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What Retirement Really Looks Like at 65 With $2.7 Million and a Vineyard That Costs $48,000 a Year to Run

A Sonoma vineyard purchased for $1.4 million drains $48,000 annually in operating costs, consuming 1.8% of a $2.7 million retirement portfolio before the coupleโ€™s living expenses and triggering IRS hobby-loss rules that prevent expense deductions against other income. Retirees m

What Retirement Really Looks Like at 65 With $2.7 Million and a Vineyard That Costs $48,000 a Year to Run
Yahoo Finance โ€” 30 May 2026
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A Sonoma vineyard purchased for $1.4 million drains $48,000 annually in operating costs, consuming 1.8% of a $2.7 million retirement portfolio before the coupleโ€™s living expenses and triggering IRS hobby-loss rules that prevent expense deductions against other income.

Retirees must choose between running the vineyard as a documented profitable business, restructuring through custom-crush arrangements that cut costs by half, or selling to a neighbor to eliminate the cash drain and restore portfolio longevity.

A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americansโ€™ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here .

The wine-country retirement fantasy looks beautiful in the brochure: twelve acres in Sonoma, a private label carrying the family name, and a tasting patio overlooking the vines at sunset. The financial reality can look very different. For a 65-year-old couple with $2.7 million in retirement assets and a Sonoma vineyard purchased in 2018 for $1.4 million, the property has quietly become the largest recurring cash drain in the household. Labor, equipment, irrigation, pest control, maintenance, and bottling costs can easily reach $48,000 a year, while bottle sales often fail to offset the operating expense.

The pattern is familiar in wealth-oriented retirement communities. Discussions in r/fatFIRE and r/ChubbyFIRE regularly feature retirees holding onto โ€œlifestyle businessesโ€ that generate personal enjoyment alongside persistent financial losses. One recent thread involved a small-business owner with roughly $2.6 million in assets trying to decide whether continuing the operation still made sense financially. Boutique vineyards often create the same dilemma, just with vines replacing inventory and tractors replacing warehouse shelves.

Liquid retirement assets: $2.7 million across IRAs and taxable accounts

Real asset: 12-acre Sonoma vineyard purchased in 2018 for $1.4 million

Annual operating loss: about $48,000, before any household spending

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