Where Your $1M Retirement Nest Egg Actually Goes Further

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Abstract generation in progress

Planning to retire with a cool $1 million? Hold up—where you hang your hat matters way more than you’d think.

Got a million bucks in Hawaii? You’re looking at just 12 years before it’s dust. California? 16 years. But flip to Mississippi or West Virginia, and that same $1M stretches to 87-88 years. Wild difference, right?

The TL;DR breakdown:

Money dries up fast (under 20 years):

  • Hawaii: $2,761/month avg spend → 12.5 years
  • California: $2,269/month → 16.3 years
  • Massachusetts: $2,340/month → 19.4 years

Sweet spot (30+ years):

  • Works in 36 states
  • Nevada, Montana, Arizona all hit 30+ year mark

Actually silly cheap (60+ years):

  • Ohio: 62 years
  • Kansas: 65 years
  • Alabama: 67 years
  • Oklahoma: 71 years
  • Mississippi: 87 years
  • West Virginia: 89 years

The gap? Monthly living costs after Social Security. Mississippi retirees spend ~$1,784/month while Hawaiians drop $2,761. That 50% difference compounds fast.

Bottom line: If you’re planning a $1M retirement, geography is your biggest wealth multiplier. Moving from the coasts to the heartland could literally double or triple how long that money lasts. Not sexy, but the math doesn’t lie.

This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
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