Colorado Springs vs Santa Fe for Retirees (2026)

Better for retirees: Colorado Springs~4% cheaper overall
Median Home Price
$400K
Colorado Springs
$480K
Santa Fe
State Income Tax
4.4%
Colorado Springs
4.9%
Santa Fe
Est. Healthcare / month
$475
Colorado Springs
$495
Santa Fe
Walk Score (0–100)
30
Colorado Springs
42
Santa Fe

Scroll down for retirement income tax breakdown, healthcare estimates, and FAQ.

Full retirement cost breakdown

Metric
Colorado Springs
Colorado
Santa Fe
New Mexico
1BR rent / month$1,500Better$1,550
Median home price$400KBetter$480K
State income tax4.4%Better4.9%
Sales tax (combined)8%7.7%Better
Monthly utilities$145Better$158
Groceries index (US = 100)98Better99
Est. healthcare / month$475Better$495
Walk score (0–100)30 / 10042 / 100Better
Overall COL index (100 = US avg)95Better99

Frequently asked questions

Which city is better for retirement — Colorado Springs or Santa Fe?

Based on home prices, taxes on retirement income, walkability, and overall cost of living, Colorado Springs scores better for retirees. Median home prices are $400K in Colorado Springs vs $480K in Santa Fe. Colorado Springs is approximately 4% cheaper overall. The best choice still depends on climate, healthcare access, and proximity to family.

Is retirement income taxed in Colorado Springs or Santa Fe?

Colorado Springs has the lower state income tax rate (4.4% vs 4.9%). Note that many states exempt Social Security income and some pension income from state taxes even when other income is taxed — check your specific state's retirement tax rules.

What is the estimated monthly healthcare cost in Colorado Springs vs Santa Fe?

Based on national average retiree healthcare spending (~$500/month) scaled by each city's cost-of-living index, estimated monthly healthcare costs are approximately $475 in Colorado Springs and $495 in Santa Fe. That's a difference of ~$20/month, or ~$240/year. Actual costs vary based on your Medicare plan, supplements, and health needs.

Can I afford to retire in Colorado Springs on a $50,000 annual income?

On a $50,000/year ($4,167/month) retirement income in Colorado Springs, rent alone would consume approximately 36% of your budget (1BR rent ~$1,500/mo) and healthcare another ~11%. That leaves roughly 53% (~$2,208/mo) for groceries, transportation, and other expenses. This is tight — a studio apartment or lower-cost neighborhood would help.

Which city is more walkable for retirees?

Santa Fe has a higher walk score (42 vs 30 out of 100). Walkability is increasingly important for retirees who want to reduce car dependence — a score above 70 means most daily errands can be done on foot. Santa Fe offers more independence without a car, which also reduces transportation costs.

Retirement purchasing power

$50K/year in Colorado Springs has the same purchasing power as $52K/year in Santa Fe

Related comparisons

Healthcare estimates based on national avg retiree spending (~$500/mo) scaled by COL index · State income tax rates from Tax Foundation · Data: Zillow, BLS, Numbeo · Q1 2026