Rent keeps climbing in plenty of U.S. metros, but the South still has cities where rents are affordable enough to free up your retirement budget. If you're on a fixed income, living off Social Security, or just tired of watching rent eat half your check, finding somewhere this affordable leaves room in your budget for everything else.
These 10 Southern cities all keep median rent under $1,200 a month, and each one still has real health care, culture, and community to offer. Here's where rent stays manageable for retirees in 2026.
Editor's note: All rent and median monthly rent figures come from the U.S. Census Bureau, as compiled in FinanceBuzz's Best U.S. Cities for Snowbirds report.
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Enid, Oklahoma
Median monthly rent: $940
If frontier history is your thing, Enid delivers it in person. The Cherokee Strip Regional Heritage Center sits on the site of the actual 1893 land run, with a reconstructed pioneer village and more than 10,000 original artifacts from the people who staked their claims here.
Day-to-day care is close by, too. INTEGRIS Bass Baptist Health Center runs a 24-hour emergency department and its own heart and vascular institute, so a serious health scare doesn't mean a long drive to a bigger city.
Texarkana, Texas
Median monthly rent: $939
Split down the middle by the Texas-Arkansas state line, Texarkana lets you stand in two states at once at the downtown post office built right on the border. Ragtime composer Scott Joplin grew up here, and the town still has that small, slightly eccentric Southern charm.
It also functions as the medical hub for a wide, mostly rural four-state region, so retirees here aren't relying on one small clinic. Two full hospitals and a large multispecialty practice mean most care happens without leaving town.
Hickory, North Carolina
Median monthly rent: $934
Hickory built its name on furniture, and the Hickory Furniture Mart still pulls in shoppers from nearly every state for outlet prices on big-name brands, a handy excuse for the grandkids to visit.
Lake Hickory adds a quieter side to retirement here, with fishing and boating a short drive from downtown. The cost of living here is approximately 11% below the national average.
Monroe, Louisiana
Median monthly rent: $928
Monroe is home to the Biedenharn Museum & Gardens, built around the house of the man who first bottled Coca-Cola, with a working nickel Coke machine still on display inside.
For anything more serious than a museum visit, Glenwood Regional Medical Center is a 278-bed hospital just across the river in West Monroe, with cancer and heart care close enough that one regional system can handle most of what comes up.
Fort Smith, Arkansas
Median monthly rent: $906
Fort Smith's downtown has turned into an open-air art gallery. There are more than 30 murals from internationally known street artists spread across roughly 10 walkable blocks as part of The Unexpected, a public art project that's added new work nearly every year since 2015.
Veterans get an extra perk here: A dedicated VA clinic handles primary and specialty care locally, and Mercy Hospital Fort Smith covers everything else with a full surgical and maternity program.
Alexandria, Louisiana
Median monthly rent: $899
Kisatchie National Forest, Louisiana's only national forest, borders Alexandria with more than 600,000 acres of trails a short drive from downtown, and the city's central location keeps Baton Rouge, Shreveport, and New Orleans all within a few hours' drive for visiting family.
CHRISTUS St. Frances Cabrini Hospital handles heart, cancer, and orthopedic care right in town, and the cost of living still runs about 16% below the national average.
Florence, Alabama
Median monthly rent: $877
Just across the river from Muscle Shoals, Florence shares in the area's music history: The Muscle Shoals Sound Studio where the Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin, and Paul Simon once recorded sits a short drive from downtown, and the city holds the only Frank Lloyd Wright house in Alabama open to the public.
Florence is also a college town, and the University of North Alabama's concerts, theater, and lecture series give retirees something to do without leaving town, all while the cost of living is about 18% below the national average.
Jonesboro, Arkansas
Median monthly rent: $870
Crowley's Ridge gives Jonesboro something most of the Arkansas Delta doesn't have: rolling hills and hardwood trees that look more like the Appalachians than the flat farmland surrounding the city.
It's also northeast Arkansas's health care hub, with St. Bernards Medical Center and NEA Baptist Memorial Hospital both based here, so specialists are a short drive rather than a trip to another state.
Owensboro, Kentucky
Median monthly rent: $853
Owensboro calls itself the Bluegrass Music Capital of the World, and the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum sits right on the Ohio River downtown, with a 450-seat theater hosting live shows year-round.
The riverfront Smothers Park has a paved, wheelchair-friendly riverwalk, and Owensboro Health Regional Hospital anchors the city's medical care. The cost of living is roughly 18% below the national average.
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Gadsden, Alabama
Median monthly rent: $834
Gadsden closes out the list with the lowest rent of the bunch, and Noccalula Falls Park gives residents a cheap outdoor outing any week of the year, with a 90-foot waterfall, a pioneer village, and more than 15 miles of trails.
The cost of living here is around 21% below the national average, the lowest on this entire list, so the savings on rent carry over into groceries and everyday bills too.
Bottom line
These 10 cities sit in seven different states, but the same idea holds in all of them: Rent this low means a Social Security check or a pension actually covers more than the basics. Fort Smith and Jonesboro put major hospital systems within a short drive, Texarkana functions as a regional medical hub on its own, and even the smallest of these towns has more going on than the rent number suggests.
None of these seven states taxes Social Security benefits, and Texas has no state income tax at all, so whichever of these 10 cities ends up on a short list, your senior benefits go further.
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