sixtyandme logo
We are community supported and may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Learn more

The Retirement “What If?” Checklist Nobody Talks About

By Scott Farlay July 12, 2026 Senior Living

Most retirement plans assume life will continue more or less as it does today. We picture ourselves healthy, independent, driving where we want, visiting family, enjoying hobbies, and finally having more time to relax.

I hope retirement looks exactly like that for you.

But one thing I have learned from researching retirement destinations is that the happiest retirees are not always the ones who planned only for the perfect version of retirement. They are often the ones who also asked a few uncomfortable but practical questions.

  • What if driving becomes harder?
  • What if my income has to stretch farther than expected?
  • What if the power goes out for several days?
  • What if the place I chose changes over time?
  • What if I need more help, more people, or more support than I do today?

These questions are not meant to scare anyone. They are meant to help us make calmer, more realistic decisions before life forces us to make them quickly.

What If Driving Becomes Harder?

Many retirement-location decisions start with housing costs, weather, taxes, scenery, or proximity to family.

Those all matter.

But daily transportation deserves just as much attention.

A place can look wonderful when you are comfortable driving everywhere. It may feel very different if night driving becomes stressful, traffic feels overwhelming, or a medical appointment requires someone else to take you.

Before settling into a long-term retirement location, ask yourself:

  • Could I get to the grocery store without driving?
  • Are doctors, pharmacies, and hospitals reasonably close?
  • Is there public transportation, senior transportation, or ride-share access?
  • Would I feel isolated if I drove less?

This is one reason it helps to compare places to retire based on more than just cost or climate. A lower-cost town may not feel like a bargain if every errand becomes difficult later.

Independence is easier to protect when the basics of daily life are close enough to manage.

What If Your Income Has to Stretch Farther Than Expected?

Many retirees are careful planners. They know their expected income, savings, pension, Social Security, and housing costs.

But retirement can still surprise us.

Insurance can rise. Property taxes can change. Healthcare costs can increase. A spouse may pass away. Adult children may need help. Home repairs may arrive at the worst possible time.

That does not mean you need to plan for every possible financial problem. No one can do that.

But it does mean your retirement location should give you some breathing room.

This matters especially for people trying to retire on Social Security or live on a fixed income. Even if Social Security is only one part of your retirement income, it can be helpful to think about how far a dependable monthly check would go in the place you are considering.

A beautiful retirement destination can become stressful if the numbers are too tight every month.

Sometimes the best retirement choice is not the cheapest place. It is the place where your budget, housing, healthcare, transportation, and lifestyle all have a reasonable chance of working together.

What If the Power Goes Out for Several Days?

A short power outage is usually just annoying.

A longer one can become much more serious.

This is especially true in areas with hurricanes, severe thunderstorms, winter storms, extreme heat, flooding, or wildfire-related outages.

For retirees, power outages are not only about lights and television. They can affect refrigerated medications, food, phone charging, internet access, heating, cooling, medical devices, and the ability to stay in touch with family.

You do not need to turn your home into a bunker. But you should have a basic plan.

  • Do you have flashlights that work?
  • Can you charge your phone?
  • Do you have a way to keep medications safe?
  • Do family members know how to reach you?
  • Do you rely on a CPAP machine or another device that needs electricity?

Anyone who depends on medical equipment should think carefully about backup power for medical devices before storm season or extreme weather arrives.

This is not about worrying every day. It is about making one hard week easier to handle if it comes.

What If the Place You Chose Changes?

Sometimes people move to a retirement destination because of how it feels at one moment in time.

The weather is pleasant. The housing seems affordable. The neighborhood feels safe. The lifestyle looks easy.

But places change.

Insurance costs may rise. Storm risk may become more noticeable. A once-quiet area may grow crowded. A nearby hospital may reduce services. Summers may feel hotter than expected. Wildfire smoke, flooding, hurricanes, or long heat waves may become part of life in ways people did not fully consider.

This is why natural disaster risk should be part of the retirement conversation, especially for anyone thinking about coastal, mountain, desert, or storm-prone areas.

That does not mean avoiding every place with risk. Every region has tradeoffs. It means knowing what those tradeoffs are before you move.

A place may still be worth it. But it is better to make that choice with open eyes than to discover the hard parts later.

What If You Need More People Around You?

Not every retirement “what if” is financial, medical, or weather-related. Some are social.

  • What if your closest friend moves away?
  • What if your spouse or partner gets sick?
  • What if you stop driving as much?
  • What if the social life you expected does not happen automatically?
  • What if your adult children are busier than you imagined?

Many people underestimate how much daily life depends on small, ordinary connections.

A neighbor who checks in.

A friend who meets for coffee.

A group that expects you on Tuesday morning.

A church, club, class, walking group, volunteer role, or favorite local place.

Before making a major retirement move, think about where your regular human contact will come from.

  • Will you have people nearby?
  • Will it be easy to meet new people?
  • Will you feel comfortable joining groups?
  • Will family be close enough for real support, not just holiday visits?

Loneliness can sneak up on people. Planning for connection is just as practical as planning for housing or taxes.

What If You Have to Move Again?

Many people picture one big retirement move.

Sell the house. Choose the dream location. Settle in for good.

Sometimes that works beautifully. But sometimes people move again.

They move closer to family. They downsize. They leave a high-maintenance home. They decide the dream location was better for vacations than daily life. They need more healthcare access, more transportation options, or less isolation.

A second move does not mean the first move was a mistake. It means life changed.

Still, it helps to avoid choices that would make a later move harder than necessary.

Before buying, ask:

  • Would this home be easy to sell?
  • Are there stairs I may not want later?
  • Could I afford help with maintenance?
  • Would renting first make sense?
  • Am I choosing flexibility, or am I locking myself into a life that may not fit later?

Retirement is not one fixed season. Your needs at 65 may not be the same as your needs at 75 or 85.

A little flexibility can be a gift to your future self.

Planning for “What If” Is Not Negative

I understand why people avoid these questions.

Retirement is supposed to be the reward. After years of working, saving, caregiving, raising families, and managing responsibilities, most of us do not want to sit around thinking about what might go wrong.

But asking “what if?” is not the same as expecting the worst.

It is a way of protecting the life you want.

A good retirement plan leaves room for real life. It allows for health changes, weather events, transportation changes, financial surprises, family needs, and shifting priorities.

None of us can plan for everything.

But we can ask better questions.

And sometimes those questions help us choose a home, a town, and a support system that will serve us better for the long run.

Questions for You:

Have you thought through your own retirement “what ifs”? Do you have a plan for power outages, transportation changes, medical appointments, or needing more help someday? What is one practical step you have taken that makes you feel more prepared?

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments

The Author

Scott Farlay is the editor of RetireScorecard, a retirement-location research site that helps retirees compare places to live using practical factors like cost of living, taxes, healthcare access, housing, weather risk, broadband, and day-to-day livability. He writes about making retirement-location decisions with clarity and confidence.

You Might Also Like