Financial literacy is making people think more widely these days today a civil servant me a question. he said he had 8 years to retire and he had never thought of it until recently after an engagement. He said he recently started thinking that my now he should have known where he was going to retire to so that he start to prepare, getting used to the environment, the people, build if possible and many other stuffs suggested. But then he asked what should be the core considerations for such a decision and I felt it was a smart question. Though we discussed but I would appreciate more insight from this house
That civil servant is asking a very important question — and honestly, many people start asking it far too late. Retirement planning is not only about pension money. It is really about designing the next 20–35 years of life. A lot of retirees struggle not because they lacked income alone, but becausRead more
That civil servant is asking a very important question — and honestly, many people start asking it far too late.
See lessRetirement planning is not only about pension money.
It is really about designing the next 20–35 years of life.
A lot of retirees struggle not because they lacked income alone, but because they retired into:
the wrong environment
social isolation
poor healthcare access
idleness
family pressure
high living costs
insecurity
lack of purpose
So choosing where and how to retire is almost as important as building the retirement fund itself.
Here are the major considerations I think matter most.
1. Healthcare Access (Extremely Important)
As people age, healthcare becomes one of the biggest expenses and necessities.
Questions to ask:
Is there a good hospital nearby?
Are specialists accessible?
How far is emergency care?
Is the area medically reliable year-round?
Can medications be easily obtained?
Many people romantically plan to retire to remote villages, then later relocate again because of healthcare problems.
A peaceful environment is good.
A peaceful environment with poor medical access can become dangerous after age 60.
2. Cost of Living
Retirement income is usually fixed or semi-fixed.
So the retiree should estimate:
housing costs
feeding
transportation
electricity
security
medical costs
social obligations
A location that looks cheap initially may become expensive because of:
insecurity
poor infrastructure
constant travel to cities
generator/diesel costs
Some retirees survive better in medium-sized towns than in very expensive cities.
3. Proximity to Family and Trusted Relationships
Loneliness affects retirees more than many people realize.
Questions:
Will children likely visit?
Is there a support network?
Are trusted friends nearby?
Is there a religious/community structure?
Retirement becomes psychologically harder when someone moves somewhere they have no emotional roots.
People underestimate how important:
familiar faces
routine interactions
community respect
companionship become later in life.
4. Security and Stability
This is now a major issue in Nigeria.
A retirement location should be assessed for:
crime
kidnapping risk
communal conflicts
political instability
flooding/environmental risks
Land may be cheap somewhere for a reason.
Many retirees are now prioritizing safer semi-urban areas over isolated ancestral villages.
5. Climate and Physical Comfort
Health and comfort matter more with age.
Consider:
excessive heat
flooding
difficult terrain
unreliable electricity
water access
A place that is manageable at 35 may become exhausting at 70.
6. Purpose After Retirement
This is one of the most ignored aspects.
Many workers unconsciously build their identity around their jobs.
Then retirement suddenly creates:
boredom
depression
loss of relevance
anxiety
The healthiest retirees usually still have:
small businesses
farming
mentoring
religious/community roles
consulting
teaching
volunteering
The question should not only be:
“Where will I retire?”
But also:
“What meaningful life will I live after retirement?”
7. Housing Strategy
This is where many people make emotional mistakes.
Important questions:
Should he build immediately?
Rent first and test the environment?
Stay close to city centers or outskirts?
Maintain two locations?
Sometimes it is wiser to:
buy land early
visit frequently
spend short periods there
gradually transition
instead of rushing into a permanent retirement house.
A person may discover after 2 years that the environment does not suit them.
8. Financial Sustainability
Retirement planning should include:
pension projections
inflation
emergency funds
healthcare reserves
investment income
In Nigeria especially, inflation can destroy retirement plans.
Someone retiring in 8 years should already be thinking about:
diversified investments
reducing unnecessary debt
building income-producing assets
not depending only on pension
This is where:
dividend stocks
money market funds
Sukuk
rental income
agriculture
small businesses can become useful supplementary income sources.
9. Emotional vs Rational Decisions
A lot of people retire based on:
family pressure
sentiment
inherited land
“my village people” thinking
But retirement should be strategic.
Sometimes:
the hometown is emotionally satisfying but
economically impractical
medically risky
socially isolating
The best retirement location is often a balance between:
emotional connection
practical sustainability
10. Retirement Should Be Gradual If Possible
The smartest retirees often transition slowly.
Example:
start spending holidays there
develop relationships
test business ideas
understand local politics
monitor security
learn the cost structure
That gradual exposure helps avoid expensive mistakes.
One Thing Many Nigerians Ignore
Retirement planning should ideally start in the 30s and 40s — not in the last few years of service.
Why?
Because retirement is easier when:
land was bought earlier
investments compounded over time
social roots already exist
health is still manageable
The earlier someone starts planning, the more options they have.
A Practical Framework for Him
Since he has about 8 years left, I would suggest he focus on:
Years 1–2
Decide possible retirement locations
Study cost of living and security
Estimate pension and retirement income
Reduce debt
Years 3–5
Begin gradual setup
Buy/build modestly if appropriate
Strengthen investments
Develop retirement activity/business
Years 6–8
Transition emotionally and socially
Spend longer periods there
Finalize healthcare and housing arrangements
Create sustainable monthly income structure
The most successful retirements are usually built around four pillars:
Financial stability
Good health access
Strong social/community connections
Meaningful daily activity
When one of those pillars is missing, retirement can become much harder than expected.