Community Corner

Here’s What It Costs To Retire Comfortably In Missouri

Yearly retirement costs range from as low as about $36,000 to as high as $56,000. Here's what retirement costs in Missouri.

MISSOURI — Retirement can be daunting. It involves a lot of math and, obviously, some educated guesses. But a new report shows that retiring comfortably in one state can cost nearly twice as much as another. That means a 65-year-old retiree who lives to be 85 might need — get this — an extra half-million dollars for living expenses depending just on where they live.

That’s according to a new report from 24/7 Wall St., which looked at what it costs to retire comfortably in every state. Missouri ranked as the 11th cheapest state for a comfortable retirement in the country, slightly more expensive than Iowa but cheaper than Utah. Here’s the breakdown:

  • Estimated yearly retirement costs: $39,696
  • Average yearly earnings for 65+ households: $22,969 (13th lowest)
  • Average yearly homeownership costs for seniors: $13,176 (12th lowest)
  • Percent of residents who are at least 65 years old:16.5% (20th highest)

The costliest state in which to retire comfortably was Alaska. About 11 percent of Alaskans are over the age of 65, the second-lowest share in the nation, the authors found. That might have something to do with the fact that retirement costs are estimated at $56,879 every year, about $2,000 more than the second-costliest state, Hawaii.

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Here are the 10 costliest states for a comfortable retirement:

  1. Alaska, $56,879
  2. Hawaii, $54,590
  3. New York, $50,321
  4. California, $49,640
  5. Vermont, $49,598
  6. Connecticut, $48,532
  7. New Jersey, $47,760
  8. Maryland, $47,061
  9. Virginia, $46,758
  10. Massachusetts, $46,265

Retirees looking to keep their costs down ought to consider Arkansas or New Mexico, the two cheapest states. An Arkansas retiree sees an estimated yearly cost of $36,378, the researchers found, and the typical senior pays just $11,112 in homeownership costs.

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New Mexico, Kentucky, Ohio and Michigan rounded out the five cheapest states for a comfortable retirement.

Many expenditures are common across all age groups, but some are specific to retirees. Among these: annual health care costs. Americans ages 65 and over spend more than 34 percent more every year on health care than the typical consumer, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Expenditure Survey.

Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

Image via Shutterstock

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