County

Durham County, North Carolina Retirement Score

Durham County is a stronger fit for retirees who prioritize healthcare access, college-town amenities, and overall balance, but it is less appealing for those who prioritize very low costs. Use this page to understand why it scores the way it does before moving into side-by-side comparisons.

Overall Retirement Score
51
Around average

Quick takeaway

Best for: healthcare access, Triangle convenience, services

Think twice if: lower-density living or lower housing costs matter more

Score breakdown

Affordability
23
Expensive for retirees
Healthcare Access
77
Above average
Climate Comfort
69
Above average
Disaster Risk
64
Around average
Air Quality
45
Below average
Retiree Fit
26
Weak

At a glance

Median rent
$1,508
Median home value
$389,400
Age 65+
32%
Climate
Mixed seasonal profile with regional tradeoffs
Healthcare
Above-average access signals
Risk
Relatively manageable

Good fit for

Retirees who want healthcare access, college-town amenities, overall balance.

Less ideal for

Retirees who want very low housing costs or a stronger coastal retirement feel.

Biggest strengths

  • A stronger profile in North Carolina for overall balance.
  • Useful when comparing nearby retirement tradeoffs.
  • Adds another realistic place to compare in the region.

Biggest tradeoffs

  • Not the lowest-cost option in its region.
  • Not every category is equally strong.
  • Users should compare it against nearby alternatives before deciding.

Affordability

Durham County, North Carolina is a more workable fit for retirees who can tolerate some cost pressure in exchange for better overall balance.

Healthcare Access

Healthcare access is among the useful parts of the profile here, especially compared with thinner or more remote alternatives.

Climate Comfort

Climate comfort is a meaningful factor here, though the main tradeoffs still depend on whether a retiree values milder winters, drier weather, or less summer heat.

Disaster Risk

Disaster risk is not the main reason this place rises or falls, but it still matters as part of the broader retirement profile.

Air Quality

Air quality is more neutral than decisive here, which means users should usually weigh it alongside cost, healthcare, and climate rather than in isolation.

Retiree Fit

Retiree fit is one of the stronger reasons this place can be worth considering in a shortlist for North Carolina and the broader region.

Similar places to consider

Buncombe County, North Carolina

Similar for retirement fit and overall livability, but with a different mix of cost, climate, and healthcare tradeoffs.

Wake County, North Carolina

Similar for retirement fit and overall livability, but with a different mix of cost, climate, and healthcare tradeoffs.

How to interpret this retirement score

Use the overall score as a quick summary, then look at the category scores to see whether affordability, healthcare, climate, air quality, disaster risk, or retiree fit is driving the result. A place can still be a good fit for you even if one category is a clear tradeoff.

Best next step after this page

Use compare pages when you have two realistic finalists. If you are still building the shortlist, use the related rankings and the broader state page to find nearby or similarly ranked alternatives.

Frequently asked questions

Is Durham County, North Carolina a good place to retire?

It can be a good fit for retirees who prioritize healthcare access, college-town amenities, overall balance.

What is the biggest tradeoff here?

The biggest tradeoff is usually whether the overall balance justifies the local cost, climate, and healthcare mix for your priorities.

What to do next

Use this page as a narrowing step, then compare it directly against nearby or similarly ranked counties and metros. The overall score is the summary; the category scores explain the tradeoffs.