A retired boomer who gets $1,662 a month in Social Security moved from Washington to rural Ohio after getting priced out of her home

Marion, not pictured, moved in with her sister after medical costs ate into her savings.Olga Rolenko
  • Marion, 70, moved to Ohio to live with two roommates due to rising rent in Washington.

  • She worked multiple jobs to support her family but faced financial strain after surgeries.

  • Living with roommates helps her save money, but medical expenses remain a significant burden.

Marion, 70, raised two sons in Washington as a single mother, often working two jobs while making financial sacrifices. However, after various surgeries that put her out of work, she decided to try a new cost-saving measure: living with roommates.

Marion, whose last name is being withheld for privacy reasons but is known by Business Insider, decided to sell most of her belongings and leave friends behind to move in with her sister and her sister's boyfriend in rural Ohio. She couldn't afford rent anymore in Washington, and she now pays about $500 in Ohio, allowing her to save money and more comfortably pay her many medical bills.

Still, getting by even in a one-stoplight town is challenging, given her $1,662 in Social Security only goes so far.

"I now have roommates for the first time in my life, but it's a way to live comfortably," Marion said. "You got to do what you got to do."

Rising costs and losing income

Marion's father was in the military, and her family moved around the country as a child. She was born in Germany and moved to Massachusetts, Florida, Michigan, and Texas.

"We were never wealthy; we were your typical middle-class family," Marion said.

She got pregnant at 17, though she had to support her child independently. Soon after, she married a man who wasn't her child's father and moved to Washington to be closer to his family. They had a child together, though they divorced four years later.

Marion raised her children north of Seattle while working as a cocktail waitress and side jobs, which paid her enough to support her children. She spent 13 years at one chain restaurant, then switched to another chain for 18 years in managerial positions that paid more.

"It was hard to raise your kids working that much and making sure that they were on the straight and narrow and not getting in trouble," Marion said, noting she often made sacrifices so her children could live comfortably and get an education. "Sometimes I look back, and I don't even know how I did it."

She recalled having a car that would fill up with smoke when it started, but she couldn't afford to buy a new one. She once borrowed $50 from her boss to get her son a Christmas present, which took her three months to pay back.