Most retirees budget for groceries, healthcare, and housing. Almost none accurately budget for their car. That is a problem, because vehicle ownership is quietly one of the largest line items in a retirement budget — often ranking third behind housing and healthcare. When you add insurance, fuel, maintenance, registration, depreciation, and parking, the number lands well above what most people assume. This article breaks down every cost category with real numbers, compares the math on buying, leasing, and keeping your current car, and gives you an interactive calculator to determine whether going car-free actually pencils out for your situation.

$8,600+ average annual cost of car ownership for retirees driving a paid-off vehicle. For a new car with a loan, AAA estimates $12,182 per year. — AAA Your Driving Costs Study, 2024

The Full Cost Breakdown

The table below reflects national averages for a retiree driving approximately 10,000 miles per year in a paid-off, mid-size sedan. If you are financing a vehicle or driving a newer model, your costs will be higher.

Expense Category Annual Cost Notes
Auto Insurance $1,800 Full coverage; liability-only averages $900
Fuel $1,500 Based on 10,000 mi/yr, 28 MPG, $3.50/gal
Maintenance & Repairs $1,200 Oil changes, tires, brakes, inspections; higher for 100K+ vehicles
Registration & Taxes $500 Varies by state; some states charge property tax on vehicles
Depreciation $3,000 Even paid-off cars lose value; average 15% per year for 5-year-old vehicles
Parking & Tolls $600 Higher in urban areas; includes garage fees, meters, highway tolls
Total $8,600+ Does not include car payments, which add $4,000-$7,000/yr

That $8,600 comes directly out of retirement savings or Social Security income. At a 4% withdrawal rate, you need $215,000 in retirement savings just to fund your car for the rest of your life. If you are driving a new car with a payment, that number climbs to $305,000.

$12,182 AAA's estimated annual cost of owning a new car in 2024, including loan payments, insurance, fuel, maintenance, registration, depreciation, and taxes. — AAA Your Driving Costs, 2024 Edition

Insurance After 65

Contrary to the popular belief that insurance gets cheaper with age, most drivers see rates increase after 65. Insurance companies base premiums on risk, and accident data shows that drivers over 70 have higher per-mile crash rates than middle-aged drivers. The increase is gradual — typically 5-10% between 65 and 75, then steeper jumps after 75.

However, multiple strategies can offset or reverse these increases:

  • Defensive driving courses: AARP Smart Driver and AAA's senior driving courses qualify you for discounts of 5-15% in most states. Many states mandate the discount by law. The courses cost $20-$30 and are available online.
  • Usage-based insurance (telematics): Programs like Progressive Snapshot, State Farm Drive Safe & Save, and Allstate Drivewise monitor your actual driving habits. Retirees who drive less and during off-peak hours often save 20-30%. If you drive under 7,500 miles per year, this is worth testing.
  • Pay-per-mile insurance: Metromile and Mile Auto charge a base rate plus a per-mile fee (typically $0.05-$0.08 per mile). At 5,000 miles per year, your premium could drop to $600-$900.
  • Dropping to liability-only: If your car is worth less than $10,000, the math often favors dropping comprehensive and collision coverage. You will save $500-$900 per year. Set the savings aside in a dedicated fund for potential repairs or replacement.
Do Not Drop Coverage to Save Money Without a Plan Dropping comprehensive and collision coverage means any accident, theft, or weather damage comes entirely out of your pocket. Only go liability-only if your car's value is low enough that you could replace it from savings. Never drop liability coverage — it protects your assets if you cause an accident.
Pro Tip Bundle your auto and homeowner's insurance with the same carrier. Most companies offer 10-15% multi-policy discounts. Then ask about low-mileage, retiree, and loyalty discounts — you often need to specifically request them.

Maintenance Reality

Routine maintenance on a newer car — oil changes, tire rotations, brake pads, air filters — runs $800-$1,200 per year. That is manageable. The problem arrives when vehicles cross 100,000 miles, which is exactly where many retirees' paid-off cars sit.

Here are the repairs that blindside retirees most often:

Repair Typical Mileage Cost Range
Timing belt/chain replacement 80,000-100,000 $500-$2,000
Transmission rebuild or replacement 100,000-150,000 $2,500-$5,000
Suspension (struts, shocks, control arms) 80,000-120,000 $1,000-$3,000
Catalytic converter 100,000+ $1,500-$3,500
AC compressor 100,000-150,000 $800-$1,500
Head gasket 100,000+ $1,500-$3,000

A single transmission failure can equal six months of car payments on a new vehicle. This is why "keeping the old car because it's paid off" is not always the cheapest option. The decision depends on the specific vehicle's reliability history and your mechanic's honest assessment of what is coming next.

The 50% rule is a useful benchmark: if a single repair costs more than 50% of the car's current value, it is usually time to replace the vehicle rather than repair it.

When to Buy vs. Lease vs. Keep

Each option has distinct advantages and drawbacks for retirees. The right choice depends on how many miles you drive, how long you plan to keep driving, and how much repair uncertainty you can absorb financially.

Factor Buy (Certified Pre-Owned) Lease New Keep Current Car
Monthly cost $350-$500 (for 48-60 mo.) $300-$450/mo. $0 (if paid off)
Repair risk Low (warranty covers 2-4 years) Very low (full warranty) High (unpredictable)
Mileage limits None 10,000-12,000/yr typical None
Total 5-year cost $21,000-$30,000 $22,000-$32,000 $6,000-$18,000+
Equity at end Yes (car has resale value) No (return the car) Minimal
Best for Drivers keeping the car 5+ years Drivers who want new safety tech and no repair bills Low-mileage drivers with reliable vehicles under 100K

For most retirees, a certified pre-owned vehicle that is 2-3 years old represents the best value. Someone else absorbed the steepest depreciation (new cars lose 20-30% of their value in the first two years), and you still get a manufacturer-backed warranty. Avoid vehicles older than 5 years or above 60,000 miles — the warranty math stops working.

The Car-Free Math

Going car-free sounds radical, but the financial argument is compelling for retirees who live in areas with transit access or rideshare availability. Use the calculator below to compare your actual car costs against alternatives.

Car Ownership vs. Car-Free Cost Calculator

Enter your actual annual car expenses to see how they compare with rideshare and transit alternatives.

Your Annual Car Costs

Car-Free Alternative Costs

For many suburban and rural retirees, going fully car-free is not practical. But "car-light" is — reducing from two cars to one saves roughly half the total ownership cost. Couples who drop their second vehicle typically save $5,000-$8,000 per year with minimal lifestyle impact.

Best Cars for Seniors

If you are buying, prioritize vehicles that score well on the factors that matter most after 65: advanced safety features, ease of entry and exit, reliability, and moderate operating costs. The following five models consistently rank highest across these criteria.

Vehicle Starting MSRP Key Senior-Friendly Features Reliability (J.D. Power) 5-Year Cost to Own
Toyota Camry $28,500 Standard safety suite, low step-in height, wide door openings 5/5 $32,000
Subaru Forester $36,000 Highest seat position in class, EyeSight driver assist, AWD standard 4/5 $36,500
Honda CR-V $32,500 Low cargo floor, Honda Sensing standard, excellent visibility 4.5/5 $34,800
Hyundai Tucson $30,500 Best warranty (5yr/60K), large dashboard controls, comfortable seats 4/5 $33,200
Toyota RAV4 Hybrid $33,900 40+ MPG combined, Toyota Safety Sense, low maintenance costs 4.5/5 $33,500

Small SUVs and crossovers dominate this list for a reason: the higher seat position means you sit down into the seat instead of lowering yourself, reducing strain on knees and hips. Sedans remain a strong choice if you prefer a lower vehicle — the Toyota Camry and Honda Accord both offer exceptional reliability and low cost of ownership.

Safety features to require in any vehicle purchased after 65:

  • Automatic emergency braking (AEB): Reduces rear-end crashes by 50% according to IIHS data
  • Blind-spot monitoring: Compensates for reduced neck mobility and peripheral vision
  • Lane departure warning: Alerts you to unintentional lane drift
  • Backup camera with cross-traffic alert: Required on all new cars since 2018, but cross-traffic alert is an add-on worth getting
  • Adaptive headlights: Improve visibility on curves and in rain — particularly valuable for drivers with reduced night vision

Reducing Costs Without Going Car-Free

If keeping a car is the right choice, there are concrete steps to reduce what you spend each year. These are not vague tips — each one has a specific, measurable dollar impact.

  • Request a low-mileage discount: If you drive under 7,500 miles per year, most insurers offer a 5-15% discount. You must ask — it is rarely applied automatically. Savings: $100-$250/year.
  • Take a defensive driving course: AARP Smart Driver costs $20 online and saves 5-15% on insurance in most states. The discount lasts 3 years, then you retake the course. Savings: $90-$270/year.
  • Downsize your vehicle: Moving from a full-size SUV to a mid-size crossover cuts fuel costs by 20-30% and reduces insurance premiums by 10-15%. Savings: $500-$1,200/year.
  • Shop insurance every 2 years: Loyalty does not pay with auto insurance. Quotes from 3+ carriers every two years catches rate creep. Average savings from switching: $400/year according to J.D. Power.
  • Increase your deductible: Raising your deductible from $500 to $1,000 reduces collision premiums by 15-25%. Only do this if you have $1,000 in accessible savings. Savings: $150-$350/year.
  • Use senior-specific programs: The Hartford (through AARP), USAA (for veterans), and some state farm bureaus offer specific senior rates that are not available through general quoting tools.
Pro Tip Stack your discounts. A retiree who takes a defensive driving course, bundles home and auto, drives under 7,500 miles, and raises the deductible to $1,000 can reduce their annual insurance premium by 25-40%. On a $1,800 policy, that is $450-$720 back in your pocket each year.

The Bottom Line

Car ownership after 65 costs significantly more than most retirees realize. At $8,600 per year for a paid-off car — and north of $12,000 for a new vehicle with payments — your car may be consuming 15-25% of your retirement income. That does not mean you should immediately sell your car. It means you should run the numbers honestly, consider whether you need two vehicles, compare the actual cost of alternatives using the calculator above, and aggressively pursue every discount available. For many retirees, dropping to one car, downsizing to a reliable crossover, and stacking insurance discounts can save $3,000-$5,000 per year without any sacrifice in mobility. That is real money — money that compounds over a 20-30 year retirement into a meaningful difference in financial security.