Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback Retirement Places Rated: What You Need to Know to Plan the Retirement You Deserve Book

ISBN: 0470089598

ISBN13: 9780470089590

Retirement Places Rated: What You Need to Know to Plan the Retirement You Deserve

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$8.09
Save $16.90!
List Price $24.99
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

The bestselling guide to the best places to retire in the United States. Completely revised and updated, Retirement Places Rated is an indispensable reference for the estimated 40 million Americans who will be 65 or older by 2010. Dividing the United States into 18 regions and 200 cities, towns, and ? counties, retirement quality-of-life expert David Savageau draws a detailed statistical portrait of each locale, ranking each for cost of living, climate, crime, services, employment opportunities, and leisure and recreational amenities. A rundown of the top 30 overall retirement places along with assessment tools, easy-to-read graphs and charts, interpretive commentaries by the author, and extensive appendices help retirees evaluate their relocation choices and make the right move. For the seventh edition, new features include: 22 new places A new chapter on housing, with ? data on shelter choices (homes, condos, apartments, and mobile homes), plus home prices and property taxes An expanded ? ambience chapter, and ? new data on age, education, politics, and diversity An expanded services chapter, with new data on air travel, physician specialties, and hospital services Easy-to-use relocation resources, including Web sites, addresses, books, and other information David Savageau Washington DC has traveled throughout the country since 1982, visiting locations that attract older adults. He wrote the "Quality of Life" column for Expansion Management magazine, and has been a featured speaker at the U.S. Department of State's quarterly seminars on retirement.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Retirement Places by Savageau

The book ranks retirement places from the first to last according to numerous categories including overall quality of life, safety, services and climate. For instance, dry climates may be found in Nevada, Utah and Arizona. Cloudy states are Oregon, Virginia, Montana and Vermont. Snowy winters are in Idaho, Colorado, Vermont and Maine. The most safe areas are portions of Georgia, Virginia, Arkansas, Texas, North Carolina and some areas of NYS. Services for seniors are best in Florida, North Carolina, New Mexico, New Hampshire and Vermont. Leisure sports are most prominent in NYS., MASS, Florida, California and New Mexico. Overall quality of life issues are strongest in Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, Colorado, Florida and Arizona. This book has a goldmine of ideas for the quality of living enthusiasts, as well as persons who are cost conscious. The book is reasonably priced for the value of information provided. Of course, you should always visit any locality on the potential list of retirement places. A retirement is a major investment of money and resources for any person or couple. Investigate before you make a final decision to invest.

Well Worth Your Effort

IF you are willing to devote the time and care to studying this book, THEN you will be rewarded with not only a clear way of thinking about retirement living, but a solid methodology to use in finding 'your best place'. Good reading and good luck!

Can't wait for next update!

Though this book is currently from 1999, it still contains useful information. Having a sense of what you need, and the kind of life you'd like to life will help you to understand why's the book is organized as it is.

Almost everything I wanted to know

This book is filled with facts and figures about numerous retirement possibilities. I like the quantitative nature of the book, but wish there was more on the people and lifestyles of the different cities.

Quantitive ratings provide good information

The beauty of the book is that Savageau's rankings are both (a) quantative, reducing the chance for the author's personal preferences to affect the ratings, and (b) pretty well explained: you know how he came up with the ratings. It's unlikely that your own list does not include several in Savageau's group. Since he explains the basis for each location's standing in each category (there are seven), the reader can make his/her own judgements if a particular factor is of less interest to that reader than it is to the author. In fact, a sort of interest quiz in the first chapter helps the reader understand which factors are more important to him/her. This armed, the reader could use the approach to his/her own list of places. Other books of this genre tend to lean heavily on opinion and seem to get a lot of input from the chamber of commerce. That's not a problem here.
Copyright © 2025 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks ® and the ThriftBooks ® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured