Retiring at 62 with no mortgage and nearly $700,000 saved sounds like a winning hand. But for one Florida couple staring down that decision, the math feels less like smooth sailing and more like walking a financial tightrope.
Here's their situation: they've built up $690,000 in a Roth IRA through decades of disciplined saving. They're expecting $1,800 monthly in combined Social Security benefits. The house is paid off, which eliminates what's usually the biggest monthly expense. So what's the problem?
Healthcare is eating them alive. They're budgeting $500 monthly just for Medicare premiums, prescriptions, and copays, assuming nothing catastrophic happens. That single expense consumes nearly a third of their Social Security income before they've paid for groceries, utilities, or anything else.
Neither spouse has a pension waiting in the wings. The husband spent his career as a freelance IT contractor, earning over $100,000 during his peak years but never accumulating traditional retirement benefits. His wife worked as a dental hygienist, steady income but nothing spectacular, and also no pension. They've always been DIY savers, investing consistently in tax-advantaged accounts, and now they're wondering if they've done enough.
The Roth IRA gives them some flexibility since withdrawals come out tax-free. If they stretch that $690,000 over 25 years, they're looking at roughly $27,600 annually, or about $2,300 monthly. Add Social Security to that, and their total monthly income lands around $4,100.
That sounds reasonable until you factor in the Florida reality. Yes, property taxes are manageable thanks to the homestead exemption, running about $1,200 yearly for their home. But homeowners insurance? That's become a nightmare across the state. They're now paying close to $4,000 annually just to stay insured. So even without a mortgage, their housing costs total about $5,200 per year.
The numbers technically work, but there's zero cushion for surprises. What if medical expenses climb higher? What if one of them needs long-term care down the road? What if the roof fails in year seven or the air conditioning unit dies during a brutal Florida summer?
One option worth considering: waiting a few more years before pulling the retirement trigger. Delaying Social Security until 65 or even later would boost their monthly benefit substantially, potentially adding hundreds of dollars per month for life. Combine that with a few extra years of Roth growth without withdrawals, and suddenly they've got more room to handle rising medical costs, take that occasional vacation, or simply sleep better at night.
For anyone in a similar position, eyeing early retirement with decent savings, no mortgage, but some stubborn expenses that won't disappear, it's worth running the scenarios with a professional. A qualified financial adviser can help map out how long your savings might realistically last, what to budget for healthcare as you age, and how to build in flexibility for life's inevitable curveballs.
Right now, this couple is cautiously optimistic. They've done the right things: saved consistently, lived within their means, avoided lifestyle creep. They don't need luxury, just security. But retiring at 62 with $500 in monthly medical bills means every dollar needs a job. They're not in trouble, but they're definitely not coasting into retirement with money to burn either.




