The Day

Accountant retires on cruise ships to avoid cost of land living

- By SYDNEY PAGE

When Angelyn Burk, a recently retired accountant, decided to crunch some numbers one evening last year, she made a stunning discovery: It would be cheaper for her and her husband to spend their retirement perpetuall­y aboard cruise ships than to continue living on land.

“This is how I want to retire,” Angelyn, 53, decided in that moment. “Life is too short.”

She turned to her husband, Richard Burk, and said: “We can do this. Let’s make cruise ships our home.”

To her delight, he was onboard. The couple had thoroughly enjoyed the nearly 10 cruises they had been on together in the past, and they have a mutual love for travel as well as a shared disdain for airports.

They looked online and determined that, on average, they could string together voyages on various cruise ships for markedly less money than their collective cost of living on land. All they had to do was hop from ship to ship with some small breaks in between.

“We calculated that we can probably live reasonably well with about $100 a day together, with what we’ve saved up,” said Richard, 51, who retired as a computer programmer last month.

“It became a no-brainer,” said Angelyn, who resigned from her accounting job in 2019, and briefly bartended before the pandemic.

The Burks have grown frustrated by the mounting costs of living on land, they said. Between the mortgage, internet, electricit­y, property taxes, insurance, and other costs associated with owning their home in Seattle, the couple was spending more than $3,500 per month. That doesn’t include food, transporta­tion, entertainm­ent and other expenses of everyday life.

On a cruise ship, however, “there is no extra. The price is the price,” Angelyn said. Spending their retirement at sea, she concluded, would be “so much cheaper.”

“By living on a cruise ship, you gain your room, you gain board, you’ve got entertainm­ent that’s built in, you’re going to different locations,” her husband echoed. “It’s hard to beat that.”

Their next cruise is set for July, at which point they plan to embark on back-to-back cruises for about nine months, with a few brief land breaks. Between cruises, they will be nomads of sorts, visiting family and friends, as well as staying in Airbnbs and hotels, which they will mostly pay for with credit card points.

They’ve tested the waters of their retirement plan over the past year, taking a nine-day Carnival cruise from Miami to the Bahamas in November, a seven-day Carnival cruise from Long Beach, Calif., to the Mexican Riviera in March, and a 21-day Holland America cruise from Fort Lauderdale through the Panama Canal, ending in Vancouver in midMay. The couple is now staying with family in Seattle, awaiting their fourth grandchild’s birth, as well as their son’s graduation from the University of Washington in June.

Although they have not yet sold their home or car, they plan to soon. Three of their five children — ages 21 to 28 — are living in their home and covering the mortgage and other expenses.

Although rare, the concept of spending long stretches at sea — particular­ly as a retiree — is not unheard of. A handful of so-called “cult cruisers” have even earned fame for it, and some lines have started offering extended vacations for snowbirds.

“It’s definitely caught fire lately in terms of people considerin­g this as a prospect,” said Collen McDaniel, the editor in chief of Cruise Critic, a cruise ship review site. “We’ve heard of a number of people doing it over the years, and we’re hearing more and more [of it].

While the pandemic temporaril­y disrupted the cruising industry, it is making a comeback, and recently Cruise Critic posted a poll on Twitter, asking, “Would you retire at sea?” Of the 141 respondent­s, 43 percent voted, “Yes, sign me up!” and 33 percent voted, “Maybe, if it’s feasible.”

McDaniel said the financial savings are a major draw to the long-term cruise lifestyle, adding that the Burks’ budget of $100 per day “is absolutely doable.”

The cost of cruises vary widely, depending on amenities. Budget-friendly voyages can cost as little as $50 a day — not including taxes, fees, and gratuities — and luxury lines, which tend to have more inclusive prices, can go for $500 per person per day, McDaniel said.

Many mainstream cruise lines have loyalty programs, meaning “the more you stay, the better perks you get,” she said. “By building up that loyalty and staying on the same line, you’re really going to be saving yourself some money.”

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? Husband and wife Angelyn and Richard Burk aboard a Carnival Cruise Line ship in March 2022. The couple has decided to spend their retirement on cruise ships.
FAMILY PHOTO Husband and wife Angelyn and Richard Burk aboard a Carnival Cruise Line ship in March 2022. The couple has decided to spend their retirement on cruise ships.

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