Don’t Retire in the Carolinas: 4 Midwestern Hidden Gems with Better Climate Resilience

The Carolinas have been sold as a retirement dream for decades. Mild weather, charming towns, gorgeous mountain scenery. Honestly, the pitch is compelling on the surface. But dig even a little deeper, and a much more alarming picture comes into focus. Between relentless hurricane seasons, record-smashing floods, and a wildfire threat that gets worse by the year, retiring in North or South Carolina in 2026 carries real, documented risks that most retirement guides conveniently gloss over. Meanwhile, a handful of Midwestern cities are quietly offering something far more valuable: stability, affordability, and a climate that won’t try to destroy your home every September. Let’s dive in.

The Carolinas’ Dirty Climate Secret: A Track Record That Can’t Be Ignored

The Carolinas' Dirty Climate Secret: A Track Record That Can't Be Ignored (Image Credits: Unsplash)
The Carolinas’ Dirty Climate Secret: A Track Record That Can’t Be Ignored (Image Credits: Unsplash)

From 1980 to 2024, there were 121 confirmed weather and climate disaster events with losses exceeding one billion dollars each to affect North Carolina alone. That’s not a typo. The 1980 to 2024 annual average was 2.7 events, but the annual average for the most recent five years from 2020 to 2024 jumped to 7.4 events. The pace is accelerating, not slowing.

North Carolina and South Carolina have seen numerous extreme rainfall events in recent years, including record-setting rainstorms in October 2015 in South Carolina, Hurricane Matthew in 2016, Hurricane Florence in 2018, and Hurricane Helene in 2024. In fact, since 2002, the three U.S. storms that have dropped 1,000-year magnitude rainfall on the largest areas have all hit the Carolinas. Three once-in-a-millennium storms in roughly twenty years. Think about that for a moment.

Devastating flooding will likely happen more frequently and become more costly in future years and decades, and North Carolina is already experiencing that trend. This is not speculation. It’s the trajectory.

Hurricane Helene’s Wake-Up Call for Potential Retirees

Hurricane Helene's Wake-Up Call for Potential Retirees (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Hurricane Helene’s Wake-Up Call for Potential Retirees (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Hurricane Helene caused deadly and destructive flooding when it swept through the Southeast on September 26 through 29, 2024, and across a broad swath of western North Carolina, where the worst flooding occurred, the amount of rainfall exceeded levels that would be expected on average only once every 1,000 years. The terrifying part? That event happened in Asheville, a city that many retirees had specifically chosen for its supposedly safer inland location.

After Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida as a Category 4 hurricane, it raged northward and inflicted widespread devastation across six states, killing more than 160 people, and pummeled western North Carolina as a tropical storm. In Buncombe County, where Asheville is the county seat, more than 50 people died and many more remained missing.

A recent First Street report found parts of North Carolina devastated by Helene could now experience a once-in-100 year flood every 11 to 25 years. If you’re planning a 20-year retirement, those odds aren’t reassuring at all.

The Science Behind Why the Carolinas Keep Getting Hit

The Science Behind Why the Carolinas Keep Getting Hit (Image Credits: Pixabay)
The Science Behind Why the Carolinas Keep Getting Hit (Image Credits: Pixabay)

A study at Stony Brook University, published in Science Advances, found that a warming climate enhanced Florence’s extreme rainfall in 2018. The North Carolina Climate Science Report published in 2020 stated that heavy precipitation accompanying hurricanes that pass near or over North Carolina is very likely to increase, which would in turn increase the potential for freshwater flooding in the state.

A simulation based on current warming trends found that Hurricane Florence at the end of this century would produce a maximum rainfall of almost 56 inches, or 20 inches more than when the storm hit in 2018. That’s not a distant future problem. Oceans made warmer by human-caused climate change are fueling more intense hurricanes in the Atlantic, and in a warming climate, these storms also bring heavier rainfall and higher storm surge when they make landfall.

There were 134 flash flood warnings in North Carolina in 2025 as of mid-August, according to the National Weather Service, the third most by that date on record, with only two years having seen more: 2024 and 2003. The data is not subtle.

Hidden Gem #1: Midland, Michigan – The Midwest’s Quiet Champion

Hidden Gem #1: Midland, Michigan - The Midwest's Quiet Champion (Image Credits: Pexels)
Hidden Gem #1: Midland, Michigan – The Midwest’s Quiet Champion (Image Credits: Pexels)

U.S. News and World Report ranked Midland as the best place to retire in 2026, thanks to its affordability, top-tier healthcare, and a tax climate that lets retirees keep their money, with a population of 42,740 that offers the ease of a small community without sacrificing essential infrastructure. Here’s the thing: nobody talks about Midland. It doesn’t have a flashy reputation. It doesn’t need one.

A median home value of $206,142 and a median monthly rent of $790 allow retirement savings to stretch further than they would in many coastal or Sun Belt hotspots, while a median household income of $76,166 reflects a stable local economy anchored by long-standing employers. Compare that to coastal Carolina real estate prices that have been climbing sharply post-Helene.

Michigan has transformed into one of the most retirement-friendly states in the country, with most retirement and pension income now fully exempt from state taxes, allowing retirees to keep significantly more of their hard-earned savings. All that Great Lakes water absorbs heat in the summer and releases it in the winter, helping to moderate Michigan’s climate and making it moister and more temperate than other Midwestern states.

Hidden Gem #2: Duluth, Minnesota – The “Climate-Proof” City You Haven’t Considered

Hidden Gem #2: Duluth, Minnesota - The "Climate-Proof" City You Haven't Considered (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Hidden Gem #2: Duluth, Minnesota – The “Climate-Proof” City You Haven’t Considered (Image Credits: Unsplash)

I know it sounds crazy to suggest Minnesota as a retirement haven, but hear me out. How about “climate-proof Duluth”? The nickname was coined citing the Lake Superior port city’s mild summer climate, abundant fresh water, distance from rising seas, and room for growth. Other attractions include expansive water views along the eight-mile Lakewalk, lots of parks and trails for hiking and biking, two top-rated hospitals, and urban amenities like a thriving craft beer scene.

Personal finance site WalletHub ranked Minnesota as the best state for healthcare in 2024, citing low costs and highly rated public hospitals. Healthcare access is arguably the single most important factor in retirement planning, and Minnesota delivers on it convincingly. The median home sale price in Minnesota is 20 percent below the national average, and the crime rate is 47 percent lower.

Duluth is a scenic city located on the shores of Lake Superior in northeastern Minnesota, offering stunning views of the lake and surrounding forests, as well as a variety of outdoor recreational activities, including fishing, kayaking, and skiing. Positioned hundreds of miles from the nearest coastline, it faces zero hurricane risk and is far enough inland to avoid the worst of any future sea-level-related flooding scenarios.

Hidden Gem #3: Sioux Falls, South Dakota – Tax-Free and Storm-Resilient

Hidden Gem #3: Sioux Falls, South Dakota - Tax-Free and Storm-Resilient (Image Credits: Pixabay)
Hidden Gem #3: Sioux Falls, South Dakota – Tax-Free and Storm-Resilient (Image Credits: Pixabay)

Sioux Falls, South Dakota offers some of the best perks for retirement living, including no state income tax and access to great healthcare options, and Forbes has included Sioux Falls in its list of the 25 best places to retire in 2025. No state income tax is genuinely a big deal for retirees living on fixed incomes. It’s the kind of savings that compounds quietly over a decade of retirement.

Located on the southeastern edge of South Dakota, Sioux Falls is an outdoor lover’s paradise with over 70 parks where you can indulge your passion for hiking, biking, and a host of outdoor sports nearly year-round. With a lower cost of living than the U.S. average, retirement savings can stretch up to 20 percent farther in South Dakota. That’s roughly the equivalent of giving yourself a raise the moment you move.

With no state income tax and a high quality of life, South Dakota ranked the number six best place to retire in 2025 according to Seniorly’s national ranking system. South Dakota has a continental climate with cold winters and warm summers, and while the winters can be harsh, the state’s sunny summers make up for it. Brutal? Occasionally. Catastrophically flooded by a hurricane? Never.

Hidden Gem #4: Peoria, Illinois – The Affordable Surprise Nobody Expects

Hidden Gem #4: Peoria, Illinois - The Affordable Surprise Nobody Expects (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Hidden Gem #4: Peoria, Illinois – The Affordable Surprise Nobody Expects (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Let’s be real: Peoria doesn’t exactly come up in travel magazines. It’s not going to win any glamour contests. A big draw for Peoria is its affordability, with the average home value at only $126,726 compared with the $357,275 average for the U.S. That gap is staggering. You could buy a comfortable home in Peoria outright with what you’d use as a down payment in coastal North Carolina.

Peoria has a cost of living that is 24 percent lower than the rest of the country. The Riverfront area offers a vibrant setting with several eateries, shops, and attractions including the Peoria Riverfront Museum with its Giant Screen Theater and Dome Planetarium. The museum hosts a senior program with a free bimonthly morning lecture series and free admission for guests aged 60 and up every third Wednesday of the month, while the Peoria Park District offers 64 park sites with miles of hiking trails, golf courses, and a nature center.

As of late 2025, the Downtown Development Corporation of Peoria remains active in promoting construction and development in the area, providing 714 construction permits valued at $74 million, while the Illinois Department of Transportation has invested over $350 million in various infrastructure projects aimed at improving safety and mobility. A city investing in itself is a city worth moving to.

The Green Bay, Wisconsin Wild Card Worth Knowing About

The Green Bay, Wisconsin Wild Card Worth Knowing About (Image Credits: Pixabay)
The Green Bay, Wisconsin Wild Card Worth Knowing About (Image Credits: Pixabay)

Green Bay often gets dismissed as just a football city. That’s a shame, because it’s quietly becoming one of the Midwest’s most forward-thinking communities. Green Bay adopted a clean energy plan in 2024 that aims for 100% clean energy and carbon neutrality by 2050, with 2030 targets focused on improved building efficiency, growth in clean electricity, and lower transportation emissions. The city also runs a Resilience and Sustainability Hub and supports an active Sustainability Commission.

Appleton, located less than two hours from Milwaukee and even closer to Green Bay, balances historic charm with urban living and has long been a sought-after place to retire, with roughly 14.2 percent of its population aged 65 and older, meaning retirees are likely to find a welcoming community of like-minded neighbors. The broader northeastern Wisconsin area, of which Green Bay is the hub, offers an outdoor lifestyle, a genuinely distinct four-season experience, and no exposure to Atlantic hurricanes whatsoever.

None of this region sits in a flood zone related to tropical storm surge. Unlike the Carolinas, where some recent notable fall hurricane strikes include Helene in 2024, Ian in 2022, Dorian in 2019, Florence in 2018, and Matthew in 2016, northern Wisconsin hasn’t faced anything remotely comparable in living memory.

Climate Resilience vs. Climate Roulette: What the Data Actually Says

Climate Resilience vs. Climate Roulette: What the Data Actually Says (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Climate Resilience vs. Climate Roulette: What the Data Actually Says (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Here’s what most retirement articles won’t say bluntly: choosing where to retire in 2026 is partly a climate risk decision. Recent studies show that climate change is driving roughly three in ten Americans to consider relocating. The number is rising. Madison, Wisconsin, for example, benefits from a chain of lakes and a balanced climate that produces fewer severe heat days than many Midwestern peers, with neighborhoods dotted with parks and trails that keep the heat index more comfortable on summer afternoons, and the city has expanded stormwater detention projects to reduce flash flooding.

The Midwest is inland. That simple geographic fact matters enormously when you consider that sea level rise can amplify storm surge during hurricanes, putting coastal residents at heightened risk. The Carolinas face this risk directly. Midwestern cities simply don’t. Retirees are prioritizing quality of life over affordability for the first time since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, and this, coupled with an expanded number of places evaluated, allowed a number of Midwestern cities to secure high positions in national retirement rankings.

It’s hard to say for sure how fast conditions in the Carolinas will deteriorate, but the trend is consistent enough that ignoring it in a retirement planning decision seems, honestly, shortsighted.

The Financial Cost of Storm Risk That Retirees Often Overlook

The Financial Cost of Storm Risk That Retirees Often Overlook (Image Credits: Unsplash)
The Financial Cost of Storm Risk That Retirees Often Overlook (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Beyond the obvious safety concerns, there’s a financial dimension to hurricane and flood risk that many retirees seriously underestimate. Home insurance in coastal and flood-prone areas of the Carolinas has been surging in recent years as private insurers reprice or exit risk-heavy markets. This is a pattern already well established in Florida and increasingly visible in North and South Carolina.

First-time entrant Midland, Michigan secured the leading rank in U.S. News and World Report’s 2026 best places to retire rankings, with retirees prioritizing its affordability and low taxes. Meanwhile, Michigan ranked 13th among states for low cost of living in the third quarter of 2024, with housing being affordable at a median sale price of about $264,000 in October 2024, compared to $435,000 nationally.

Lower home prices plus dramatically lower insurance exposure equals a retirement budget that simply goes further. That’s the math the Carolinas can’t compete with right now.

The Bottom Line: Rethink the Dream Before You Sign the Papers

The Bottom Line: Rethink the Dream Before You Sign the Papers (Image Credits: Unsplash)
The Bottom Line: Rethink the Dream Before You Sign the Papers (Image Credits: Unsplash)

The Carolinas are beautiful. There is no question about that. But beauty doesn’t protect your home from a once-in-a-millennium flood that now seems to arrive every few years. This comes less than a year after Helene set the new flood of record in much of western North Carolina, with flooding in Asheville after Helene dumped up to 31 inches of rain on western North Carolina in September 2024. The mountains that were supposed to be the safe inland escape turned out to be a funnel for catastrophic rainfall.

The four Midwestern gems described here, Midland, Duluth, Sioux Falls, and Peoria, share something the Carolinas cannot currently offer: a credible, data-backed case for climate stability paired with genuine affordability and quality healthcare. Forget retiring in the South. Affordability, ample activities, and quality healthcare make these Midwestern cities unexpectedly appealing to retirees. Kiplinger said it plainly, and the recent data backs it up.

Retirement is a long game. The city that looks appealing in year one needs to still be livable, insurable, and structurally sound in year twenty. Before you fall in love with a Carolina mountain view or a coastal cottage, ask yourself honestly: what does the climate trajectory of that place look like in 2040? The Midwest has a surprisingly compelling answer. What would you have guessed before reading this? Tell us in the comments.

<p>The post Don’t Retire in the Carolinas: 4 Midwestern Hidden Gems with Better Climate Resilience first appeared on Travelbinger.</p>

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