I’m 83 and will have $500K if I sell my house. My estranged wife wants me to join her in Colombia. Do I go?
I live alone in a retirement community and I am 83 years old. I can just barely handle my expenses with a mortgage payment of $984 and an income of $3,800 per month; I end up with about $500 for free spending every month. My wife lives in Colombia (she doesn’t like the cold weather) and we’re separated, but still friendly. She has invited me to live with her there. I have about $220,000 in savings and I have close to $300,000 in equity if I sell the house. My expenses in Colombia would be minimal. Should I relocate there? What is the downside?
Living in a Cold Climate
Related: My husband and I are building a house on my mother-in-law’s land. Are we asking for trouble?
You will have separate bedrooms, but will you also have separate bathrooms?
I ask because what you give up in expenses if and/or when you sell your house in the retirement community, you will lose in terms of your independence. It’s hard to put a price on your independence, but yours is $500,000. That’s quite a nice tidy sum, but all the reasons you separated from your wife will still be there when you arrive in Colombia. It’s a financial decision, but it’s also a lifestyle decision, one that will impact your sense of well-being (there’s nothing like having your own place) and social circles. After food, utilities, taxes and mortgage payments, $500 cash is not that bad if your needs are simple.
I have some questions for you to answer privately and in your own time: Will your arrival benefit your wife financially? Will you purchase a home together? What if your wife predeceases you? What leisure activities will you miss if you leave the U.S.? What will you do for medical insurance? Medicare does not cover you in Colombia. What happens if you get sick? Will you come back to the U.S.? If so, where will you live? Do you have friends here that you would miss if you moved to South America? Are you prepared for your wife to be your one and only friend when you get there?
More retirees are moving overseas, due to the high cost of living in the U.S., in addition to the lure of living in a foreign land. Last year, more than 760,000 Americans received Social Security benefits while living overseas, up from roughly 430,000 in 2019, according to data from the Social Security Administration. You would not be doing it alone, which is a small mercy, but that does not mean you wouldn’t have problems adjusting to life in Colombia, not to mention a language barrier if you don’t speak Spanish. Please also read the Department of State’s travel advisory on the country.

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