Retiring and relocating? Take a holistic approach
[August 09, 2025]
By LEANNE ITALIE
NEW YORK (AP) — Debra Taylor has had a busy year or so: She's going
through a divorce while in the process of retiring — and she's moving to
Portugal from Southern California with one of her daughters.
After deciding her next home would be outside the U.S., she narrowed
down her choices based on tax burdens (Spain was out with its wealth
taxes), climate (no Costa Rica, too hot) and ease of travel within
Europe, one of her favorite parts of the world. She then toured Portugal
with a relocation company, Expatsi, and found her new home, Aveiro. It's
a striking city on the country's west coast with lovely canals that
earned it the nickname the Venice of Portugal.
It's all logistics from there. Taylor signed a year lease on an
apartment (a requirement for moving forward), hired the company Viv
Europe to navigate bureaucracies and paperwork, signed up for the
necessary FBI background check and has an appointment in late September
to move ahead with visas.
Her youngest child gave her the idea to leave the country.
“After our current president was elected, my 18-year-old transgender
daughter came to me and said, ‘I want to get out of this country ASAP,’”
Taylor recalled. “That was just fine with me.”
Her oldest daughter, who's 20, will stay in the U.S. to complete
college.
“None of this means I have to live there forever,” Taylor said. “I’ll
use this as my jumping-off point to do more deeper dives, explore the
rest of the region. I want to buy a place, but I’m not going to do that
until I’m living there and spend more time in different communities.”
According to aging and relocation experts, Taylor has made the right
decisions.

Relocating for retirement
The number of people who relocate upon retirement fluctuates, based on
such factors as politics, home affordability and cost-of-living rates.
While older adults are less likely to move than younger populations,
more than 3 million people age 65 and older relocated within the U.S. in
the five years before the coronavirus pandemic, according to the U.S.
Census Bureau.
As for moving abroad, U.S. politics is now the No. 1 reason cited by
people who use Expatsi, the company's co-founder Jen Barnett said.
“The one downside is that a lot of countries retirees are interested in
don’t want retirees, and that is to say wealthy, English-speaking
countries, because they want laborers,” Barnett said.
While most U.S. retirees stay put in existing homes and locales, those
who want to age in place face mounting challenges, said AARP Vice
President Rodney Harrell, who focuses on housing and livable
communities.
Challenges include rising rents or mortgages, costs for home
modifications, and a lack of community support services like adequate
health care, reliable utilities and safe environments.
“One of the biggest challenges that we have is making sure that we take
the future us into account, and not just look at our needs today,"
Harrell said. “Are we driving today? Is our income where it is? Is our
spouse and myself healthy right now? How able are we to walk around and
use steps, etc.? Things can change.”
All of the above is crucial as the U.S. heads into a gray bubble.
“We’re going to have more people over 65 than under 18 by 2034. For the
first time in U.S. history, we have more older adults than children,”
Harrell said.
It's not just about weather or grandkids
Do you want mountains, an ocean, to be closer to grandkids? Would you
like a university town or city, a particular religious institution?
Harrell suggests setting clear priorities when planning a relocation.
And they should go well beyond those specifications.

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Water surrounds the coast of Cabo da Roca near Lisbon, Portugal on
April 14, 2023. (AP Photo/Michael Probst, File)
 Taking housing costs into
consideration is generally universal, he said, but he urged a more
subtle consideration.
“What are the neighbors like? Is it an active community, if that’s
what you want. Do people keep to themselves more? That social
connection is really important, too,” Harrell said.
The AARP's livability index scores neighborhoods and communities
across the U.S. for the services and amenities that impact older
people. It's easily searchable by address, city, state or ZIP code.
“Think about all of the things that you might want collectively, and
know that there’s no perfect place,” Harrell said. “Once you have
those things in mind, you’ll get to the best possible outcome. Every
place has trade-offs."
If being close to children and grandchildren is high on the list,
set clear expectations about how involved you want to be in such
things as child care, said retirement transition planner Elizabeth
Zelinka Parsons. Also, chat with adult children before making a move
to determine how settled they are themselves.
Casey Bowers and her husband, Dave Bowers, recently relocated to
Ericeira, northwest of Lisbon on Portugal's beachy Silver Coast.
They love it, but it's not all ocean and sun.
“We have three adult children and their partners, and one grandbaby
with another on the way,” Casey said. “We're very close to our
children. Learning the grocery store, getting new cellphones, those
are just procedural things, but being away from family — that’s the
hardest part.”
Sarah Friedell O’Connell, a retirement coach in Boston, looks at
relocation this way: “You’re going to get a lot of hours back when
you stop your full-time job. What are you going to do with that
time?"
Take a good look at your lifestyle
As a wealth manager, Chad Harmer has helped dozens of retirees
relocate, from Ontario, Canada, to Arizona’s High Desert, from the
Boston suburbs to the Carolinas. And he's dealt with some
“boomerang” moves back home after grandchildren arrived.
“Start with a 'lifestyle audit,' not a tax table," he said. “I ask
clients to write a perfect Thursday five years from now. Where are
they walking? Who are they meeting for coffee? How long is the drive
to the grandkids? That exercise surfaces climate preferences, social
networks, volunteer hobbies and healthcare priorities long before we
argue over property tax millage rates.”

He also recommended budgeting for hidden inflators — such as higher
insurance premiums in disaster-prone areas and frequent flights to
see family — and considering less obvious weather complications,
like pollen levels.
Parsons, who wrote “Encore: A High Achiever's Guide to Thriving in
Retirement,” is a staunch supporter of taking a short-term rental
before deciding on a permanent move.
“It's tempting to retire where you vacation, but that may not be the
greatest idea,” she said.
Harmer's rule of thumb: When 80 % of your desired daily routine is
achievable in a new location for at least 80 % of the year, you’re
in the right ZIP code.
“Anything less and you’re probably chasing an Instagram fantasy
rather than a retirement reality,” he said.
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