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Bellingham, Washington
Puget Sound · Washington
Retiring in Bellingham: Is It the Right Fit for Your Next Chapter? (2026)

Retiring in Bellingham: Is It the Right Fit for Your Next Chapter?

Bellingham is genuinely one of the more honest retirement destinations in the Pacific Northwest — not because it sells itself hard, but because it doesn't have to. The combination of no state income tax, a walkable waterfront, a Level II trauma hospital that has earned Leapfrog's Grade A safety rating eleven consecutive years, and a mild maritime climate makes the case on its own. But this is not a city for every retiree. If your version of retirement involves warm winters, flat terrain, or a large sprawling senior community with a golf course, Bellingham will frustrate you more than it rewards you.

The retiree who thrives here is typically someone who was already active before retirement and wants to stay that way. The Cascades are forty minutes east. Chuckanut Drive runs south along the coast. The Saturday Farmers Market at Railroad Avenue draws a crowd that skews noticeably older than the university-aged population nearby. Bellingham's median age is 34 — young, shaped heavily by Western Washington University — but the 16.5% of residents who are 65 or older form a well-established, visible community with their own rhythms.

This guide is written specifically for people weighing Bellingham as a retirement destination in 2026. It covers what Washington's tax structure actually means for your income, how the local hospital stacks up, what senior living options exist and roughly what they cost, and which neighborhoods tend to attract retirees for the right reasons. It also names the situations where Bellingham probably isn't the right call.

Bellingham, Washington

The Washington Retirement Tax Picture

No other single factor does more to make Bellingham competitive as a retirement destination than Washington's tax structure. The state has no income tax — full stop. Social Security, pension distributions, IRA withdrawals, 401(k) income, and investment dividends are all untaxed at the state level.

Income TypeWashington State Tax Treatment
Social Security BenefitsNo state tax
Pension / Defined Benefit IncomeNo state tax
IRA / 401(k) WithdrawalsNo state tax
Investment Dividends & Capital GainsNo state tax (as of 2026 ruling)
Earned / W-2 IncomeNo state tax
Property Tax (Bellingham)Approximately 0.81% effective rate
Sales Tax (Whatcom County)8.8% combined rate
Estate TaxWashington taxes estates over $2.193 million
For retirees arriving from California, Oregon, or any state with a progressive income tax, the savings are immediate and significant. A couple drawing $80,000 per year in combined Social Security and IRA income keeps every dollar of it at the state level. Oregon, by contrast, taxes that same income at rates up to 9.9%, which translates to thousands of dollars annually that stay in a Bellingham retiree's pocket instead.

Washington does offset some of that advantage through a higher sales tax — the Whatcom County combined rate runs around 8.8% — so everyday purchases cost more than they would in Oregon. On balance, though, fixed-income retirees almost always come out ahead in Washington, particularly once you factor in the senior property tax exemption. Washington offers a property tax relief program for homeowners aged 61 and older with household incomes below a qualifying threshold. Eligible seniors can see significant reductions in their annual property tax obligation, making that 0.81% effective rate even more favorable in practice. The combination of no income tax plus the senior exemption is something relocating retirees from high-tax states consistently describe as one of the most meaningful financial changes they experience after moving.

Healthcare in Bellingham

PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center at 2901 Squalicum Parkway is the only hospital in Whatcom County, and it carries more weight than a single facility typically does in a city this size. With 255 licensed beds, 780 physicians and clinicians on staff, and the only Level II Trauma designation in northern Washington, it functions as the regional hub for serious medical events from the Canadian border south through the county.

For retirees, the relevant specialties are strong. The hospital operates a dedicated Cardiovascular Center with Blue Cross Blue Shield Blue Distinction status for cardiac care, a St. Joseph Cancer Center, a Joint Replacement program that earned the America's 50 Best Hospitals for Outpatient Joint Replacement designation from Healthgrades, and a Stroke Program. The Haggen Family Emergency and Trauma Center runs 24/7 with board-certified emergency physicians. Eleven consecutive Leapfrog Grade A safety ratings — one of the longest such streaks in the Northwest — signal consistent operational quality, not a one-year snapshot.

The honest limitation: for conditions requiring subspecialty care — complex cardiac surgery, major oncology cases, Level I trauma — the transfer destination is typically Seattle's Harborview Medical Center or University of Washington Medical Center, both roughly 90 minutes south. That distance is real, and retirees with pre-existing complex conditions should weigh it carefully. PeaceHealth accepts Medicare and provides 24-hour language interpretation, which matters for the region's diverse senior population.

Senior Living Options

Bellingham has approximately 23 senior living communities across the full spectrum of care, which is a larger number than most people expect from a city its size. That depth reflects both the retiree demand and the influence of a regional medical center that draws healthcare infrastructure.

CommunityTypeNeighborhood / LocationEst. Monthly Cost
Brookdale BellinghamIndependent 55+ Apartments4415 Columbine Dr (North Bellingham)$2,500–$3,800
Solstice at BellinghamIndependent LivingFairhaven / Bellingham Bay$3,200–$4,500
Spring Creek by BonaventureIndependent + Assisted + Memory CareBellingham$3,500–$5,200
Highgate at BellinghamAssisted + Memory CareBellingham$4,200–$6,000
Silverado BellinghamMemory Care (up to 80 residents)Bellingham$5,500–$7,500
Orchard Park RetirementIndependent + AssistedCentral Bellingham$2,800–$4,200
Cordata CourtIndependent + Assisted + Memory CareCordata neighborhood$3,000–$5,000
Woodway Senior LivingIndependent + AssistedRoosevelt District$2,900–$4,400
The WillowsIndependent LivingBellingham$2,600–$3,800
Rosewood VillaAssisted LivingBellingham$3,800–$5,500
Solstice at Bellingham is the community most frequently mentioned by retirees drawn specifically to the Fairhaven lifestyle — it positions itself around the historic district's walkability and proximity to Bellingham Bay, with Chuckanut Drive as a literal backdrop. The facility emphasizes its proximity to PeaceHealth, which is genuinely a selling point given that it's the only hospital in the county.

Spring Creek by Bonaventure stands out for its 122 assisted living units, walking trails on the property, and 24/7 staffing — relevant for families making a transition from independent living into a higher-care setting. Silverado Bellingham focuses exclusively on memory care and is designed specifically to serve up to 80 residents in a structured, secure environment. For buyers who want to buy a home and age in place rather than enter a community, the adult family home model is also well-represented in Bellingham, with smaller licensed homes like Gracious Living (1511 Edwards St) and Vining Villa (2617 Vining Place) providing a more residential alternative to larger institutional settings.

Bellingham, Washington

What Retirement Life Looks Like Day-to-Day

The honest walkability picture in Bellingham is mixed, in a way that matters for retirement planning. Fairhaven and parts of the Lettered Streets neighborhood are genuinely walkable — coffee shops, restaurants, and the waterfront trail within a flat or gently sloping walk. Much of the rest of the city, particularly Barkley, Cordata, and the areas north of Squalicum, is car-dependent in the way most American mid-sized cities are. Retirees who want to live without a car will find Fairhaven and downtown Bellingham viable but should not assume that holds citywide.

Whatcom Transportation Authority (WTA) runs fixed-route bus service throughout the city and offers DIAL-A-RIDE paratransit for seniors and riders with disabilities — a meaningful option as driving becomes less desirable over time. The routes are functional but not frequent enough to fully replace a car for most errands outside the core neighborhoods.

The cultural calendar is genuinely strong for a city of this size. The Bellingham Festival of Music runs each summer at Western Washington University, bringing professional orchestral performances to a setting that feels more intimate than the program's quality would suggest. The Whatcom Museum operates across multiple historic buildings downtown and runs year-round exhibitions. The Saturday Farmers Market on Railroad Avenue runs April through December and is one of the most attended regular community events in the city — retirees who've moved here consistently name it as one of the first places they felt like they belonged.

Outdoor access shapes daily life in a way that doesn't translate well in text. The 20-mile Interurban Trail runs from Bellingham south toward Larrabee State Park along Chuckanut Mountain. Boulevard Park on the waterfront has a paved walking path along Bellingham Bay that works comfortably for all fitness levels. Lake Padden Park, Whatcom Falls Park, and Sehome Hill Arboretum all offer trail systems within city limits. For retirees whose identity is built around hiking, cycling, kayaking, or simply being outdoors regularly, Bellingham delivers in a way that few cities at this price point do.

Daily convenience is solid without being exceptional. Fred Meyer, Haggen, Trader Joe's, and a Costco serve the city well. The Barkley neighborhood has emerged as one of the more convenient clusters for medical appointments, grocery runs, and everyday errands — multiple medical offices, a pharmacy concentration, and easy parking make it a practical base for retirees managing regular healthcare needs.

Todd Davidson, Executive Loan Officer at Rocket Mortgage
Todd Davidson Executive Loan Officer · Rocket Mortgage · NMLS #2003696 Specializing in Washington & Oregon home buyers statewide
🏦 Mortgage Perspective: Bellingham

Bellingham offers real variety for retirees, and where you land within the city matters more than people expect. Fairhaven tends to hold its value exceptionally well — it has that walkable village feel that appeals to a wide range of buyers, which means well-priced homes there rarely sit long, sometimes just days. Sehome and Columbia attract retirees who want proximity to Western Washington University's amenities and quieter residential streets, and both neighborhoods have seen steady demand. If you're drawn to something under $750,000 with good bones and a manageable footprint, you'll want to move quickly when the right place surfaces.

That's exactly why I encourage retirees to connect with a lender before they start touring homes. Your approval amount and your comfortable budget are two different numbers, and understanding your full monthly picture — loan structure, property taxes, homeowner's insurance, and any HOA dues combined — gives you a realistic foundation to shop from. Retirement income, Social Security, and asset-based qualification all factor into how your loan is structured, and knowing that before you fall in love with a home means you're ready to act instead of scrambling to catch up

Bellingham vs. Nearby Retirement Destinations

CityMedian Home PriceHospital AccessWalkabilitySenior Living DepthOverall Retirement Fit
Bellingham, WA$630,000Level II Trauma on-siteGood (Fairhaven/downtown)Strong (23+ communities)★★★★☆
Anacortes, WA~$550,000Island Hospital (critical access)ModerateLimited★★★☆☆
Mount Vernon, WA~$480,000Skagit Valley Hospital (Level III)LimitedModerate★★★☆☆
Ferndale, WA~$490,000Relies on PeaceHealth BellinghamLimitedLimited★★☆☆☆
Burlington, WA~$440,000Skagit Valley Hospital nearbyCar-dependentLimited★★★☆☆
Lynden, WA~$520,000Relies on PeaceHealth BellinghamWalkable downtownSmall but growing★★★☆☆
The comparison that comes up most often is Bellingham versus Anacortes — both waterfront cities with outdoor character and lower price points than Seattle. Anacortes is quieter, more insular, and beautiful, but it relies on Island Hospital, a critical access facility with limited specialty depth. For retirees with cardiac or oncology concerns, the difference in local hospital capability is meaningful. Bellingham's position as the only Level II trauma and specialty hub in northern Washington is the defining healthcare advantage in this region.

Mount Vernon and Burlington offer lower entry prices and proximity to Skagit Valley Hospital, but neither has Bellingham's cultural infrastructure or senior living depth. Ferndale and Lynden are comfortable small towns that many retirees enjoy, but both fully depend on Bellingham for serious medical care, so buyers there are trading proximity to the hospital without gaining meaningfully lower costs.

Bellingham, Washington

Local Expert Takeaway: Retirees who thrive in Bellingham tend to land in one of three places: Fairhaven for the walkable village lifestyle close to the bay, Barkley for practical convenience and newer construction without the hills, or Edgemoor for quieter single-family streets with easy waterfront access. The retiree who should look elsewhere is anyone prioritizing warm dry winters, flat terrain citywide, or a large-format resort-style senior community — none of those exist here in meaningful form. If you're choosing between Bellingham and a smaller Whatcom County town like Lynden or Ferndale, recognize that you'd be giving up the hospital, the cultural calendar, and most of the senior living options in exchange for a $100,000–$140,000 reduction in home price that may or may not be worth the tradeoff depending on your health picture.

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Quick Takeaways & FAQs

Is Bellingham a good place to retire?

Bellingham is a strong retirement destination for active, outdoors-oriented retirees who want walkable access to cultural life, strong local healthcare, and the financial advantages of Washington's no-income-tax structure. The city's mild maritime climate, mature trail system, and well-developed senior living market make it genuinely competitive at the $630,000 median home price — though buyers coming from lower-cost regions will feel the housing costs.

What healthcare is available for retirees in Bellingham?

PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center is the region's primary hospital, operating as a Level II Trauma Center with 255 licensed beds, cardiovascular, cancer, joint replacement, and stroke programs, and a CMS 4-star overall rating. It is the only hospital in Whatcom County, which means complex cases beyond its scope typically require transfer to Seattle — a factor retirees with serious pre-existing conditions should discuss with their physicians before relocating.

How does Bellingham compare to other Washington retirement cities?

Bellingham sits in a strong position relative to most smaller Northwest Washington cities — it has more senior living depth, better hospital access, and a richer cultural calendar than comparably priced options like Anacortes, Mount Vernon, or Lynden. The primary downsides relative to those cities are the higher home prices and a terrain that is hilly enough to be relevant for retirees with mobility considerations. For buyers who want a warmer, drier climate, Eastern Washington cities like Wenatchee or Walla Walla offer a meaningfully different experience.

Explore the full Bellingham series: Living in Bellingham · Is Bellingham Safe? · Cost of Living · Best Neighborhoods · Schools & Family Life · Youth Sports · Parks & Rec · Retiring in Bellingham