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What is the most important aspect of retirement planning?
If you said finances, you’re probably right. But have you ever thought about where the best place is to retire? Being strategic about location can make a big impact on your quality of life, and perhaps help your savings go just a bit further.
To help break it down, we’ve visualized data from personal finance platform, WalletHub, which ranked the best U.S. states for retirement as of 2023.
Data and Methodology
WalletHub ranked each state using 47 metrics across three dimensions.
Affordability (7 metrics worth 40 points)
Quality of Life (22 metrics worth 30 points)
Health Care (18 metrics worth 30 points)
Here are some examples of what each dimension measures:
Affordability: Cost of living and taxation
Quality of Life: Quality of elder-abuse protections and crime rates
Health Care: Number of health professionals per capita and life expectancy
The final scores (visualized as the bars in the infographic above) represent each state’s weighted average across all metrics. See below for more comprehensive results.
Rank
State
Score
Affordability
(rank)
Quality of Life
(rank)
Health Care
(rank)
1
Virginia
57.6
16
11
11
2T
Florida
57.4
9
4
28
2T
Colorado
57.4
14
27
5
4
Wyoming
55.6
5
9
38
5
Delaware
55.5
6
33
18
6
New Hampshire
55.0
31
5
7
7
South Dakota
53.6
25
30
9
8
Minnesota
53.5
40
2
1
9
Idaho
53.2
15
17
31
10
North Dakota
53.0
22
25
20
11
Utah
52.7
20
24
26
12
North Carolina
52.6
12
23
35
13
Missouri
52.4
17
28
32
14
Pennsylvania
52.3
36
3
12
15T
Montana
52.1
24
15
29
15T
South Carolina
52.1
4
38
39
17
Massachusetts
51.9
47
1
2
18
California
51.6
32
19
10
19
Alaska
51.3
26
36
8
20
Arizona
51.1
18
35
25
21
Wisconsin
50.9
34
14
17
22
Alabama
50.7
1
44
50
23
Ohio
49.8
27
8
37
24
Hawaii
49.7
38
29
4
25
Nebraska
49.3
37
16
15
26
Iowa
48.9
35
12
24
27
Georgia
48.6
7
40
42
28
Michigan
48.0
29
18
36
29T
Maine
47.5
43
6
13
29T
New Mexico
47.5
21
46
30
31
Indiana
47.3
23
31
40
32T
Nevada
47.2
11
42
41
32T
Tennessee
47.2
2
48
45
34T
Vermont
47.1
48
7
6
34T
Connecticut
47.1
44
26
3
36
Kansas
46.8
30
32
33
37
West Virginia
46.4
3
43
49
38
Oregon
46.1
41
21
21
39
Texas
45.9
28
37
34
40
Rhode Island
45.0
39
39
14
41
Arkansas
44.7
8
49
44
42
Maryland
44.6
46
20
19
43
Washington
44.5
45
13
23
44
Illinois
44.3
42
22
27
45
Louisiana
43.9
13
45
47
46
New York
43.7
50
10
16
47
Oklahoma
43.6
19
47
43
48
Mississippi
40.8
10
50
48
49
New Jersey
40.2
49
34
22
50
Kentucky
38.8
33
41
46
According to this methodology, Virginia is currently the best state for retirement. Although the Southeastern state does not excel in any one dimension, it scores consistently well across all three to create a very balanced retirement profile.
This gives it a slight advantage over second place Florida, which excels in quality of life and affordability, but falls further behind in terms of health care. Third-placed Colorado is a mirror of Florida, offering excellent health care but a lower quality of life in comparison.
How to Interpret These Results
It’s important to remember that this ranking is purely based on data and the methodology above, and may not be tailored to your individual preferences.
For example, if you believe that health services will be very important during retirement, you may rank Minnesota (#1 in terms of health care) much higher than eighth place.
You may notice that prioritizing one dimension will often come at a trade-off in others. Looking at Minnesota once more, we can see that the state is also one of America’s most expensive.
Looking to retire outside of the U.S.? Check out this graphic on the top 25 countries to retire in.