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The word ‘active’ in Active Adult retirement communities doesn’t mean that you have to be an athletic person to want to live there.  ‘Active’ actually refers to a community with lots of choices and opportunities available for people to participate in.  While these communities certainly may offer golf, tennis, swimming, hiking and other athletic activities, they also offer things like bridge clubs, reading groups, choral groups, and the like.

Social life is an important aspect of Active Adult retirement community living and these retirement communities provide ample opportunities for that.  Indeed, people looking into Active Adult retirement communities tend to look at the lifestyle choices first and the housing second.

Active Adult retirement communities often have a minimum age restriction.  These age-restricted communities are often referred to as 55+ Active Adult, and at least one person in the family has to be 55.  Age-restricted retirement communities don’t allow children as residents even with a 55+ family member.  Other Active Adult communities are simply age-targeted with no age restrictions.  You need to be clear in your mind which type you would prefer.

While residents of Active Adult communities buy their homes…be they single family homes, apartments, townhouses, manufactured homes or whatever…they also must pay homeowners fees to use the clubhouse, swimming pool, golf course, or other shared resources.  These communities will have a Community Association with Conditions, Covenants and Restrictions (CC&Rs) as well as association fees to cover things such as maintenance, landscaping, security, activity fees and the like.  Be sure to read the fine print carefully as these charges could mount up significantly and wreak havoc with your retirement investment finances.

Another thing to be aware of when planning your retirement move is that Active Adult retirement communities are usually not equipped to provide health care or assisted living services.  While you may not plan on needing such services, your retirement investment planning should take that need into consideration.

  • Retirement investing isn’t just about stocks and mutual funds. It’s about spending your money wisely in all areas. Yesterday we talked about making your bathtub more accessible and adding a stair lift to help with climbing stairs. Today we’ll discuss some other practical changes you might consider to make your home better adapted for your later years.

    Better lighting is a change you can make now that’s an immediate benefit now and will also help in latter life. As we get older, our eyes can simply use a little extra help. This isn’t needed all the time, but if you have extra lighting, it can be great when you need it.

    You can install adjustable lighting that can make a room really bright when you need it but will let you dial the light back at other times. You can also install additional task lighting at your work areas or your home office desk or workbench, over the kitchen sink and under kitchen cabinets.

    Adding lighting to your front porch will help you see better who might be at the front door. And adding low voltage outdoor lighting along your front walkway will help everyone from your older friends to trick or treaters make it to your front door safely. A floodlight with a motion detector at the end of your driveway and at your back door will make walking safer at night for you also.

    Other changes you might want to consider include grab rails in the bathroom, lever style door handles and wider doorways that can accommodate a wheelchair later on. These changes are much less expensive to make if you’re doing some remodeling anyway. Some day you might need to add a ramp to reach that front door, also.

    For many of us, needing such accommodations to limited mobility may be years and years away, or we might never need them. The point is – if retirement is still a few years down the road – keep these needs in mind if you’re planning to do some remodeling soon. It can make life more pleasant now and can save money later on.

  • Let’s say you’re a few years from retirement. You’ve decided you don’t want to move out of state. You don’t want to move to a smaller home. In fact, like nearly one-half of all those who retire, you don’t plan to move at all, now or later. Instead you plan to spend some of your retirement investing dollars on making your home more livable for after you retire. What are some of the changes you should make that will be a sound retirement investment when you invest in your own home?

    First up is a little advance planning. Think about what changes will make life easier for you 10 or 20 years down the road. If you’re a bit of a handy-man, now is the time to begin to make needed alterations, while you’re young enough to do the work yourself. If you don’t enjoy doing your own work or don’t seem to have the time now for some remodeling, now is also the ideal time when you have a full-time income to pay for others to make the changes for you.

    Most of the changes you will need to make fall under the general heading of accessibility and mobility. Whether we like to think about it or not, our bodies aren’t as flexible, and we aren’t able to get around as well when we’re 70 as when we’re 50. A few adaptations can make life much easier.

    If you’ve been thinking of remodeling the bathroom, now might be a great time. But instead of putting in that Jacuzzi or garden tub, with the high sides that are hard to get into and harder to get out of, consider something like the walk-in tub from Safety Tubs. It has adjustable power jets for a soothing massage, like a spa tub. But it also has a door in the side to make getting into and out of it much easier.

    As a matter of fact, many older American’s find it very difficult to get into and out of a conventional bathtub safely. Garden spa tubs are even more difficult. Many older folks end up only being able to use a shower. A tub like the Safety Tub will be a Godsend if mobility or bending ever becomes a problem for you.

    Stairs can be a problem, whether it’s 3 steps up to a front porch or living in a two-story house. I found this out the hard way about 10 years ago when I had knew surgery. I never did learn how to climb stairs on crutches. It made me realize how big a barrier stairs can be to those with limited mobility.

    For a permanent solution to getting up and down the stairs, you can install a chair-type stair lift. Do-It-Yourself models start from $2,000 up, such as the Ameriglide. Deluxe models installed by professionals can cost thousands of dollars more. Installing a stair lift can indeed cost a considerable amount of money, but it’s a lot less trouble than moving from a two-story house you like to a one-story house just because you can no longer climb the stairs.

    We’ll continue discussing practical changes you can make to your home to adapt it for your later years tomorrow.

  • A little over fifty years ago developers began building the first retirement communities in Florida and Arizona. Both Florida and Arizona offered the mild winters retirees wanted, especially those from the Snow Belt, and they also offered plenty of cheap undeveloped land for the developers.

    New retirement communities are still being developed in Florida and Arizona. Del Webb is now developing Sun City Festival in Arizona, a 3,000 acre site designed to eventually be home to 7,200 households. But now not only are retirement communities growing in Florida and Arizona, they are now popping up in other Sun Belt states like Texas and New Mexico. But what’s really amazing is the development of retirement communities in such northern locales as Michigan, Massachusetts and Illinois.

    Several things are driving this trend. Many retirees want to downsize from the house where they raised their families. They simply no longer need all that space, so they’re looking for a smaller house. They like the amenities planned retirement communities offer.

    At the same time, many folks have realized they don’t want to move half way across the country from their children and grandchildren, better weather or not. How much fun is being able to play golf in January if there’s a new grandbaby you only get to see once or twice a year because of the distance.

    The booming real estate market of the last few years, particularly in the Northeast, has driven home equity up to all-time highs. But if you sell your house to capture the equity, where do you go when you buy a smaller house? People moving out of larger houses can afford to relocate to a planned retirement community, but in what part of the country?

    Oak Point in Massachusetts is a great example of this new trend of Northeastern retirement communities. It has the community clubhouse and shuffleboard courts you would expect in a 55+ community in the Sun Belt. It has almost all the amenities you’d find in a Florida or Arizona retirement community except the weather.

    But it’s not just shuffleboard and bocce ball. Since Oak Pointe is also designed for active seniors, you can wait for the snow to melt in the heated swimming pool and the state-of-the-art fitness center. You also don’t have to shovel the snow: the maintenance staff does it. It’s all included in the price. When you want some big city excitement, Boston is less than an hour away by car or bus. If you want a day at the beach, Cape Cod is also an hour’s drive away.

    Especially for those with children in the area, and for those who enjoy the cultural amenities of the Boston area, retirement in the North makes great sense. Even a few folks who were living in the Sun Belt have now moved into some of these Northern retirement communities. Who could have imagined that a few years ago?

  • It is admittedly extra trouble to test drive a new area by renting there first. Maybe you’re sure you know you’ll like the area because you’ve been there on vacation several times or on business trips. But there’s nothing like investing 12 months in finding out what an area is like to live in year-round to help you avoid surprises.

    It can be one of the best retirement investing strategies you can have, because it can pay huge dividends. It can open our eyes to the reality of living in a new place full-time. This is the kind of information you need to know before you spend serious money to ship your furniture cross-country to a new area.

    Let’s say you visited Phoenix in the winter and dreamed of not having to shovel snow for days on end. I lived in Arizona for 5 years, and there is a lot to like about Arizona. My mother-in-law still lives there.

    Winter is very pleasant in Phoenix. But are you ready for 120 degree days in the summer, when your feet stick to the pavement of asphalt parking lots, and the steering wheel in your car gets so hot from being parked in the sun, that you can get blisters on your hands from touching it?

    Yes, I know you can buy a cover to keep your steering wheel cooler. But the point is, to fully experience an area you might be considering making a permanent move to, you need to test it out for at least 12 months first. Experience all the seasons, so you can see the good and the bad.

    Some people love the heat in Phoenix. Some people spend the entire summer under an air conditioner and never go outside, at least in the daytime. If you like to walk for exercise, you’ll have to do it at 5am, like my mother-in-law, before it gets unbearably hot. Only you know what you like and what you can’t put up with.

    So…before you make a permanent move, check out your new area by renting there for a year. Granted - it is extra trouble and maybe a little extra expense, but it can save you from making a very costly mistake. Get to know the neighborhoods and the city. Find out about development plans. You will be able to gather the kind of information you need to make an informed decision. If you rent first and then you decide not to move, you’ll still have your house back where you came from to go back to.

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