Housing As We Grow Older: Independent Choices
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Housing As We Grow Older: Independent Choices

   

Housing As We Grow Older: Independent Choices1

Virginia Peart and Carolyn Wilken2

Most people (86 percent) want to "age in place" or stay in their own homes as long as they are able. Moving to a smaller home or housing that provides support for our physical limitations requires a lot of hard decisions: Is a change needed now or in the near future? What housing types are available? Which are affordable? How long will each housing type meet our needs which are always changing? Once the decision is made to change our housing arrangement more decisions must follow: Our possessions. What to keep? What to give away? What to throw away?

Before choosing any living arrangement, think about the ways you rely on others for help and how much you are able to manage by yourself. Since finances are important, you will need to consider costs. What can you afford now and in the future? Will this arrangement allow you to remain as independent as you wish for as long as possible?

Stay Where You Are in Your Own Home

This home may be one you have lived in for years or moved to after retiring. Take a closer look at the advantages and disadvantages of remaining in your own home.

Advantages

Disadvantages

If you rent your home, you may enjoy the advantages of low maintenance costs and more freedom to change your housing as needed. On the other hand, your expenses may be more affected by inflation since rent may go up at any time.

Advance planning is often the key to making it possible for an older person to stay in his or her own home. If you are planning to stay, you might want to use your early retirement years to prepare your home for later years. You may want to take care of expensive repairs now to cut maintenance costs later. Or you might want to convert part of your home to an income-producing apartment.

Your ability to do these things will, of course, depend on your finances. There are a number of community support services that help older persons remain in their homes.

If you plan to move, what are your options?

Condominiums

One alternative similar to traditional home ownership is the condominium, which is growing in popularity. A condominium is an "apartment" you own. Condominium ownership is created when a buyer receives legal title to certain property, as well as an undivided share or interest in common areas and facilities of a building or project. This usually involves exclusive ownership of a dwelling unit and common ownership of such facilities as the land, exterior walls, roofs, party walls between units, elevators, halls, lobbies and other items as defined in the master deed. Owning a condominium has both advantages and disadvantages.

Advantages

Disadvantages

Renting an Apartment

Selling a home and renting an apartment is another alternative. Apartment living can be carefree, especially for someone who travels and doesn't want maintenance responsibilities.

Advantages

Disadvantages

Subsidized Housing

In recent years, many communities have built subsidized housing complexes for older people on limited incomes. These include high-rise apartments, older buildings that have been converted into apartments, and small apartment complexes.

Advantages

Disadvantages

Purchase or Rent a Mobile Home

Mobile home living has been very popular with older persons in recent years. Lower cost is a major reason. Another appeal is the neighborly atmosphere of some mobile home parks. Many of these parks are exclusively for retired persons. A mobile home can, if zoning permits, be located on your own lot in the country and placed on a permanent foundation or even a basement.

Advantages

Disadvantages

Retirement Villages or Communities

Retirement villages are a relatively new concept. These communities are built exclusively for retired people and isolate them from the noise and bustle of life among young families. Since comfort and friendship are important to this group, it is not surprising that recreational facilities such as golf courses and swimming pools are available. Libraries, craft workshops, and auditoriums may also be included. The physical setup and the kinds of services vary widely, as do the costs.

Business corporations, religious organizations, and other groups have sponsored retirement villages which are usually managed by developers or a management team. Housing types might include single-family detached homes, duplexes, townhouses and condominiums. They range in size from one to three bedrooms for rent or purchase. Advantages are that residents are assured of community life among others of similar age and, presumably, of compatible tastes. The major disadvantage may be the cost -- both the initial entrance cost and the monthly fee thereafter.

Moving in With Others

An older person and his children or other relatives or friends may decide to live together. An older parent who is alone may move in with relatives for companionship. Both generations may benefit by living together -- an older woman escapes loneliness by living with her son's family, and helps out by babysitting for her grandchildren. This arrangement allows her daughter-in-law to pursue a career.

Older adults may find it economical to pool their financial resources by combining households, or they may simply get along well and enjoy living together in a shared household. In this arrangement, each person has his or her own room and shares the rest of the house with others. Some housekeeping and even food services may be provided. Living together is not necessarily the right option for everyone, however. You might want to discuss this idea openly and honestly with everyone involved first, since all -- parents, adult children, grandchildren and housemates -- will be affected by the change.

If possible, it's best to take time and think about this option carefully before a crisis imposes a hasty decision on you. You might even want to try living together for a few months before you make a permanent change.

Advantages

Disadvantages


Footnotes

1. This document is Fact Sheet FCS 3188, a series of the Department of Family, Youth and Community Sciences, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Publication date: November 2002. First published: January 1994. Revised: November 2002. Originally published as AH-2. Please visit the EDIS web site at http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu

2. Adapted by Virginia Peart, former associate professor, Housing; revised by Carolyn Wilken, associate professor, Family Life; and reviewed by Nayda I. Torres, professor, Family and Consumer Economics, Department of Family, Youth and Community Sciences, Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, 32611.


The Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS) is an Equal Opportunity Institution authorized to provide research, educational information and other services only to individuals and institutions that function with non-discrimination with respect to race, creed, color, religion, age, disability, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, national origin, political opinions or affiliations. For more information on obtaining other extension publications, contact your county Cooperative Extension service.

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service, University of Florida, IFAS, Florida A. & M. University Cooperative Extension Program, and Boards of County Commissioners Cooperating. Larry Arrington, Dean.



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