Every 53y Man Wants to Retire On The California Coast With A Porsche 911, Few Actually Run The Math
Key takeaways
- Every 53y Man Wants to Retire On The California Coast With A Porsche 911, Few Actually Run The Math Epic Stock Media and olm26250 from Getty Images Pro Michael Williams Mon, June 1, 2026 at 6:05 PM GMT+7 5 min read.
- A modest single-family home in San Luis Obispo runs around $1.1 million, and Santa Barbara s median sits closer to $1.7 million.
- California s overall price level runs 10.72% above the national average.
Every 53y Man Wants to Retire On The California Coast With A Porsche 911, Few Actually Run The Math Epic Stock Media and olm26250 from Getty Images Pro Michael Williams Mon, June 1, 2026 at 6:05 PM GMT+7 5 min read. The fantasy is specific: a low-slung house above the Pacific, a garage with a 911, and enough margin to drive Highway 1 on a Tuesday morning. The math is also specific, and at 53 it is tighter than most men assume. Twelve years stand between this reader and Medicare. Thirty-five or more years of retirement may stand between this reader and the actuarial tables. Both windows tax the portfolio in ways a 4% calculator quietly ignores.
Start with shelter. A modest single-family home in San Luis Obispo runs around $1.1 million, and Santa Barbara s median sits closer to $1.7 million. Buy in cash and you still owe property tax (roughly 1.1% all-in under Prop 13), homeowners insurance that has gotten ugly in fire zones, and maintenance that ocean air punishes. Figure $22,000 to $30,000 a year on a $1.3 million home you already own outright, before utilities.
California s overall price level runs 10.72% above the national average. Groceries, restaurants, and services should be budgeted at 15% to 25% above national norms. Utilities on a coastal single-family home, including water and a PG&E or SCE bill that has climbed faster than CPI, realistically run $4,500 to $6,500 a year.