Here Are The 10 Worst US States To Retire In

Ranked: The 10 Worst U.S. States to Retire In (2024)

This chart ranks the 10 worst U.S. states to retire in, as of 2024. Data was sourced from Bankrate.com.
 

This chart ranks the 10 worst U.S. states to retire in, according to Bankrate.com.

 

To create this list, Bankrate analyzed all states across five categories with assigned weights:

  • Affordability: Cost of living, taxes (40%).
  • Well-being: Sense of community, entertainment (25%).
  • Healthcare: Quality, cost, and access to health services (20%).
  • Weather: Average annual temperatures, natural disasters (10%).
  • Crime: Property and violent crime rates (5%).

One overall rank for each state was then calculated. The higher the number, the worse the ranking.


Which U.S. State is the Worst for Retirement?

By glancing through this graphic, it’s apparent that the worst states to retire in are those that are expensive and cold.
 

Overall Rank State Affordability Weather
50 Alaska #41 #50
49 New York #49 #37
48 Washington #47 #34
47 California #50 #12
46 North Dakota #26 #48
45 Massachusetts #48 #31
44 Colorado #39 #42
43 Maryland #46 #14
42 Texas #26 #7
41 Minnesota #32 #49

 

The logic behind the analysis is clear. Older adults are more sensitive to colder weather due to thinner skin, fat loss, and a slower metabolic rate. And of course, living on a fixed pension means that states with a higher cost of living are automatically harder to retire in.

Bankrate’s worst state for retirement, Alaska performs poorly across all metrics except that of well-being. It’s the coldest state by average temperatures. And while there’s no income tax, housing, utilities, and cost of health care are much higher than the rest of the country

Ranked 49th, New York is the second-worst state for affordability and ranks below-average for weather and healthcare.

The affordability metric also drags down Washington and California, despite them scoring well on all other metrics except crime.

Perhaps most surprising however is Texas, the only southern state in the bottom 10. With no income tax, and warmer weather it should be retirement central. However, Bankrate ranks Texas third-last on “well-being,” affecting its overall score.

For the complete list by all factors, you can download the pdf at Bankrate.com


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Disclosure: None

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