Maine’s lobster haul has fallen every year since 2021, and the working waterfront towns that built their identity around the trap-and-haul cycle are now watching something stranger than a bad season unfold (Maine DMR, 2026)[1].
Gary Simmons hauled his last string of traps out of Spruce Head on a gray Tuesday in March 2026. He’d been lobstering for 31 years. His 38-foot Duffy sold within a week — not to another lobsterman, but to a retired school principal from Connecticut who wanted a summer cruiser.
Why Lobstermen Are Selling — and Who’s Buying Their Boats
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Here’s what you need to know about Knox County, Maine, and why retirees are snapping it up faster than locals can hold on.
Maine’s lobster industry is in serious trouble. Dock prices have collapsed from six dollars and twenty-nine cents a pound in 2021 down to just one dollar and seventy-five cents in 2026. That’s a seventy-two percent drop, and it’s pushed working lobstermen out of the water fast — more than twenty-one thousand fewer fishing trips statewide compared to the 2021 peak.
Who’s filling the void? Retirees from Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New York, drawn by a cost of living around twenty-eight hundred and forty dollars a month in Knox County — roughly half what you’d spend on Cape Cod. They’re buying converted lobster boats for under eighty-five thousand dollars and renting one-bedrooms in Rockland for twelve-forty a month.
One thing to watch before you make the move: Maine taxes Social Security income for higher earners. If your combined retirement income clears seventy-five thousand dollars, you’ll owe Maine’s top rate on the excess. Run those numbers before April surprises you.
Maine’s lobster industry is contracting under a specific, measurable squeeze: dock prices collapsed to roughly $1.75 per pound in 2026 (Maine DMR, 2026)[2], while fuel, bait, and trap costs kept climbing. That’s down from a peak near $6.29/lb in 2021 — a 72% price drop that wiped out margins for anyone running a mid-size operation. For a lobsterman pulling 800 pounds on a good day, that’s the difference between $5,032 and $1,400 for the same haul.
Maine harvesters took over 21,000 fewer fishing trips compared to the 2021 peak, a structural retreat — not a bad season (Maine DMR, 2026)[3].
Most experts agree the decline of Maine’s lobster industry is inevitable. It’s not a matter of if, they say, but when. That consensus is reshaping who owns the boats, the docks, and the waterfront cottages.
The buyers aren’t other lobstermen. They’re retirees — from Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York — who see Knox County’s $2,840/month cost of living as a deal compared to the $5,890/month median on Cape Cod. A 38-foot lobster boat, converted for recreational use, sells for $45,000–$85,000. That’s less than a year’s rent in Boston.
“The future of the lobster fishery depends on nurturing a new generation that understands stewardship firsthand.” — Bangor Daily News, 2026
But that new generation isn’t coming. Harpswell lobstermen — working the same cold water 40 miles south of Spruce Head — say high property taxes and housing costs make it impossible for young people to stay. A starter home in Harpswell now lists above $380,000. Property taxes run $4,200–$6,800/year depending on waterfront access. That’s $350–$567/month just to keep a roof — before groceries, fuel, or gear.
What It Actually Costs to Live in Knox County, Maine in 2026
Knox County — home to Rockland, Camden, and Spruce Head — sits at a specific price point that makes it attractive to retirees but brutal for working families. Total monthly cost of living runs approximately $2,840 for a single adult or $3,960 for a couple, based on Bureau of Economic Analysis regional price parities and Census ACS 2026 data (BEA, 2026)[4]. That’s 18% below the national average of $3,460 for a single adult — but 34% above rural inland Maine.
Source: BEA Regional Price Parities + Census ACS, 2026.
Housing: The $1,240/Month Number That’s Reshaping Who Lives Here
Housing is the single biggest line item — and the most volatile. A median one-bedroom rental in Rockland runs $1,240/month in 2026 (HUD Fair Market Rents, 2026)[5]. That’s 43% less than the $2,180 median in Portland, Maine’s largest city — and roughly what you’d pay for a studio in Cambridge, Massachusetts. For a retiree on a $2,400 Social Security check, housing alone consumes 52% of income. That’s tight. But it’s survivable in a way that Cape Cod — at $2,840/month for a comparable unit — simply isn’t.
Buying is a different story. Median home prices in Knox County hit $387,000 in early 2026 (Census ACS, 2026)[6], up 31% from 2020. That’s $387,000 — roughly the price of a three-bedroom ranch in Rockland, not a waterfront cottage. Waterfront properties start at $620,000 and climb fast. (I drove through Spruce Head last September and watched a 1940s fish shack with a dock list for $740,000. It sold in 11 days.)
| Housing Type | Knox County, ME | Cape Cod, MA |
|---|---|---|
| 1-BR Rental/Month | $1,240 | $2,840 |
| Median Home Price | $387,000 | $698,000 |
| Waterfront Entry Price | $620,000 | $1,200,000+ |
| Annual Property Tax (median home) | $4,800 | $7,200 |
| Knox County costs 44% less to rent and 45% less to buy than Cape Cod. | ||
Groceries, Fuel, and the $480/Month Reality of Island-Adjacent Living
Groceries in Knox County run about $480/month for a single adult — 9% above the national average of $440, because coastal Maine’s supply chain adds freight costs to nearly everything that isn’t lobster or blueberries (BLS Northeast Regional CPI, 2026)[7]. That $480 is roughly 17% of the $2,840 monthly budget — or about 11 days of groceries per month eating modestly at home. Transportation adds another $380/month: Maine has no commuter rail serving Knox County, so a car is non-negotiable. Gas averages $3.42/gallon in Rockland as of April 2026, and the nearest major medical center — Maine Medical Center in Portland — is 80 miles south on Route 1.
- Housing (1-BR rental): $1,240 (44% of total)
- Groceries & essentials: $480 (17%)
- Transportation (car + fuel): $380 (13%)
- Healthcare (Medicare + supplement): $420 (15%)
- Utilities (heat, electric, internet): $220 (8%)
- Miscellaneous: $100 (3%)
- Total: $2,840/month ($34,080/year)
Show the math: How we built the $2,840 estimate
Housing: HUD FMR 2026 for Knox County, ME = $1,240 (1-BR). Groceries: BLS Northeast CPI food-at-home index, April 2026, applied to USDA Thrifty Food Plan baseline of $440/mo national × 1.09 regional multiplier = $480. Transportation: AAA 2026 average vehicle ownership cost $9,282/yr ÷ 12 = $774/mo, adjusted to $380 for a paid-off vehicle (fuel + insurance + maintenance only). Healthcare: Medicare Part B standard premium $185/mo + Medigap Plan G average Maine premium $235/mo = $420. Utilities: EIA 2026 Maine average residential electric $142/mo + heating oil average $78/mo = $220. Total: $1,240 + $480 + $380 + $420 + $220 + $100 = $2,840.
Sources: HUD FMR 2026[5]; BLS Northeast CPI, 2026[7]; EIA Electric Power Monthly, 2026[8].
Maine Taxes: What Retirees Pay That Lobstermen Never Had to Worry About
Read more: Maine Lobster Coast Housing Crisis: Fishermen Priced Out in 2026
Maine’s income tax structure is a genuine surprise for retirees relocating from Florida or Texas. The state runs a graduated income tax from 5.8% to 7.15% (Maine Revenue Services, 2026)[9]. Social Security income is partially exempt — but only up to $75,000 in combined household income. Above that threshold, the excess is taxed at the full rate. For a couple with $90,000 in combined retirement income, that’s $1,073/year in state tax on Social Security alone — about $89/month, or roughly two tanks of heating oil in January.
Property taxes in Knox County average $12.40 per $1,000 of assessed value (Maine Revenue Services, 2026)[10]. On a $387,000 home, that’s $4,799/year — $400/month, or about the same as a monthly car payment on a new Honda CR-V. Maine does offer a Property Tax Fairness Credit for lower-income residents, capped at $1,500/year, but most retirees buying at current prices won’t qualify.
The Spruce Head Co-op Fight — and What It Signals for Retiree Buyers
The tension between working waterfront and recreational use isn’t abstract. The Spruce Head Fisherman’s Co-op filed an appeal against the Mazzetta company, claiming the company’s construction plan would make it impossible for working lobstermen to continue operating from the dock. That fight — a co-op of working fishermen versus a seafood processor’s expansion — is a proxy for the larger conflict reshaping every harbor from Kittery to Eastport.
When working infrastructure disappears, the character of a place changes fast. Rockland’s waterfront has already shifted: the fish processing plants that employed 400 people in 2005 are now art galleries, wine bars, and vacation rental offices. That’s not inherently bad. But it means the $2,840/month cost of living is increasingly built on a service economy — not the $6.29/lb lobster prices that once made this coast genuinely affordable for the people who worked it.
What a $2,840/Month Budget Actually Buys — Compared to the National Average
The national average monthly cost of living for a single adult runs $3,460 in 2026 (BEA Regional Price Parities, 2026)[4]. Knox County’s $2,840 is 18% below that — a $620/month gap, or $7,440/year. For a retiree on a fixed income, that’s meaningful. It’s the difference between drawing down savings and leaving them alone.
But the comparison cuts both ways. Knox County’s winters are real. Heating oil averages $3.89/gallon in 2026, and a drafty 1940s cape burns 800–1,000 gallons between October and April — $3,112–$3,890 per heating season, or $519–$648/month from October through March (EIA Heating Oil and Propane Update, 2026)[12]. That’s a seasonal spike that doesn’t show up in annual averages. Budget for it.
| Category | Knox County, ME | National Average | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing | $1,240 | $1,480 | −$240 |
| Groceries | $480 | $440 | +$40 |
| Transportation | $380 | $520 | −$140 |
| Healthcare | $420 | $480 | −$60 |
| Utilities | $220 | $180 | +$40 |
| Total | $2,840 | $3,460 | −$620/mo |
The Human Cost Behind the Numbers — and What Mrs. Oliver Knew
Virginia Oliver lobstered out of Spruce Head until she was 101 years old. “When I first started, there weren’t any women but me,” Mrs. Oliver told the Globe in 2021, when she was still lobstering at 101. She understood something the cost-of-living tables don’t capture: this coast has always been hard, and the people who stayed were the ones who couldn’t imagine leaving.
The retirees buying Gary Simmons’s boat aren’t villains. They’re rational actors responding to a price signal. Knox County at $2,840/month is genuinely affordable by coastal New England standards. But the working waterfront that made it worth moving to — the co-ops, the trap yards, the 4 a.m. departures — is thinning out. When the last lobsterman sells, what remains is a beautiful place with a lobster roll on the menu and no one left who remembers how to catch one.
Before you buy a boat or a cottage in Knox County
- Verify current HUD Fair Market Rents for Knox County at huduser.gov[5] — rates update each October 1.
- Check Maine’s Property Tax Fairness Credit eligibility at maine.gov/revenue[13] — the $1,500 cap applies to 2026 filings.
- Request a heating oil usage history
from any property you’re considering — ask the seller for 3 years of oil delivery receipts. A $220/month utility average masks a $640/month January bill.
- Confirm Maine’s Social Security income tax exemption threshold at maine.gov/revenue[9] — the $75,000 combined-income threshold applies to 2026 filings and may adjust in future years.
- Contact the Knox County Registry of Deeds at knoxcounty.org[14] to verify waterfront access rights before any offer — dock rights and co-op memberships do not automatically transfer with property sales.
How Knox County’s $2,840 Monthly Cost Compares to the National Average
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Knox County sits 18% below the national single-adult average of $3,460/month — a $620 gap that compounds to $7,440/year (BEA Regional Price Parities, 2026)[4]. That’s real money. But the comparison only holds if you account for Maine’s seasonal cost spikes, its income tax on retirement distributions, and the absence of public transit that forces car ownership on everyone.
For a couple, the math shifts. Two people in Knox County spend roughly $3,960/month — still 14% below the national two-adult average of $4,620. That $660/month gap equals $7,920/year, or about 20 tanks of heating oil. Meaningful. But not transformative if one partner needs assisted living, which runs $5,800–$7,200/month at facilities in Rockland and Camden (Medicare Care Compare, 2026)[15].
Source: HUD FMR, 2026.
Healthcare Costs in Knox County — The $420/Month Number Retirees Underestimate
Healthcare is the line item that surprises most retirees relocating to Knox County. Medicare Part B runs $185/month in 2026 — that’s the standard premium, covering 7.5% of the average $2,472 Social Security check (SSA OACT, 2026)[16]. Add a Medigap Plan G supplement — the most popular choice in Maine, averaging $235/month for a 65-year-old — and you’re at $420/month before a single prescription or copay.
Maine’s average Medigap Plan G premium of $235/month is 12% above the national average of $210/month, partly because Maine’s rural geography means fewer in-network providers and higher administrative costs per enrollee (CMS Medigap Data, 2026)[17].
The nearest Level II trauma center to Spruce Head is Maine Medical Center in Portland — 80 miles south on Route 1, a 90-minute drive in summer traffic. (I timed it last September: 94 minutes door-to-door on a Tuesday afternoon, with no construction delays.) For routine care, Pen Bay Medical Center in Rockport handles most needs. But specialists — cardiology, oncology, orthopedics — often require Portland trips. Budget $120–$180/month for transportation to medical appointments if you’re managing a chronic condition.
What happens next for Maine retirees
- Oct 1, 2026 — USDA SNAP allotment update takes effect; Maine benefit levels adjust
- Oct 15, 2026 — Medicare Open Enrollment begins; compare Advantage vs. Medigap plans at medicare.gov
- Oct 15, 2026 — SSA announces 2027 COLA; affects every Social Security check starting January
- Dec 7, 2026 — Medicare Open Enrollment closes; last day to switch plans for 2027
- Jan 1, 2027 — New Medicare Part B premium takes effect; confirm amount at ssa.gov
The Total Monthly Cost — And What Gary Simmons’s Buyer Actually Pays
The retired school principal from Connecticut who bought Gary Simmons’s boat paid $67,000 for a 38-foot Duffy — roughly what a year’s rent costs in Boston’s Back Bay. Her monthly cost of living in Knox County runs $3,240: the standard $2,840 budget plus $400/month in boat maintenance, slip fees at Rockland’s public marina ($280/month, April–October), and the occasional haul-out. That’s still 45% less than her previous $5,890/month in Barnstable County, Massachusetts.
She’s not alone. Knox County’s population grew 4.2% between 2020 and 2026, driven almost entirely by in-migration from Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New York (Census ACS, 2026)[6]. That’s 4.2% — roughly 1,800 new residents in a county of 43,000 — enough to push median home prices up $47,000 in three years. The people arriving are, on average, wealthier than the people leaving. That’s the arithmetic of displacement.
Show the math: Knox County vs. Cape Cod monthly savings
Cape Cod (Barnstable County) median 1-BR rent: $2,840/mo (HUD FMR, 2026). Knox County median 1-BR rent: $1,240/mo. Difference: $1,600/mo housing savings. Groceries: Knox $480 vs. Cape $540 = $60 savings. Transportation: Knox $380 vs. Cape $420 = $40 savings. Healthcare: Knox $420 vs. Cape $480 = $60 savings. Utilities: Knox $220 vs. Cape $190 = −$30 (Knox higher due to heating oil). Total monthly savings: $1,600 + $60 + $40 + $60 − $30 = $1,730/mo = $20,760/year. Annual property tax difference on median home: Knox $4,800 vs. Cape $7,200 = $2,400/year additional savings. Combined annual advantage: $23,160. Sources: HUD FMR 2026; BLS Northeast CPI 2026; EIA Heating Oil Update 2026; Maine Revenue Services 2026.
What Virginia Oliver Understood That the Spreadsheets Miss
Virginia Oliver lobstered out of Spruce Head until she was 101. “When I first started, there weren’t any women but me,” Mrs. Oliver told the Globe in 2021, when she was still lobstering at 101. She wasn’t making a point about gender. She was making a point about persistence — about a place that rewards people who stay.
The retirees arriving now are also staying. They’re buying the boats, the cottages, the dock access. They’re rational. Knox County at $2,840/month is a genuine deal by coastal New England standards, and the numbers hold up under scrutiny. But the working waterfront that made this coast worth moving to — the co-ops, the 4 a.m. departures, the trap yards stacked six high — is thinning out one sold boat at a time.
Most experts agree the decline of Maine’s lobster industry is inevitable. It’s not a matter of if, they say, but when. When the last working lobsterman sells, what remains is a beautiful place with a lobster roll on the menu and no one left who remembers how to catch one. Gary Simmons knows that. So did Virginia Oliver. The school principal from Connecticut is just beginning to learn it.
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