City retirement risk
City-level retirement risk view for Arthurdale, West Virginia. We highlight directional pressure across longevity, sequence, inflation, healthcare/LTC, tax, and housing. Run the assessment to tailor it to your timing, assets, housing status, and health.
Population (approx): 755
Directional view based on public signals for this city. Scoring refines automatically as new state/city data releases publish.
Longevity horizon: ~15.5 years remaining (age 65, overall, location adj -3.35 yrs)
Location delta: -3.35 yrs vs national
Remaining life expectancy ~15.5 years at age 65; plan for a 80+ horizon.
Why it matters: If you outlive your current plan, every other risk gets harder. A longer horizon amplifies sequence risk, inflation drag, healthcare/LTC costs, and housing/tax exposure.
~15.5 years remaining (age 65, overall, location adj -3.35 yrs)
Location delta: -3.35 yrs
Read the explainerSequence-of-returns risk matters most near retirement; keep a cash buffer.
Why it matters: Timing matters: a bad market in your first decade of retirement can derail a plan even if long-run averages look fine. Your score weights early-sequence stress and local cost pr…
Location factor +0.4 pts
Location delta: +0.40 pts
Read the explainerRegional cost pressure can erode fixed income; model real spending paths.
Why it matters: Inflation eats purchasing power. If your area runs hotter than national averages, fixed income erodes faster and withdrawals rise.
Location factor -5.1 pts
Location delta: -5.10 pts
Read the explainerMedicare timing, OOP caps, and LTC likelihood drive variability.
Why it matters: Coverage gaps, medical inflation, and late-life care can blow up a budget. Location affects premiums, access, and LTC pricing.
Location factor -0.2 pts
Location delta: -0.20 pts
Read the explainerFederal + state brackets, RMD timing, and IRMAA shape after-tax income.
Why it matters: Taxes, RMD timing, and IRMAA shape your after-tax income. Location matters for net withdrawals over decades.
Location factor +0.5 pts
Location delta: +0.50 pts
Read the explainerProperty taxes, insurance, and local policy shifts influence net costs.
Why it matters: Housing, insurance, utilities, and property taxes can climb faster than expected. Location pressure raises your fixed costs and withdrawal needs.
Location factor -10.0 pts
Location delta: -10.00 pts
Read the explainerThese links focus on the most relevant connected risk topics for this location.
FinancialRiskIQ
Household financial stress and stability risk context.
City-level context
View on FinancialRiskIQ ->
EstateRiskIQ
Estate planning and decision-readiness context.
State-level context (fallback)
View on EstateRiskIQ ->
HealthRiskIQ
Population health risk and care-access pressure context.
City-level context
View on HealthRiskIQ ->
Retirement cost questions
Retirement costs in Arthurdale, WV depend on more than a monthly spending target. The current RetirementRiskIQ score is 37/100, a lower relative pressure reading driven most by tax risk and market & sequence risk. Some inputs are still state-level proxies, so use this as a directional city view rather than a precise household budget.
A practical estimate starts with your expected housing, healthcare, taxes, insurance, and day-to-day spending, then stress-tests those costs over a long retirement. In Arthurdale, WV, the city score points to lower relative pressure, so the important question is not one exact number; it is whether your fixed costs and withdrawal plan still work if high-drift categories rise faster than expected.
Costs can rise over time when housing, insurance, healthcare, taxes, or inflation-sensitive essentials take a larger share of withdrawals. For Arthurdale, WV, the highest-scoring risk areas are tax risk and market & sequence risk, which should be the first assumptions to review before treating the location as affordable for a full retirement horizon.
Arthurdale, WV can be a good retirement fit when your plan has enough room for the local risk drivers, especially tax risk and market & sequence risk. It may be less comfortable if your plan depends on fixed spending, narrow cash buffers, or a tax/housing assumption that has not been stress-tested.
$500k
A $500k portfolio usually needs careful spending control, dependable income sources, and limited fixed-cost drift. In Arthurdale, WV, review housing, healthcare, and tax exposure before assuming the location is affordable on portfolio assets alone.
$1M
A $1M portfolio gives more planning room, but sequence risk and inflation still matter. For Arthurdale, WV, test whether essential costs remain covered if the first decade of retirement is weaker than expected.
$2M
A $2M portfolio can absorb more volatility, but high local costs can still affect after-tax income, healthcare reserves, and legacy goals. Use the score to identify which assumptions deserve a second look.
City pages remain directional where public inputs are state-level. Use this to compare assumptions, not as a personalized retirement recommendation.
There is no single safe number for every household. Start with your expected spending, guaranteed income, housing status, healthcare exposure, and tax picture, then stress-test the lower local pressure shown here.
The major drivers are housing, healthcare, taxes, insurance, and inflation-sensitive daily costs. RetirementRiskIQ uses public location signals to show whether those pressures look higher or lower than other places.
It can be, if your plan has room for the main local risk drivers: tax risk and market & sequence risk. This page is educational and directional, not personalized financial advice.
Those asset levels can mean very different things depending on Social Security, pensions, debt, housing status, healthcare needs, taxes, and withdrawal flexibility. Use the scenarios here as prompts for stress-testing, not as go/no-go advice.
Scores stay fresh as new data releases publish. Use the assessment to add your timing, assets, housing, and health for a tailored view; any referrals remain opt-in.