The post Here’s Where Your Dog Wants To Retire. But Can You Afford It? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A woman in her late 60s has spent most of her life training dogs. Not professionally anymore, but enough that daily walks, obedience work, trail time, and canine companionship are woven into her routine. She has two rescue dogs, a $750,000 portfolio, a $2,800 monthly Social Security check, and a city in mind. Bend, Oregon appears on nearly every list of America’s most dog-friendly cities, with miles of trails, off-leash recreation areas, dog-friendly breweries, and enough outdoor space to keep both dogs and owners happy. She wants to know whether retiring there is financially realistic or simply another lifestyle that looks better on Instagram than on a spreadsheet.
The challenge is that many other people have discovered the same thing. Housing costs, healthcare expenses, and everyday living costs reflect Bend’s popularity as much as its scenery. The question is not whether she and the dogs would love it. The question is whether the retirement budget can love it too.
Start with the house, because in Bend, the house is the whole conversation. The median home price sits around $725,000, with Redfin (NASDAQ:RDFN) showing a three-month median closer to $704,000 and Zillow (NASDAQ:Z)’s median list price pushing past $818,000. A retiree showing up with $750,000 and trying to buy in cash would empty the entire portfolio for the front door. Financing a $425,000 mortgage at current rates eats roughly $2,800 a month in principal and interest, which is the entire Social Security check.
This scenario only works if you arrive with substantial home equity from somewhere else, or you rent. A decent two-bedroom rental in Bend runs $2,200 to $2,500 a month, which is workable but still consumes most of the Social Security income before the first hike.
Assume the retiree sells a paid-off home elsewhere and lands in Bend mortgage-free in a modest house worth around $600,000. Now the numbers start cooperating. Deschutes County’s effective property tax rate is about 0.60%, with median Bend property taxes near $3,938. Homeowners insurance is the variable nobody wants to talk about: premiums in Deschutes County rose 30.3% from 2021 to 2023, and 21% of property tax lots in the county are designated high wildfire hazard. Budget $2,500 to $3,500 a year, and assume that line grows faster than general inflation, which is already running at 3.77% headline PCE.
Here is a realistic annual budget for a paid-off house, one car, two senior rescue dogs, and a life spent mostly outdoors:
That lands at roughly $47,600 a year. Oregon does not tax Social Security, but it does tax IRA and 401(k) withdrawals at marginal rates running from 4.75% to 9.9%, with the 8.75% bracket starting at just $10,200 of taxable income. That bites more than retirees expect.
Subtract $33,600 in Social Security and the portfolio needs to cover about $14,000 a year. Against a $750,000 balance, that is a withdrawal rate under 2%, which is genuinely conservative. A laddered mix of short-duration Treasuries and TIPS for the next decade of withdrawals, with the remainder split between a broad total-market index fund and an intermediate investment-grade bond fund, handles this without drama.
The Carolinas, Arizona, and Florida often look cheaper on paper, but the comparison is not as dramatic as many retirees assume. Oregon’s regional price parity of 103.361 is almost identical to Florida’s 103.414. The real difference is housing. Bend’s popularity with outdoor enthusiasts, remote workers, and retirees has pushed home prices well above many competing retirement destinations. A comparable house in Bend can easily cost $200,000 to $300,000 more than a similar property in Greenville, South Carolina, or many Florida markets.
For this retiree, that gap is the entire story. If she arrives with substantial home equity from a Pacific Northwest sale, Bend becomes much easier to justify. If she arrives with less equity from a lower-cost market, the housing purchase starts drawing heavily on the portfolio that is supposed to support retirement. Wildfire insurance and maintenance costs add another layer over time. The three rescue dogs will love the trails, rivers, and open space regardless. Whether their owner can comfortably afford to join them depends less on the dogs and more on the house she sold to get there.
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The post Here’s Where Your Dog Wants To Retire. But Can You Afford It? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


