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Florida vs Michigan for retirement

On the 8 lines this page tracks, Florida comes out lower or more retiree-friendly on 5 of them. That is a starting point, not a verdict: your own spending, housing, income mix, and the city you pick still decide the real number.

FloridaMichigan
Cost of living (BEA index)
103
96
State income tax
None
~4.2%
Taxes Social Security
No
No
Property tax rate
0.9%
1.5%
Sales tax (avg combined)
7.0%
6.0%
Assisted living (per year)
$67,320
$69,816
Nursing home, semi-private (per year)
$124,100
$135,050
Home caregiver (per year)
$73,216
$79,508

A green check marks the more retiree-friendly side on that line (lower cost, lower tax, or Social Security not taxed). Lower is not always better for you; these are state averages, not your plan.

Common questions

Florida vs Michigan, answered.

Is Florida or Michigan cheaper to retire in?

On the BEA cost-of-living index, Michigan sits at 96 and Florida at 103, where 100 is the U.S. average. So the same basket of goods tends to cost less in Michigan. Housing and your own budget still decide the real number.

Which has lower taxes for retirees, Florida or Michigan?

Florida has no state income tax. Michigan uses about a 4.2% blended retirement-income planning rate. Florida's average combined sales tax is 7.0% and its property-tax planning rate is 0.9%; Michigan is 6.0% and 1.5%.

Does Florida or Michigan tax Social Security?

Florida does not tax Social Security benefits under the current state-tax summary used here. Michigan does not tax Social Security benefits under the current state-tax summary used here.

Where is long-term care cheaper, Florida or Michigan?

In the CareScout and Genworth 2025 medians, assisted living runs about $67,320 a year in Florida and $69,816 in Michigan; a semi-private nursing-home room is about $124,100 versus $135,050.

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