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10 Small Southern Towns Where Retirees Can Live Like Millionaires on $60,000 a Year

These towns prove you don't need a big-city budget to live well.

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Updated June 25, 2026
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The promise of a comfortable retirement doesn't have to hinge on a seven-figure nest egg. In the right town, $60,000 a year could pay your bills and cover housing, food, health care, and leisure with money left over.

To find those towns, the team at FinanceBuzz analyzed Zillow rent and home value data alongside U.S. Census demographic figures for small and mid-size cities across the South. Here are towns to consider to save money in retirement.

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Dothan, Alabama

Roberto/Adobe houston county

Median rent: $1,016/month

Average home value: $199,443

Nearly one in five Dothan residents is 65 or older, and the infrastructure reflects it: strong medical facilities, senior centers, and a pace of life that doesn't rush you. Alabama's Wiregrass region keeps housing well under national averages, leaving a $60,000 retiree substantial room for travel, hobbies, and health care.

Gulfport, Mississippi

David/Adobe joseph t. jones educational plaza

Median rent: $1,131/month

Average home value: $195,959

Gulfport sits along the Gulf of Mexico, giving retirees beach access at a price point that would be unthinkable in Florida or the Carolinas. Average home values under $200,000 make buying a serious option, and Biloxi is minutes away for additional dining and entertainment.

Johnson City, Tennessee

mark/Adobe johnson city tennessee aerial view

Median rent: $1,107/month

Average home value: $282,216

Johnson City anchors Tennessee's Tri-Cities region in the Blue Ridge foothills, with the Appalachian Trail and Cherokee National Forest within easy reach. Tennessee has no state income tax and does not tax Social Security benefits, which may stretch a $60,000 budget further than the housing numbers alone suggest.

Jonesboro, Arkansas

Roberto/Adobe craighead county

Median rent: $872/month

Average home value: $219,207

At $872 a month in median rent, Jonesboro is the most affordable city on this list by a meaningful margin. Arkansas does not tax Social Security benefits and offers an exemption on other retirement income, so the budget math here could look better than the sticker prices imply.

Roanoke, Virginia

Christopher Boswell/Adobe roanoke virginia

Median rent: $1,043/month

Average home value: $268,725

Roanoke offers something rare at this price point: a genuine downtown, with a historic City Market district and easy access to the Blue Ridge Parkway. Nearly 19% of residents are 65 or older and more than 22% of households report retirement income, so the retiree social ecosystem is well established.

Greenville, North Carolina

valeriyap/Adobe historic courthouse building

Median rent: $1,000/month

Average home value: $230,909

Greenville is anchored by East Carolina University and Vidant Health, giving retirees access to a major academic medical center in a town of fewer than 100,000 people. The Outer Banks are a reasonable drive for beach day trips.

Lafayette, Louisiana

Katia/Adobe Saint John's Cathedral and the cemetery

Median rent: $1,042/month

Average home value: $217,233

Lafayette delivers a food, music, and cultural scene that punches well above its size, with more than 20% of residents 65 or older. Louisiana does not tax Social Security benefits and offers a generous retirement income exclusion for residents 65 and older.

Norman, Oklahoma

Chad Robertson/Adobe oklahoma campus in norman

Median rent: $1,090/month

Average home value: $256,216

More than 27% of Norman households report retirement income, the highest rate among cities on this list, and the community amenities reflect that. The University of Oklahoma campus adds cultural programming and lifelong-learning opportunities unusual for a city this size.

Tyler, Texas

LMPark Photos/Adobe smith county courthouse

Median rent: $1,291/month

Average home value: $245,325

Known as the Rose Capital of America, Tyler has a strong medical community anchored by UT Health East Texas, which matters for retirees weighing long-term care access. Plus, Texas has no state income tax and no tax on Social Security benefits.

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Greenville, South Carolina

digidreamgrafix/Adobe greenville south carolina

Median rent: $1,404/month

Average home value: $318,309

Greenville is the highest-cost city on this list, but the lifestyle it delivers for that price would cost two to three times as much in comparable cities in the Northeast or on the Pacific Coast. The revitalized Falls Park district, a nationally recognized restaurant scene, and proximity to the Blue Ridge Mountains make it a standout for retirees who want an active, social retirement.

Bottom line

Jacob Lund/Adobe Senior couple dancing at home

Across all 10 cities, median rent ranges from $872 a month in Jonesboro to $1,404 in Greenville, South Carolina, meaning annual housing costs of roughly $10,500 to $16,800. On a $60,000 income, that leaves $43,000 to $49,500 for everything else.

Plus, seven of the 10 states here exempt Social Security benefits from state income tax entirely, and several offer additional exemptions on pension or retirement account income. For a retiree drawing $60,000 a year, the difference between a high-tax and low-tax state can be worth $2,000 to $4,000 annually, a factor that doesn't show up in rent figures but matters when you're trying to stretch your retirement dollars further.

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