10 Bargain Retirement Spots
There's nothing chintzy about these lower-cost locales
When you retire, you're obviously no longer tied to your job. Equally important, you no longer have to live where your job was. You're free to lie on the beach, explore the mountains, traverse a bustling city, breathe in the wide open spaces, or reside anywhere that strikes your fancy and-ah, yes-fits your budget.

The "B" word-there's the rub. Most would-be retirees aren't going to have enough dough in the bank or 401(k) to kick back in Honolulu or live the expatriate life in Paris. Studies consistently show that when it comes to saving for retirement, most Americans are running behind. And, let's face it, many will never catch up. Nearly half of Americans report having less than $25,000 worth of savings and investments.
But you can do much to help your cause by picking a low-cost locale. There are plenty of retirement spots that offer delightful surroundings and amenities but still are easy on the wallet. And if you move to a destination with a lower cost of living than where you reside now-maybe even getting a bigger house for less money-it will add to your net worth and enable you to live better in retirement.
U.S. News consulted four of the country's top experts on retirement locations and came up with a list of 10 best bargain retirement spots. They range from the rocky beaches of Kennebunk, Maine, to arid Yucca Valley, Calif., and from sun-soaked Melbourne Beach, Fla., to rural Sandpoint, Idaho, near Canada. Not all will seem downright cheap-in fact, a few may strike you as quite pricey depending on where you live today-but they do have this in common: They offer good value in retirement living.
"Although money is limited, you're still able to do a lot of things most people can't," says David Savageau, author of Retirement Places Rated.
Bruce Wilson, 57, moved from Mount Vernon, Va., to Natchitoches, La., in 2003 and built a 4,000-square-foot lakefront house on 2 acres of land dotted with banana trees. "You'd have to have a lot more money than I've got to have a place like this in Washington, D.C.," says Wilson, a retired Army colonel who used to work at the Pentagon. "Even though I put some high-end stuff in it, it was still significantly cheaper per square foot to build it here," he says of his seven marble-floored bathrooms and the guest suite fondly known as the "West Wing."
It also helps when you save on taxes. Jean Baber, who moved from San Diego to Yuma, Ariz., now pays a state sales tax that is 1.65 percentage points lower than California's and a state income tax with a maximum rate of only 4.57 percent, compared with 9.3 percent in California.
Moving on. Granted, most people don't move when they retire. Only 7 percent of people age 50 or older traded spaces in 2004, according to the Census Bureau, and most of them stayed in the same state. But there are significant savings to be had by finding a lower-cost location in your state. "If you downsize from your very expensive house in San Francisco, you're going to pay a lot less for your house and you're going to free up a lot of equity," says Lizzy Scully, managing editor of the relocation recommendation website FindYourSpot.com.
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