Introduction
Arguably the most overlooked aspect of relocation planning is the social reality: you’re not just moving to a new place, you’re starting from zero in the friendship department. Building a meaningful social life from scratch as an adult in a foreign country is genuinely difficult—and yet it’s absolutely essential for your wellbeing and success abroad. This guide walks you through realistic strategies for making friends, building community, and navigating one of the most underestimated challenges of expat life: loneliness.
The central tension: the expat bubble is comfortable but ultimately isolating. Local integration is rewarding but requires significantly more effort. Most successful expats find a balance—starting in the expat community while actively building local friendships simultaneously.
The Expat Bubble vs. Local Integration Debate
What Is the Expat Bubble?
The expat bubble consists of other foreign nationals living in your city—often from diverse countries, but frequently with substantial American presence. These communities exist in virtually every major European city.
Advantages of the expat bubble:
- Immediate sense of belonging and understanding
- No language barrier
- Shared experience of adjustment challenges
- Faster to develop friendships (everyone is actively looking for friends)
- Cultural familiarity—shared references, humor, perspectives
- Professional networking opportunities
- Practical help—expats often know which apartments are good, which services work, which jobs are available
Disadvantages of the expat bubble:
Can feel like a cushion preventing real integration
Risk of creating “floating” communities—high turnover, difficulty developing deep friendships
Reinforces dependence on English, limiting language acquisition
Potential for negative cultural attitudes (“I’m better than locals,” “this city is worse than home”)
Social life revolves around complaining about differences rather than embracing them
Limits your experience of your actual adopted city
Perpetuates feeling like a permanent visitor rather than resident
Why Local Integration Is Harder
Making friends with locals, especially in Northern and Central Europe, is genuinely challenging for several reasons:
Cultural barriers:
Northern/Central European friendship norms are different. Friendships develop more slowly. What Americans interpret as coldness is often just different pacing.
Locals often have established friend groups from school/childhood and aren’t actively building new friendships
Family and hometown ties are often stronger; adult friendships are secondary
Language barriers:
Even fluent English speakers appreciate friendship in their native language
Nuance, humor, and genuine connection are harder in a non-native language
Even if locals speak English, they often socialize in their native language in groups
Cultural expectations:
In some countries, locals expect foreigners to adapt (which many do appreciate, but takes effort)
There can be skepticism about temporary residents—why invest in friendship if you might leave?
Historical attitudes toward Americans vary by country and region
Geography:
Southern Europeans (Spain, Italy, Greece, Portugal) tend to be more socially open and group-oriented; making friends is easier
Northern Europeans (Germany, Scandinavia, Netherlands, Belgium) are culturally more reserved; friendships develop slowly
Central Europeans vary significantly; some are warm, others reserved
Reality: In Berlin, making local friends might take 12-18 months. In Barcelona, 4-6 months. In Prague, 6-9 months. This is not failure—it’s realistic timeline.
InterNations: The Expat Community Platform
InterNations is by far the largest and most organized expat network in Europe. With chapters in hundreds of cities, it’s often your first stop for meeting other expats.
What Is InterNations?
InterNations is a professional social network specifically for expats. It’s not a dating app or casual meetup platform—it’s structured community building.
Membership: Free membership with basic access; paid tier (approximately €150-200/year) for full access
What you get:
Monthly meetup events in your city (typically 30-200 people attending, depending on city size)
Professional networking events
Hobby-specific groups (sports, arts, cooking, gaming, etc.)
Online forums by city
Directory of members
Best cities for InterNations:
Berlin, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Madrid, Vienna, and Brussels have active chapters (500+ regular members)
Prague, Budapest, and Warsaw have growing chapters
Smaller cities often have less active chapters
Reality Check on InterNations
The good:
Low-pressure environment to meet people
Usually organized bar or restaurant events—no awkwardness about “where to meet”
Mix of people from dozens of countries provides perspective
Many people form lasting friendships through InterNations
Generally well-run organization
The challenging:
Can feel transactional—people networking rather than genuinely connecting
High turnover—people you befriend often leave within 6-12 months
Tends to attract either very serious professionals or travelers passing through
Can be cliquish after initial friendships form
Quality varies enormously by city size and chapter organization
“Expat bubble” personified—may reinforce English-speaking comfort zone
Honest take: InterNations is an excellent tool for preventing initial loneliness and building a basic social network, but for most people, real friendships develop outside InterNations through other channels.
Meetup.com and Online Communities
Meetup is a general interest-based networking platform (not expat-specific) organized by hobby or activity.
Using Meetup Effectively
Common groups in European cities:
Language exchange groups (truly excellent for meeting locals and practicing language)
Sports clubs (running, hiking, cycling, football, rugby)
Hobby groups (board games, cooking, book clubs, arts)
Professional groups (tech meetups, entrepreneurship, etc.)
Volunteer organizations
Advantages over InterNations:
More likely to include locals, not just expats
Interest-based, so natural conversation starters
Often free or very cheap
Can help with language practice and integration
Best practices:
Attend regularly (consistency builds friendships, not one-off visits)
Go to the same group repeatedly rather than sampling different groups
Arrive early to help setup or facilitate conversation
Extend invitations for coffee/drinks after events
Be patient—friendships take repetition and continuity
Realistic timeline: After attending 5-10 sessions of the same group, you’ll likely develop acquaintances. After 15-20 sessions, some friendships usually develop.
Facebook Expat Groups
Nearly every European city has private Facebook groups for expats (search “[City Name] Expats” or “[City Name] English Speakers”).
Useful for:
Practical questions (where to find bagels, furniture, specific services)
Temporary friend-matching for apartment viewings or first weeks
Connecting with people arriving same time as you
Organizing social events
Not useful for:
Developing deep friendships (too transactional and public)
Long-term community building (too transient)
Participation tip: Answer questions generously when you’ve figured things out. Helping newer expats builds karma and sometimes leads to friendships.
Sports Clubs and Hobby Groups
Some of the deepest expat friendships develop through regular shared activity—sports, arts, volunteering, hobbies.
Why Sports/Hobbies Work for Friendship Building
Regular contact: The same group, same time, same place builds familiarity
Natural conversation: Shared activity generates natural dialogue rather than forced “getting to know you”
Lower stakes: Bonding happens around the activity, not through awkward socializing
Mixed local/expat: These groups often include both locals and expats, facilitating integration
Shared identity: You’re part of a “hiking group” or “running club” identity, not just “expats”
Natural progression to deeper friendship: Coffee before or after activity, then outside activities
Best Activities for Making Friends as an Adult Expat
Sports (best for making friends):
Running clubs (extremely social, welcoming to newcomers)
Cycling groups
Football/soccer leagues (futsal in winter)
Hiking clubs
Rock climbing gyms
Tennis clubs
Rowing or water sports clubs
Hobby groups:
Language exchange meetups (excellent for meeting locals)
Cooking classes
Pottery/art classes
Board game groups
Book clubs
Volunteer organizations
Coworking spaces (if freelance/remote)
Professional groups:
Industry-specific meetups
Entrepreneurship groups
Tech meetups
Female entrepreneurs groups (if applicable)
Finding Groups
Meetup.com: Most comprehensive English-language group directory
Facebook: Search “[city] [sport/hobby] [english]” or local language equivalent
Google: “[City] running club,” etc.
Sports facilities: Ask at gyms, climbing gyms, parks—they often organize groups
Universities: Many maintain community groups in local language
Volunteer Opportunities
Volunteering is among the most underutilized paths to friendship and integration for expats.
Why Volunteering Works
Meaningful activity: You’re contributing to something you care about
Regular commitment: Same people, same place, same time (friendship-building requirements)
Values alignment: You’re with people who care about similar causes
Locals and expats mixed: Integration happens naturally
Gratitude and appreciation: Volunteers are appreciated, easing social anxiety
Skills transfer: Your American experience often brings valuable perspective
Finding Volunteer Opportunities
Idealist.org: Global volunteer directory; searchable by country and city
VolunteerMatch: US-based but lists international opportunities
Local NGOs and nonprofits: Research in your city (environmental, refugee support, animal welfare, etc.)
Social integration services: Many local governments have integration programs needing volunteers
English-language organizations: Libraries, community centers, schools often need volunteers
Church/religious communities: Often organize volunteer activities (welcoming to non-members)
Realistic Volunteer Opportunities
English teaching (community centers, immigrant support)
Refugee assistance programs
Environmental organizations
Animal shelters
Healthcare volunteer roles (hospitals, hospice)
Community events organization
Tech skills teaching
Mentoring young entrepreneurs
Coworking Communities
For remote workers and freelancers, coworking spaces are underrated friendship venues.
Coworking for Community Building
Daily routine: Same location, same time, same faces builds familiarity
Work-adjacent socializing: Coffee, lunch, coworking events provide natural interaction
Mix of nationalities: Coworking spaces tend to attract international workers
Professional starting point: Easier to transition from colleagues to friends
Built-in community: Coworking spaces organize events, happy hours, workshops
Cost: €150-400/month depending on location (cheaper outside major city centers)
Best coworking spaces:
Spaces focused on specific industries (tech, design, consulting) develop tighter communities
Smaller spaces have stronger community than large corporate chains
Spanish and Portuguese coworking spaces tend to be more social; Northern European ones more professional
The Difficulty of Making Local Friends (Especially in Northern Europe)
This deserves emphasis: making local friends is genuinely harder than most Americans expect, especially in Northern and Central Europe.
Why It’s Hard
Northern Europe (Germany, Scandinavia, Netherlands, Belgium):
Friendship as a concept develops more slowly
Adults often aren’t actively expanding friend groups
Childhood and school friendships remain primary
Cultural reserve—warmth develops over months, not weeks
Language barrier means conversations stay surface-level longer
Skepticism about temporary residents’ commitment
Timeline reality: Making one genuine local friend often takes 6-12 months. Making a small friend group of locals takes 18-24 months or longer.
What “friendship” means differently:
Americans interpret social interaction as friendship-building
Northern Europeans see regular social interaction but not necessarily friendship progress
Italians, Spanish, Greeks form friendships faster and more openly
Strategies That Actually Work for Making Local Friends
1. Language immersion: The single most effective strategy. Speaking the local language signals commitment and creates vulnerability that friendships need. Even poor language skills show effort.
2. Join an ongoing group/activity: Not a one-time event. Regular attendance to the same group (sports, hobby, volunteer) is essential. Friendship develops through repetition, not intensity.
3. Be patient about friendship progression: In Northern Europe, a “new friend” phase lasts longer before becoming a “real friend.” Accept this. Continue showing up.
4. Invite people for specific activities: Rather than vague “let’s hang out sometime,” invite someone for a run, a specific concert, or a meal. Concrete plans are easier to accept.
5. Show genuine interest in local culture: Ask questions about local traditions, foods, history. People appreciate genuine interest.
6. Use the “familiar stranger” principle: Become a regular at a café, bar, hobby space. Familiarity breeds friendships over time.
7. Host gatherings: Hosting dinner or game nights (in your home or after group activities) accelerates friendship development. Throwing an event creates relationship obligation.
8. Find “friendship accelerators”: Certain situations speed friendship. Travel together, crisis management together, or working toward a shared goal creates bonding quickly.
9. Be patient with dating/romantic relationships: Don’t use romantic relationships as the primary path to deeper connection. For both language development and psychological health, non-romantic friendships matter.
10. Accept different friendship styles: A local friend who invites you out once monthly but is genuinely happy to see you is a real friend, even if Americans would text more frequently.
Dealing with Loneliness and Homesickness
Moving to a foreign country with no existing social network will likely be lonely at times. This is normal, expected, and temporary—but it deserves explicit attention.
Normal Loneliness Progression
Weeks 1-4: Honeymoon phase. Everything is interesting. Loneliness masked by novelty.
Weeks 5-12: Adjustment phase. Novelty wears off. Loneliness becomes apparent, often acute. You miss home. Food seems weird. Language frustrates you. This is when many people struggle most.
Months 4-6: Acceptance and adaptation. You’ve figured out basic systems. You have a few acquaintances. Acute loneliness eases.
Months 6-12: Integration phase. You have some friends, local routines, favorite places. Occasional homesickness but not acute loneliness.
Year 2+: Settlement. You have a life. You belong. Homesickness is nostalgia, not acute pain.
Strategies for Managing Loneliness
Maintain connections home (but carefully):
Regular calls/video chats with family and close friends (weekly, not daily)
Too much connection home delays adaptation
Share your life abroad, don’t just listen to their home-life updates
Establish immediately:
One routine café or restaurant where staff know you
One recurring weekly activity (class, group, volunteer shift)
One hobby or interest you pursue regularly
Physical activity is critical:
Exercise releases endorphins and regulates mood
Group sports provide social connection
Walking/hiking is meditative and helps you know your city
Many expats find physical activity non-negotiable for mental health
Budget for experiences:
Small travel (weekends in nearby cities) breaks monotony
Concerts, museums, events
Activities cost money but improve mental health
Professional support:
Consider therapy (therapists in major European cities often speak English)
Costs €50-150/session but helps navigate transition
Some countries have free/cheap mental health services for residents
Avoid isolation:
Say yes to social invitations, even when anxious
Host people at your place, even if simple
Volunteer or join activities even when unmotivated (motivation follows action, not vice versa)
Seek out other Americans if truly struggling:
There’s no shame in starting in the expat community
Many successful expats did this initially
You can transition to more local friendships once stabilized
Consider timing:
Moving in spring/summer eases adjustment (lighter, more outdoor activities, more group events)
Moving in winter is harder (fewer outdoor activities, darker, higher seasonal depression risk)
Building Your Social Life: A Practical Timeline
Before arrival:
Research meetup groups, sports clubs, and volunteer organizations in your destination city
Join Facebook expat groups and lurk to understand the community
Week 1-2:
Attend at least two InterNations or meetup events (just to break initial isolation)
Visit your top 3 candidate sports/hobby groups or volunteer organizations
Weeks 3-8:
Commit to one recurring activity (sports, hobby, or volunteer—one that meets weekly)
Attend InterNations events 2-3 times per month
Say yes to all social invitations
Start at your local café or restaurant, become a regular
Weeks 9-24:
Continue your primary recurring activity (consistency is key)
Branch out to a second recurring activity if interested
Attend meetup/interest groups 1-2 times per month
Work on friendships from your primary activity (extend outside-group invitations)
Months 6-12:
Reduce expat-specific events while increasing hobby/volunteer group presence
Consciously work on local friendships—invite people for activities beyond the group
Host gatherings yourself
Establish your local routines and relationships
Conclusion
Building a social life as an expat is challenging, takes time, and requires intentionality. The expat community is a valuable starting point, preventing acute loneliness while you establish yourself. However, your long-term satisfaction depends on developing genuine friendships beyond the expat bubble. This takes patience, especially in Northern Europe, but is absolutely achievable through consistent participation in activities aligned with your interests. The key is choosing your avenue (sports, hobbies, volunteering, language exchange) and committing to regular participation over months. Friendships follow naturally from repeated interaction combined with genuine interest and effort. Most successful expats report that local friendships become their most cherished aspect of life abroad.
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