7 Vacations That Frugal Retirees Love To Take
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Retirement travel doesn’t have to mean cruises and resort fees.
The best trips retirees are taking right now tend to be off the obvious radar, genuinely affordable and packed with the kind of unhurried experiences that crowded tourist hotspots can’t offer.
Here are seven worth putting on your list.
Tbilisi, Georgia
Not the state — the country! Georgia sits at the crossroads of Europe and Asia and remains one of the most affordable and least-visited destinations for English-speaking travelers.
The food is extraordinary, the wine culture dates back 8,000 years, the old city is walkable and beautiful, and a comfortable daily budget runs well under $75 per person including meals and a hotel. After combing through Booking.com, it looks like direct flights from major U.S. hubs have become more accessible.
For retirees who want genuine cultural immersion without fighting crowds or paying Paris prices, Tbilisi is a revelation.
Oaxaca, Mexico
Oaxaca is one of the great food and art destinations in the Western Hemisphere and it costs a fraction of what comparable experiences run in Europe.
The city’s historic center is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the mezcal is produced locally, the markets are extraordinary, and the surrounding mountains offer ruins and villages that most tourists never reach. Retirees can eat and drink extremely well for around $50 a day, according to BudgetYourTrip, and the year-round mild climate makes any month a good time to go.
Paducah, Kentucky
Most people have never considered it, which is the point. Paducah is a small river city on the Ohio River that was designated a UNESCO Creative City for its thriving quilt and fiber arts culture, and it has the kind of well-preserved downtown and walkable riverfront that much larger cities spend fortunes trying to recreate.
Hotels run under $100 a night regularly, according to Hotels.com. The food scene punches above its size, and the National Quilt Museum draws visitors from around the world. For retirees who love arts, Americana and genuine small-city charm, Paducah is an easy long weekend or a full week.
Bisbee, Arizona
Bisbee is a former copper mining town tucked into the Mule Mountains near the Mexican border that somehow turned itself into one of the quirkiest and most charming small towns in the Southwest.
The streets are vertical, the Victorian architecture is intact, the art galleries and independent restaurants are genuinely good, and the whole thing costs almost nothing. It sits a short drive from Tombstone and the Chiricahua National Monument, making it a great base for a wider Arizona road trip.
Hotel costs are low (around $100 a night), per Expedia, and the town has a strong retiree community that has been quietly discovering it for years.
The Finger Lakes, New York
The Finger Lakes region of upstate New York offers waterfalls, wine trails, state parks and small towns at prices that bear no resemblance to what New York City charges for anything.
There are more than 100 wineries spread across the region and most offer free or low-cost tastings. Gorges and waterfalls are scattered throughout the state parks, many of which charge no admission. Fall is spectacular and shoulder season rates on lodging are genuinely affordable (around $100 per night for hotels, per Expedia).
For retirees on the East Coast especially, this is an easy drive that feels like a much bigger trip.
Plovdiv, Bulgaria
Bulgaria is the most affordable country in the European Union, and Plovdiv is its most livable and beautiful city. The Old Town sits on three hills and is filled with Bulgarian National Revival architecture, Roman ruins and independent cafes that charge a dollar or two for coffee.
Plovdiv was a European Capital of Culture, and its arts scene remains active and interesting. A comfortable daily budget including a nice hotel, meals and activities runs around $100 per person, according to BudgetYourTrip.
For retirees who want authentic European history without Western European prices, this is one of the best-kept secrets on the continent.
Bend, Oregon
Bend has become more popular over the last decade but remains cheaper than the Oregon coast or Portland while offering more outdoor access than either. It sits at the edge of the Cascade Mountains with easy access to the simply stunning Crater Lake, lava fields, high desert trails, and some of the best fly fishing in the Pacific Northwest.
The downtown is walkable with good restaurants and a strong local brewery culture. Senior passes for national parks make the surrounding public lands essentially free, and the dry sunny climate means you can plan around good weather reliably.
For active retirees who want outdoor adventure without roughing it, Bend hits a sweet spot that’s hard to match.
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