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Top 10 Best Towns to Retire in Maryland

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Top 10 Best Towns to Retire in Maryland

Direct Answer

The Best Overall town to retire in Maryland is Ocean Pines, a master-planned Worcester County community where low taxes for seniors, abundant amenities, no city property tax, and beach access combine for an easy, active retirement at a median home near $375,000. The Best Value pick is Solomons, a relaxed Calvert County waterfront village that delivers Bay living, boating, and a tight community for a median home around $360,000 — the strongest quality-of-life-per-dollar combination here.

This ranking is built for retirees and near-retirees who want safety, accessible healthcare, walkable or amenity-rich settings, and reasonable cost of living — across the Eastern Shore, the Bay, and the Baltimore-Washington corridor. Every figure below reflects real, publicly reported population, home-price, tax, and healthcare data.

How We Ranked the Top 10

We scored each town against what retirees actually prioritize, drawing on published figures from Niche, the U.S. Census / data.census.gov, Zillow, Realtor.com, BestPlaces, GreatSchools (for grandkid visits), and Maryland tax and healthcare sources. The weighting:

A town that nails charm but strands you from a hospital, or wins on price but feels unsafe, drops fast. The winners balance all six.

1. Ocean Pines 🏆 BEST OVERALL

County: Worcester | Median home: $375,000 | Best for: Active retirees who want amenities and beach access

Ocean Pines (population near 12,500) is a master-planned community built for the retirement many people picture: golf, marinas, pools, racquet sports, and miles of trails, all 8 miles from Ocean City's beaches. With no municipal property tax (it's an unincorporated association), Worcester County's low county rate, and Maryland's pension-income exclusion, the tax picture is friendly.

Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin is 10 minutes away. Crime is low, the community calendar is packed, and home prices remain attainable for the amenity level — the most complete active-retirement package in the state.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: Ocean Pines wins on balance — amenities, low taxes, healthcare, and beach access with no real weak spot.

2. Annapolis

County: Anne Arundel | Median home: $545,000 | Best for: Retirees who want a walkable, cultured capital

Maryland's sailing capital, Annapolis (population near 40,000), offers a brick-lined historic downtown, the U.S. Naval Academy, the State House, and a deep arts and dining scene, all walkable from the water. Anne Arundel Medical Center (Luminis Health) is a top regional hospital.

Crime is moderate for a city its size, and the cultural calendar rarely sleeps. Home prices run high, but retirees value the walkability, healthcare, and easy access to Baltimore (35 minutes) and Washington (45 minutes). The vibe is historic, maritime, and lively year-round.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The walkable-culture pick — superb healthcare and amenities for retirees who don't mind a premium price.

3. Easton

County: Talbot | Median home: $440,000 | Best for: Retirees wanting Eastern Shore charm with real services

Easton (population near 17,500) is the Eastern Shore's service hub, blending a walkable historic downtown — galleries, the restored Avalon Theatre, and the Academy Art Museum — with the practical anchor of University of Maryland Shore Medical Center. That hospital, plus abundant retail and dining, makes Easton the rare small Shore town that meets daily needs without a long drive.

Crime is low, the cost of living is moderate, and St. Michaels and Oxford sit minutes away for waterfront outings. The vibe is cultured, comfortable, and self-sufficient.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The self-sufficient Shore pick — culture, healthcare, and services in one walkable, low-crime town.

4. St. Michaels

County: Talbot | Median home: $640,000 | Best for: Affluent retirees who want a premier harbor village

St. Michaels (population near 1,000) is the Eastern Shore's marquee harbor village — a walkable waterfront of inns, museums, boatyards, and farm-to-table dining. Crime is very low, the community is tight, and the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum anchors a boat-centric culture.

Healthcare runs through Easton, 10 minutes away. The catch is price: a median home near $640,000 reflects heavy second-home demand. For retirees who can afford it, few places in Maryland offer a more polished, walkable, water-front daily life.

The vibe is serene, upscale, and proudly preserved.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The premium harbor pick — beautiful, safe, and walkable for retirees who can meet its price.

5. Frederick

County: Frederick | Median home: $475,000 | Best for: Retirees who want a vibrant downtown and top healthcare

Frederick (population near 80,000) pairs a celebrated, walkable historic downtown — breweries, galleries, a creek-side promenade, and strong dining — with the major Frederick Health Hospital and growing specialty care. The cost of living sits below close-in D.C. Suburbs, crime in the core is moderate and improving, and MARC rail and I-270 keep the capital's culture and airports within reach.

Retirees get city amenities, robust healthcare, and reasonable prices in one package. The vibe is energetic, historic, and increasingly sophisticated.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The amenities-and-healthcare pick — a lively downtown with a real hospital at a reasonable price.

6. Solomons 💎 BEST VALUE

County: Calvert | Median home: $360,000 | Best for: Boaters and value-minded waterfront retirees

Solomons (population near 2,500) sits where the Patuxent River meets the Chesapeake, a relaxed boating village of marinas, the Calvert Marine Museum, riverside dining, and a scenic waterfront boardwalk. For a true Bay-front community, prices are remarkably attainable, making this the value leader.

CalvertHealth Medical Center is about 20 minutes north in Prince Frederick, crime is low, and the pace is gentle. Washington is roughly 75 minutes away for occasional trips. Retirees who want water, boats, and community without an Eastern Shore premium find their match here.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The value champion — genuine Bay-front retirement living for a median far below comparable waterfront towns.

7. Chestertown

County: Kent | Median home: $360,000 | Best for: Retirees who love history and a college-town pace

Chestertown (population near 5,500), the seat of Maryland's least-populous county, offers a riverfront downtown of Georgian homes, independent bookstores, and a Saturday farmers market, energized by Washington College's lectures, theater, and sports. University of Maryland Shore Medical Center at Chestertown provides local hospital care — a real plus for a town this size.

Crime is very low, cost of living is moderate, and the pace is unhurried. The trade-off is distance from big cities, which matters less in retirement. The vibe is intellectual, historic, and calm.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The history-lover's pick — a calm, cultured college town with its own hospital and very low crime.

8. Severna Park

County: Anne Arundel | Median home: $625,000 | Best for: Affluent retirees near family and the Bay

Severna Park (population near 38,000) is an upscale Anne Arundel community prized for safety, amenities, and Bay access via the Baltimore & Annapolis Trail and nearby marinas. Retirees value the proximity to Anne Arundel Medical Center, top-tier safety, and easy reach to both Baltimore (30 minutes) and Annapolis (15 minutes).

It's also a natural choice for those moving near adult children, given the area's family draw and excellent schools for visiting grandkids. Prices are high, but the safety, healthcare, and convenience justify the premium. The vibe is polished, active, and family-adjacent.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The affluent-suburb pick — safety, healthcare, and Bay access for retirees settling near family.

9. Columbia

County: Howard | Median home: $480,000 | Best for: Retirees who want planned-community convenience and top healthcare

Columbia (population near 105,000), Maryland's famous planned community, surrounds residents with lakes, 94 miles of pathways, village centers, and the cultural draw of Merriweather Post Pavilion. Healthcare is a strength: Johns Hopkins-affiliated Howard County General Hospital sits in town, with Baltimore and D.C.

Specialty centers 30–45 minutes away. Howard County ranks among the nation's safest and best-educated counties. Cost of living is above average but reasonable for the amenities, and everything is close by car.

The vibe is green, organized, and convenient.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The convenience-and-healthcare pick — top hospitals, trails, and safety in one organized community.

10. Berlin

County: Worcester | Median home: $430,000 | Best for: Retirees wanting beach-adjacent small-town charm

Berlin (population near 5,000), "America's Coolest Small Town," sits 8 miles from Ocean City with a brick-lined Main Street of boutiques, a restored theater, and a busy festival calendar. Atlantic General Hospital is right in town, a major plus for retirees, and Worcester County's low taxes and pension-friendly Maryland rules ease the budget.

Crime is low and the community is welcoming. Beach access without resort prices, a real hospital, and genuine small-town charm make Berlin an easy recommendation. The vibe is friendly, walkable, and festive.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The beach-town charmer — a walkable Main Street, a local hospital, and low taxes near the ocean.

Which Town Is Right for You?

flowchart TD A[Start: What matters most?] --- B{Top priority?} B -- Amenities and low taxes --- C[Pick 1 Ocean Pines] B -- Best value waterfront --- D[Pick 6 Solomons] B -- Top healthcare nearby --- E{Setting?} E -- Planned community --- F[Pick 9 Columbia] E -- Walkable city --- G[Pick 2 Annapolis or Pick 5 Frederick] B -- Eastern Shore charm --- H{Budget?} H -- Moderate --- I[Pick 3 Easton or Pick 7 Chestertown or Pick 10 Berlin] H -- Premium --- J[Pick 4 St. Michaels] B -- Near family in Anne Arundel --- K[Pick 8 Severna Park]

What to Look For When Choosing a Town in Maryland

What matters less than marketing suggests: glossy "best retirement town" lists and amenity brochures. Hospital access, taxes, real safety data, and total cost of living shape your retirement far more than a slogan.

FAQ

What is the best town to retire in Maryland overall? Ocean Pines in Worcester County earns our top spot for resort-level amenities, no municipal property tax, low county rates, a hospital 10 minutes away, and beach access — all at a median home near $375,000.

Which Maryland retirement town offers the best value? Solomons in Calvert County is our value pick: genuine Bay-front living, marinas, and a tight community for a median home around $360,000, far below comparable waterfront towns.

Which Maryland retirement towns have the best healthcare access? Columbia (Howard County General, Johns Hopkins-affiliated), Annapolis (Anne Arundel Medical Center), Easton, Berlin, and Chestertown all have hospitals in or immediately beside town.

Is Maryland tax-friendly for retirees? Maryland excludes a portion of pension income and offers Social Security exemptions; counties like Worcester and Calvert run lower rates, and unincorporated communities like Ocean Pines avoid a municipal property tax.

Which Maryland retirement towns are the safest? Howard County (Columbia), Worcester County (Ocean Pines, Berlin), and Severna Park consistently report very low crime on BestPlaces and county data.

Where should I retire in Maryland to be near the Bay? Solomons, St. Michaels, Annapolis, and Severna Park all offer Bay or river access; Solomons is the best value, while St. Michaels and Severna Park sit at the premium end.

Bottom Line

For retiring in Maryland, Ocean Pines is our Best Overall — resort-level amenities, no municipal property tax, a nearby hospital, and beach access at an attainable median. Solomons is our Best Value, delivering genuine Bay-front living and community for a median far below comparable waterfront towns.

If your priorities lean toward top-tier healthcare, a walkable cultured downtown, or settling near family, use the decision tree above to route yourself to Columbia, Annapolis, or Severna Park instead. Choose on healthcare access, taxes, and real safety data — not glossy retirement lists — and your Maryland retirement will be a comfortable one.

Sources

*Best towns to retire in Maryland review — where to retire, rankings, home prices, healthcare, taxes, and a review of the best retirement places.*

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