offering: the part that answers the questions people are actually asking before they commit.


Mauritius-Life Benefits: Why the Island Competes Seriously

Mauritius has built a genuinely competitive offer for international residents. The benefits are structural, not just atmospheric:

  • Flat income tax at 15%, with no capital gains tax, no inheritance tax, and no wealth tax.
  • Premium Visa and Occupation Permit pathways that allow professionals, investors, and retirees to establish legal residency without excessive bureaucracy.
  • Political and economic stability β€” Mauritius consistently ranks as Africa's most competitive economy and scores well on rule-of-law indices.
  • English and French as official working languages, alongside Mauritian Creole, which means most professionals adapt quickly.
  • High-quality private healthcare concentrated in the north and central plateau, with internationally trained staff and competitive costs versus Western Europe.
  • International schooling β€” French lycΓ©es, British-curriculum schools, and IB programmes are all available, making Mauritius viable for families with school-age children.
  • Direct flights to London, Paris, Dubai, Johannesburg, Singapore, and Mumbai, which matters considerably for those maintaining business or family ties elsewhere.

These are not soft lifestyle perks. They are the reasons Mauritius attracts serious people making serious decisions.


Mauritius Life vs Alternatives: How Does It Compare?

The honest comparison matters. Mauritius is frequently considered alongside Malta, Portugal, the UAE, and various Caribbean jurisdictions. Here is how it holds up:

Mauritius vs Malta

Malta offers EU access, which Mauritius cannot. But Malta's cost of living has risen sharply, property prices in Valletta and Sliema are high, and the island is small enough that infrastructure strain is visible. Mauritius offers lower taxation, lower property entry costs in IRS/PDS schemes, and a quieter pace without the density.

Mauritius vs Portugal (NHR)

Portugal's Non-Habitual Residency regime has been restructured, reducing its tax advantages. Mauritius offers a cleaner, more stable tax environment for those whose income is internationally sourced. Portugal wins on EU mobility; Mauritius wins on cost and climate consistency.

Mauritius vs UAE (Dubai)

Dubai is zero-income-tax and has world-scale infrastructure. But it is expensive to live well, culturally demanding to integrate into long-term, and offers no path to citizenship. Mauritius offers a more human scale, a genuine community, and a citizenship pathway after seven years of residency.

Mauritius vs Caribbean (Barbados, Cayman)

The Caribbean is geographically closer to North America but further from European and African business networks. Mauritius sits in a time zone (UTC+4) that overlaps usefully with both European mornings and Asian afternoons β€” a practical advantage for remote workers and fund managers.


The Mauritius-Life Checklist: What to Work Through Before You Move

A structured checklist prevents the gaps that derail otherwise well-planned relocations. The Corail Bleu framework covers these stages:

1. Visa and Permit Selection Identify the correct pathway: Premium Visa (up to one year, renewable), Occupation Permit (investor, professional, or self-employed), or Retired Non-Citizen Permit. Each has different income thresholds and documentation requirements.

2. Tax Residency Planning Confirm your exit from your current tax jurisdiction before establishing Mauritius residency. This requires coordination with a tax adviser in both countries.

3. Property or Rental Decision Foreigners can purchase property through approved IRS, RES, PDS, or Smart City schemes. Outside these schemes, freehold purchase is not available to non-citizens. Renting first β€” for six to twelve months β€” is almost always the right first move.

4. Banking Open a Mauritius bank account early. The main banks (MCB, AfrAsia, SBM, MauBank) each have different strengths. AfrAsia is preferred by many international clients for its private banking offer; MCB has the broadest retail network.

5. Healthcare Registration Register with a private GP and identify your nearest private clinic. Medical evacuation insurance is worth carrying for serious procedures, though local capability is higher than most arrivals expect.

6. Schooling Placement For families, school placement timelines are long β€” some schools have waiting lists of twelve to eighteen months. Begin applications before arrival.

7. Community and Integration Mauritius has active expatriate communities in Grand Baie, Tamarin, and the Moka/Beau Plan corridor. Joining early reduces the isolation that affects some new arrivals.


Mauritius-Life Examples: Who Actually Makes This Move?

The profile of people who relocate to Mauritius through frameworks like Corail Bleu is more varied than the stereotype suggests:

  • Fund managers and fintech founders drawn by the tax framework and the time zone overlap with both London and Singapore.
  • Remote-working couples in their 30s and 40s who want good internet, warm weather, and a manageable cost of living without sacrificing schooling quality for their children.
  • South African families seeking political stability and a familiar cultural register β€” Mauritius has a large South African community, particularly on the west coast.
  • European retirees (French and British in particular) who want year-round warmth, affordable private healthcare, and a French-influenced culture.
  • Entrepreneurs running businesses that benefit from Mauritius's double-taxation treaties with over forty countries, including India, China, and France.

These are real patterns, not aspirational profiles.


Finding Mauritius-Life Near You: How to Start

Corail Bleu and the broader Mauritius-Life platform are accessible online, but the most effective starting point is usually a structured consultation rather than independent research alone. The reason is simple: Mauritius's regulatory framework β€” particularly around property ownership and permit categories β€” changes periodically, and acting on outdated information is a common and costly mistake.

Mauritius-Life connects prospective residents with vetted advisers, notaries, and relocation specialists who work on the ground. Whether you are in London, Paris, Johannesburg, or Dubai, the first conversation can happen remotely; the due diligence that follows requires people who know the island.


Why Corail Bleu Is the Right Starting Point

Most relocation decisions fail not because the destination was wrong but because the preparation was insufficient. Corail Bleu exists to close that gap β€” to give people who are serious about Mauritius the depth of information they need to make a decision they will not regret.

The east coast lagoon is the quietest argument for staying longer than you planned. Corail Bleu is the argument for arriving prepared.

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