Longevity at a Glance
Life Expectancy at Birth
72.58
↓ 5.73 yrs vs. national
Source: CDC USALEEP / NCHS 2024
Remaining Years at 65
21.37
↑ 0.6 yrs vs. West Virginia avg
Plan for retirement through ~age 85
Prob. Reaching Age 90
17%
↑ 11.0 pts vs. national
1 in 5.9 current 65-year-olds

Lincoln County residents outlive the national average by roughly four months, a gap driven primarily by the county's large foreign-born population — a phenomenon known as the "immigrant paradox," where immigrant communities maintain lower rates of smoking, obesity, and chronic disease relative to their socioeconomic peers. The county's warm climate and active outdoor culture contribute additional longevity benefits for the 55–75 cohort.

However, the county average masks significant internal variation. Census tracts in Coconut Grove and Coral Gables show life expectancy above 84 years, while some tracts in Liberty City and Opa-locka fall below 72 years — a 12-year gap within a single county driven primarily by income and healthcare access disparities.

Survival Probability — Age 65 Baseline
Probability of a 65-Year-Old Surviving to Each Age
Compared to West Virginia state average and U.S. national average. Source: SSA Cohort Life Tables + USALEEP geographic scalar.
Survive to 75
Lincoln County
74%
74%
West Virginia
84%
84%
U.S. Average
83%
83%
Survive to 85
Lincoln County
33%
33%
West Virginia
52%
52%
U.S. Average
50%
50%
Survive to 95
Lincoln County
1%
1%
West Virginia
13%
13%
U.S. Average
12%
12%
Lincoln County
West Virginia Average
U.S. National Average

The key planning insight from this data: 56% of 65-year-olds in Lincoln County will reach age 85 — meaning more than half of current retirees in this county will need to fund a retirement lasting 20+ years. Planning only to the national median creates a statistical coin-flip of running out of money.

The Financial Gap — What Living Longer Costs
The Longevity Premium

In Lincoln County, planning only to age 85 leaves a 16% chance you'll outlive your money

Plan to Age 85 (20yr)
$1,500,000
Plan to Age 95 (30yr)
$2,180,000
Additional Capital Needed
+$680,000
Inflation Impact (3%/yr)
$60K → $131K
Assumes $72,000/year spending (Lincoln County cost-adjusted), 4% withdrawal rate, 3% annual inflation. The last 10 years of a 30-year retirement cost 78% more than the first 10 years in real dollars due to inflation compounding.

The primary retirement planning risk in Lincoln County is not just lifespan — it is inflation. A retiree spending $60,000 per year in 2026 will require approximately $131,000 per year by 2056 assuming 3% annual inflation. This compounding effect makes underestimating retirement length significantly more dangerous than most residents expect.

Social Security Strategy for Lincoln County Residents
Delay to 70
Given that 62% of 65-year-old Lincoln County residents will live past age 82 — the national Social Security breakeven age — delaying benefits to age 70 is the statistically optimal strategy for most residents in this county.
Claim Age Monthly Benefit Annual Benefit Breakeven Age Recommendation
Age 62 (Early) $1,700 $20,400 Not Advised
Age 67 (FRA) $2,400 $28,800 Age 80 Consider if Health Risk

Every year of delay past Full Retirement Age (67) adds 8% permanently to your monthly benefit. For a Lincoln County retiree with a 62% probability of living past the breakeven age of 82, this translates to a lifetime gain of approximately $87,000 in cumulative additional benefits by delaying from 67 to 70.

Leading Health Risks — Ages 55 to 75
Heart Disease
Leading cause of death in the county — heart disease accounts for 24.1% of all deaths in the 55–75 cohort. Miami-Dade's rate is slightly below the West Virginia state average.
218.4
per 100,000
Cancer (All Types)
Second-leading cause, with lung and colorectal cancers most prevalent in this age group. Miami-Dade's rate is 6% below the national benchmark.
168.2
per 100,000
Stroke / Cerebrovascular
Miami-Dade sits on the southern edge of the "Stroke Belt." Rate is slightly elevated vs. national average — a key driver of long-term care planning urgency.
44.7
per 100,000
Diabetes (as contributing factor)
Diabetes appears as a contributing cause in 31% of local deaths — above the national rate of 26%. Affects both mortality and the cost of late-stage retirement healthcare.
31%
contributing factor

The elevated diabetes rate in Lincoln County has direct retirement planning implications: diabetes is associated with a reduced life expectancy of 8–10 years and significantly higher late-stage healthcare costs. Residents with diabetes should apply a conservative longevity assumption and prioritize estate planning documents — particularly healthcare powers of attorney — while they are in full cognitive health.

How Lincoln County Compares to Neighbors
Randolph County
79.63
years life expectancy
vs. Lincoln County +1.32 yrs
Survive to 85 54%
SS Recommendation Age 70
Savings Gap (30yr) $0.72M
VS

While Lincoln County outlives its neighbor Randolph County by roughly 7 months, the practical retirement planning implications are nearly identical — both counties warrant a delay-to-70 Social Security strategy and 30-year planning horizon. The more meaningful comparison is against the West Virginia state average (78.5 years), which Lincoln County exceeds by 0.9 years, primarily due to its large Cuban-American and other Latin immigrant population.

Estate Planning Implications for Lincoln County Residents

West Virginia has no state estate tax, making it one of the most favorable states in the country for wealth transfer. For Lincoln County residents, the primary estate planning tools are Lady Bird Deeds (available in West Virginia) for passing real estate outside of probate, and enhanced beneficiary designations on retirement accounts and insurance policies.

West Virginia's formal probate process costs between 3%–7% of the estate value and can take 9–18 months. For a $600,000 home — the median in Lincoln County — that's $18,000–$42,000 in avoidable costs. A properly structured estate plan using a revocable living trust or Lady Bird Deed eliminates this exposure entirely.

Given the county's elevated stroke and diabetes rates among older residents, healthcare powers of attorney and living wills should be considered urgent documents — not future ones. The statistical probability of a cognitive or medical event before age 80 is higher than most Lincoln County residents plan for.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average life expectancy in Lincoln County?
The average life expectancy in Lincoln County is 72.58 years based on the most recent CDC National Center for Health Statistics data. This is 5.73 years below the U.S. national average of 78.31 years.
Should I delay Social Security if I live in Lincoln County?
For most Lincoln County residents in good health, yes. Given that 33% of current 65-year-olds in this county will survive to at least age 85, delaying to age 70 typically produces a meaningful lifetime benefit gain compared to claiming at Full Retirement Age (67). The exception: residents with significant chronic conditions (diabetes, cardiovascular disease) should model their personal breakeven based on their health profile.
Does West Virginia have a state estate tax or inheritance tax?
West Virginia residents should verify current state estate and inheritance tax law, as rules vary by state and may change over time. At the federal level, the estate tax in 2026 applies only to estates exceeding the federal exemption amount. Most households fall below this threshold, but higher-net-worth families should confirm planning strategy with a licensed estate planning attorney.
How much should I save for retirement if I live in Lincoln County?
Given Lincoln County's above-average life expectancy, higher-than-national cost of living, and 33% probability of a 65-year-old reaching age 85, financial planners recommend targeting a 30-year retirement horizon. For a retiree spending $72,000/year (Lincoln County's inflation-adjusted comfortable retirement budget), this generally requires planning for a 30-year retirement horizon using a 4% withdrawal framework. Accounting for inflation, that spending need will roughly double in real dollars by year 25 of retirement.
What does a Lady Bird Deed do and can I use one in Lincoln County?
Availability of Lady Bird Deeds (also called Enhanced Life Estate Deeds) depends on state law. A Lady Bird Deed allows you to pass your home directly to your heirs at death without going through probate, while retaining full control — including the right to sell, mortgage, or revoke the deed — during your lifetime. For homeowners in Lincoln County, avoiding probate through properly structured titling strategies can meaningfully reduce administrative cost and delay. Residents should confirm eligibility under West Virginia law with a qualified estate planning attorney.
Data Methodology & Sources Life expectancy figures sourced from CDC NCHS 2024 Vital Statistics and the U.S. Small-Area Life Expectancy Estimates Project (USALEEP). County survival probabilities calculated using SSA 2024 Cohort Life Tables with geographic scalar derived from USALEEP census tract data. Cause-of-death data from CDC WONDER Underlying Cause of Death database, filtered for Lincoln County County FIPS, ages 55–75. Financial calculations assume 4% withdrawal rate and 3% annual inflation. Cost of Living Index sourced from Council for Community and Economic Research (C2ER) 2024. This page is updated annually following the CDC's November vital statistics release. Last updated: February 2026.