Making Friends Abroad: Why Building a Social Life Can Be Harder Than Finding a Job

Many people move abroad believing that finding a job will be their biggest challenge.

They spend weeks updating their CV, searching job boards, preparing for interviews, and learning about the local job market. After all that effort, they finally get hired.

But a few months later, many discover that the hardest part of living abroad was never finding a job.

It was making friends.

For expats, international students, and newcomers, building a social life in a new country can be far more difficult than securing employment. While jobs come with clear systems and expectations, friendships are much harder to build. They require time, trust, and repeated interaction. There is no application process, no guaranteed outcome, and no clear roadmap.

Yet social connections are often what determine whether someone truly feels at home in a new country.

Why Work Comes First and Friendship Comes Later

When people move abroad, practical needs naturally take priority. Housing, visas, paperwork, finances, and employment all demand immediate attention.

A job provides stability. It creates structure, financial security, and a sense of progress. For many newcomers, finding work is the first major milestone.

Social life, however, is different.

Many people assume friendships will develop naturally once they settle in. After all, that is how many friendships begin during school, university, or through neighbourhoods and existing social circles.

Moving abroad changes that.

Suddenly, even simple things can become surprisingly difficult. Finding someone to have coffee with, celebrate a birthday with, or call during a difficult week is no longer easy.

The Hidden Loneliness of Living Abroad

One of the most common experiences among internationals is feeling surrounded by people while still feeling alone.

You may spend every day talking to colleagues. You may greet neighbours, attend events, or interact with people regularly. Yet those interactions do not always turn into meaningful relationships.

This creates a gap between being socially active and feeling genuinely connected.

Many expats describe the same experience: their career is moving forward, but their personal life feels stuck.

On paper, life looks successful. In reality, something important is missing.

Human connection.

Cultural Differences Can Make Friendship More Complicated

Friendship means different things in different cultures.

In some countries, people quickly invite newcomers into their social lives. In others, friendships develop more slowly but often become deeper and longer lasting.

For newcomers, these differences can be confusing.

A colleague may be warm, friendly, and enjoyable to work with but never suggest meeting outside the office. Someone may have a great conversation with you at an event but never follow up afterwards.

Many internationals interpret these situations as rejection.

Often, they simply reflect different cultural expectations.

Understanding local social norms helps newcomers avoid unnecessary disappointment and build relationships with more realistic expectations.

The Challenge of Making Friends as an Adult

Making friends is not difficult only for expats.

Many adults struggle with it.

As people get older, life becomes busier. Careers demand more time. Families grow. Existing friendships often take up most of the available time and energy.

Unlike school or university, adult life rarely places people in environments that naturally encourage new friendships.

For newcomers, this creates a double challenge. They are adapting to a new country while also navigating the realities of adult social life.

As a result, meaningful friendships often take longer to develop than people expect.

Why Friendship Matters More Than Many People Realise

A successful move abroad is about more than employment.

Research and experience show that social connection plays an important role in wellbeing, happiness, and long-term integration.

Friends provide emotional support during difficult periods. They help newcomers understand local culture and create a sense of belonging that no salary or job title can replace.

Without meaningful relationships, even the most exciting international opportunity can begin to feel isolating.

With strong social connections, a foreign city can slowly start to feel like home.

How to Build a Social Life Abroad

The good news is that friendships can be built anywhere.

However, they rarely happen by accident.

Join Communities Instead of One-Time Events

Many newcomers attend networking events or social gatherings hoping to make friends immediately.

While these events can be useful, lasting friendships usually develop through repeated contact.

Sports clubs, volunteer organisations, hobby groups, language exchanges, and community activities often provide better opportunities because people meet regularly over time.

Familiarity creates trust, and trust creates connection.

Be Willing to Make the First Move

One of the biggest lessons many expats learn is that waiting for invitations does not always work.

Friendships often begin with small acts of initiative.

Invite a colleague for coffee. Suggest lunch after a language class. Organise a casual meetup. Follow up after meeting someone interesting.

Not every invitation will lead to a friendship.

That is normal.

The goal is not immediate success. The goal is creating more opportunities for connection.

Build Different Types of Relationships

A healthy social life is rarely built around one close friend.

It usually includes different types of connections:

  • Friends
  • Colleagues
  • Neighbours
  • Activity partners
  • Fellow internationals
  • Local residents

Each relationship adds value in a different way.

Together, they create a stronger sense of community and belonging.

Be Patient

Perhaps the most important advice is also the simplest: give it time.

Many people underestimate how long meaningful friendships take to develop.

Building a career often has visible milestones. Building relationships does not.

Progress can feel slow, but small interactions build up over time.

The people who feel most connected abroad are not always the most outgoing. They are often the people who consistently show up, stay engaged, and allow relationships to grow naturally.

From Living Abroad to Belonging Abroad

Finding a job abroad is an important achievement.

But employment alone does not create a fulfilling life.

For many internationals, the moment they truly feel settled is not when they sign an employment contract or receive a promotion. It is when they have people to celebrate with, rely on, and share everyday experiences with.

That is the difference between living in a country and belonging to it.

Making friends abroad may be harder than finding a job, but it is also one of the most rewarding parts of the international experience.

Because in the end, people rarely remember a city because of their office.

They remember it because of the relationships they built there.

Sayed Farid Sanai
Sayed Farid Sanai

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