TLDR: Has anyone moved to a LCOL area from HCOL before FIRE to pursue a slower pace of life? How much did it affect your savings rate? Was the change in quality of life drastic enough to be worth the pay cut?
For those who want context:My husband and I lived in Portland, OR for 6 years while he finished the world's longest Bachelors degree program. We then moved to Anchorage, AK for 3.5 years and absolutely fell in love with the pace of life there. The population was only around 300,000 people. Traffic was non-existent. We had easy access to anything we needed and also to lots and lots of open space.
Then my husband was laid off. He looked for a job locally for about six months with no luck. We worried that with oil being far and away Alaska's primary source of income that we were taking a big risk staying there. He took a job back in Portland, where I also had lots of professional contacts, and we moved back almost exactly two years ago. We're now making great money, own a beautiful house equidistant between our two offices, and are saving about 40% of our income per year. Unfortunately, we're miserable.
Here's a list of why we're miserable:
- The climate sucks. I miss snow and mountains on a cellular level.
- The traffic is horrendous.
- Once you do get somewhere, 5000 people are already there. Hiking areas? Packed. Cultural events? Packed. It feels impossible to get away from people.
- We suck at making friends here. I had a huge social group in Anchorage, aside from not really fitting in to the Portland crowd of craft beer and local bands, having friends that live more than 5 miles from you makes it hard to want to battle traffic to spend time with people.
- Cost of living is insane. Remember that gorgeous house? In a fit of despair over leaving somewhere I loved, I bought a quirky house that is solidly 50% larger than what I needed. It's also outside the only neighborhood I like in Portland because I was trying to compromise on location with my husband who works way out in the suburbs. The house somehow is one of the few things I like about living here, and also a huge source of anxiety.
I'm almost sad that we went to Alaska because for the first time in my life I loved where I lived. I thought that economic stability and being closer to family would outweigh that feeling, but it doesn't. I used to be happy every day. Now I feel like there are maybe 4 days per month when I can truly claim to be happy.
There's another situation compounding our unhappiness, which is my husband's career. He is an extremely smart dude with absolutely zero ambition. I should not have forced him through school, but I did. He didn't graduate until he was 30. He is now stuck at almost 36 in an entry level position and has failed his professional licensing examination twice by a very narrow margin. If he doesn't pass it a third time, his career will have dead ended. This wouldn't be so bad, but he works in the field every day for 10-12 hours in this horrible, horrible climate. He is miserable. And honestly, even if he passes his licensing exam, he really needs a Masters degree to work for 75% of the companies that are in his line of work. Since I'm not sure his sanity or our marriage would survive another degree, the chances of him getting a cushy desk job are slim.
We are fantasizing about moving to a mountainous college town where I can get a job working at a university (a lifelong dream) or even stay in my current career path (marketing in the A/E/C field), and he can... manage some rental properties? Work as a teller? Get a real estate license? Basically do something to bring in ~30k/year so we can keep saving. Right now we're looking at Helena, MT or Boone, NC for their nexus of size, location, and real estate prices.
I've run that math and while we can retire in ~12 years on our current path, who knows exactly what that would look like in a LCOL area. It looks like we would spend about $3200/mo in the locations we're looking at, which seems like a totally reasonable amount for two highly educated professionals to be able to take home even in an area without a ton of job opportunity. But even with the best planning there are lots of unknowns. That said, we're so unhappy that it seems worth the gamble. At the same time, there's no guarantee that the move would magically fix everything, but it seems like it can't be as bad as staying...
So, after all that rambling, I guess I'm looking for advice. Any stories about downshifting and its impact on the rest of your life? Anyone else just unable to tolerate city living? I just need some outside perspectives.