Short answer
The move is a plan question, not a postcard question.
Florida can work on paper only if the household tests the whole move: monthly spending, housing reset, state taxes, insurance or hazard risk, health care, and the distance from family. Florida can lower one tax line while raising the importance of housing, insurance, storm risk, and summer comfort.
Start here
What you actually came to find out
Plain answers first. Sources stay below for checking details.
What is the real cost?
Start with today's monthly spending, then test the destination cost level, the new home cost, insurance, travel, and one-time setup money.
What changes in taxes?
No broad state income tax. State income tax is only one line. Property tax, sales tax, retirement-income treatment, and Medicare income effects can still matter.
What changes in life?
Heat, storms, insurance. The move changes doctors, daily errands, weather, visitors, airport access, and how often family sees each other.
What does the planner test?
The journey turns the destination into a retirement map: spending, home, income, taxes, health care, travel, and how long the move can stay comfortable.
Cost level
BEA: Florida above U.S. average
BEA price parities show whether the state starts above or below the national cost level before the household chooses a specific home.
Source trail: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
Housing reset
Census: state-level housing reset
Census housing facts help frame ownership, rent, household income, and age mix before a move quote or home search takes over.
Source trail: U.S. Census Bureau
Tax layer
No broad state income tax
State tax treatment can change retirement cash flow, but the tax answer is incomplete without income type, property, sales tax, and timing.
Source trail: SmartAsset, Tax Foundation, Florida Office of Economic and Demographic Research
Risk and rhythm
Heat, storms, insurance
FEMA hazard data and Medicare cost sources keep risk, insurance, and health-care access in the same conversation as lifestyle.
Source trail: FEMA, Medicare.gov
A neutral way to test Florida is this: price the dream, then check whether the tax, housing, health-care, risk, and family-distance lines still fit the map.
Free quick estimate
Quick move math for Florida
Compare current monthly spending and state-taxable retirement income with a rough Florida cost and tax check.
Free to use here. Save it to your map when you want the full road.
Testing move to
Florida
This quick check uses BEA state price parities and broad 2026 state income-tax rates. Housing, insurance, property tax, Medicare networks, and county details still need the full map.
Move math
Live estimate
-$317 per month
Florida prices run lower than New York in this BEA state-level check. The tax line and move budget still need to be tested.
Florida has no broad personal income tax, so the plan has to look harder at housing, insurance, sales tax, and property tax. This is a rough first-pass comparison, not a tax return.
Neutral landscape
The shape of the question
The first layer is the monthly cost level. BEA regional price parities are not a personal budget, but they give a public way to compare Florida against another state.
Source trail: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
The second layer is housing. Census: state-level housing reset matters because a lower state tax bill can disappear if the new home, HOA, rent, property tax, or insurance line is higher.
Source trail: U.S. Census Bureau
The third layer is state tax. No broad state income tax belongs beside federal taxes, Social Security timing, RMDs, pensions, Roth withdrawals, and Medicare premium lookbacks.
Source trail: SmartAsset, Tax Foundation, Florida Office of Economic and Demographic Research
The fourth layer is daily life. Heat, storms, insurance can change transportation, doctor access, family visits, seasonal comfort, and the cost of staying connected.
Source trail: FEMA, Medicare.gov
Curator core
What the authorities say
These sources are here for the reader who wants to check the work. The plain-English answer stays above them.
Source 01
SmartAsset
Where Retirees Are Moving in 2025
SmartAsset uses Census migration data to show where older households moved, including top states and metros.
Source framing
SmartAsset gives a current retiree-migration lens for choosing the first destination batch.
Strongest for: retiree migration demand signals
Read at SmartAssetSource 02
AARP
States Retirees Are Moving To
AARP summarizes retiree relocation patterns and the states drawing older movers.
Source framing
AARP frames retiree relocation as a practical mix of cost, taxes, housing, weather, and family.
Strongest for: retiree relocation context
Read at AARPSource 03
U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
Regional Price Parities by State and Metro Area
BEA regional price parities compare price levels across states and metro areas against the national average.
Source framing
BEA gives the public cost-level framework used for the quick move math on these pages.
Strongest for: state and metro cost-level comparison
Read at U.S. Bureau of Economic AnalysisSource 04
Tax Foundation
State Individual Income Tax Rates and Brackets, 2026
Tax Foundation compiles 2026 state individual income tax rates and bracket structures.
Source framing
Tax Foundation gives the cross-state income-tax table behind the relocation tax quick check.
Strongest for: comparing state income tax structures
Read at Tax FoundationSource 05
Florida Office of Economic and Demographic Research
Florida Tax Handbook
Florida state tax handbooks summarize the state tax system, including the lack of a broad personal income tax.
Source framing
Florida tax material is the official trail for the state tax layer in Florida relocation pages.
Strongest for: Florida tax-system context
Read at Florida Office of Economic and Demographic ResearchSource 06
U.S. Census Bureau
QuickFacts: Florida
Census QuickFacts gives public demographic, housing, income, and age data for Florida.
Source framing
Census QuickFacts keeps the Florida move grounded in population and housing facts.
Strongest for: Florida demographic and housing facts
Read at U.S. Census BureauSource 07
FEMA
National Risk Index
FEMA maps natural-hazard risk by county and community, including hurricane, wildfire, flood, heat, and winter-weather hazards.
Source framing
FEMA helps keep relocation pages from treating climate and insurance risk as an afterthought.
Strongest for: natural-hazard risk context
Read at FEMASource 08
Medicare.gov
Medicare Costs
Medicare.gov explains premiums, deductibles, copayments, coinsurance, and cost vocabulary.
Source framing
Medicare.gov is the consumer source for Medicare cost categories and premium terms.
Strongest for: Medicare cost vocabulary
Read at Medicare.govPlain-English forks
The forks people face
Most retirement questions hide a few smaller decisions. These are the practical pieces that change the plan.
Is the move really cheaper?
Why it matters: The useful comparison starts with current monthly spending and then adjusts for the destination cost level and housing reset.
In real life: This fork changes monthly cash flow before taxes are even added.
What to look at: What to look at: BEA price parities, local Census housing data, and actual home or rent quotes.
Which tax line actually changes?
Why it matters: A state income-tax change may matter, but property tax, sales tax, retirement-income rules, and Medicare lookbacks can offset it.
In real life: This fork changes after-tax income and the year-by-year plan.
What to look at: What to look at: state revenue sources, Tax Foundation rate tables, IRS income timing, and the household tax return.
What happens to housing risk?
Why it matters: A move can trade one risk for another: storm, flood, heat, wildfire, winter weather, HOA rules, or insurance availability.
In real life: This fork changes the home line and the emergency reserve.
What to look at: What to look at: FEMA risk data, insurance quotes, property records, and local emergency-management information.
Who gets farther away?
Why it matters: Family distance can change travel costs, caregiving, holidays, backup help, and how long the move still feels good.
In real life: This fork changes the lifestyle value of the move, not just the budget.
What to look at: What to look at: flight or driving cost, health-care networks, long-term care plans, and family visit rhythm.
Common questions
Quick answers
Short, plain answers for the questions people usually have next. The source trail stays available below.
Is Florida cheaper for retirement?+
It depends on the current state, the home choice, insurance, travel, and tax facts. BEA gives a state-level cost comparison, but the personal answer comes from the household budget.
Does Florida tax retirement income?+
No broad state income tax. The full answer depends on the type of income, filing status, deductions, property tax, sales tax, and federal tax timing.
How much cash belongs in the move budget?+
No public source gives one number that fits every move. The budget usually needs moving services, temporary lodging, deposits, home setup, repairs, registration, travel, and a cushion.
What is the housing number to test?+
Test the full housing line: mortgage or rent, property tax, insurance, HOA fees, repairs, utilities, and the cost to sell or buy.
How does health care fit into a relocation plan?+
Health care belongs in the county-level check because Medicare plans, doctors, hospitals, and prescription costs can change after a move.
Can the free journey help compare this move?+
Yes. The journey turns the move into a plan with spending, housing, income, taxes, Social Security, health care, travel, and dream trade-offs in one place.
How this page is curated
This page uses a relocation-first source set: BEA regional price parities for cost-level comparison, Census QuickFacts for housing and population context, Tax Foundation and state revenue sources for state-tax treatment, FEMA for hazard context, and Medicare sources for health-cost framing. The page does not rank destinations or tell a household where to move.
Read the planner methodologyTrust anchor
Sources used on this page
Every source named above is listed here in one place.
AARP. States Retirees Are Moving To
https://www.aarp.org/money/retirement/retirees-top-states-2025/FEMA. National Risk Index
https://hazards.fema.gov/nri/Florida Office of Economic and Demographic Research. Florida Tax Handbook
https://edr.state.fl.us/Content/revenues/reports/tax-handbook/index.cfmMedicare.gov. Medicare Costs
https://www.medicare.gov/basics/costs/medicare-costsSmartAsset. Where Retirees Are Moving in 2025
https://smartasset.com/data-studies/where-retirees-move-2025Tax Foundation. State Individual Income Tax Rates and Brackets, 2026
https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/state-income-tax-rates-2026/U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Regional Price Parities by State and Metro Area
https://www.bea.gov/data/prices-inflation/regional-price-parities-state-and-metro-areaU.S. Census Bureau. QuickFacts: Florida
https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/florida
Before you act on this
This plan is educational. It is not personalized financial, tax, or insurance advice. Projections illustrate the math, they do not predict the future. Talk to your own licensed financial professional before acting on any of it.