25 Best US Cities Where You Can Retire on $2500 a Month

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This article takes a look at the 25 best US cities where you can retire on $2500 a month. If you wish to skip our detailed analysis on navigating retirement in 2024, you may go to 5 Best US Cities Where You Can Retire on $2500 a Month.

Navigating Retirement in 2024: Insights, Challenges, and Strategies

Entering 2024, retirees will encounter a substantial reduction in their Cost of Living Adjustments (COLAs), amounting to less than half of what they received in 2023. The USA grappled with record inflation in the year 2022, prompting the Social Security Administration to announce an 8.7% increase in social security benefits for the subsequent year. This increase has been the highest in 40 years, with retirees receiving an average monthly boost of more than $140. Regrettably, benefits do not increase consistently each year, and even when they do, the increments may not necessarily match the levels of the previous year.

This means that the 71 million individuals receiving Social Security benefits in 2024 are poised to receive a Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) mirroring the deceleration in inflation. This COLA for 2024 is set to be 3.2% only.

"Though it's less than the COLA for the past two years, next year's bump is more in line with the historical average increase. For the past two decades, the average COLA has been 2.6%. In more recent years, it has been as low as 0%." -Mike Lynch, managing director of applied insights Hartford Funds.

The 3.2% COLA means the average monthly benefit for a retired worker will increase by more than $50 per month starting January 2024. According to The Charles Schwab Corporation (NYSE:SCHW), although this payment may appear modest compared to the 8.9% COLA last year, retirees stand to retain higher benefits if inflation continues to subside in the coming months. Nevertheless, a sizable chunk is going to be eaten away by the standard Medicare Part B premiums too. These premiums have risen to $174.70 per month in 2024 from $164.90 in 2023, and are generally deducted from social security benefits.

"Social Security benefits generally do keep up with inflation, though there is a lag…If anything, these changes are a reminder that retirees' incomes aren't truly fixed. Social Security benefits can change from year to year, and retirees can and should adjust their spending as their situation and the broader economic and financial environment evolve."