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How these villages became a trap for retirees | 7.30

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They are billed as a retiree's utopia: A playground for adults that is fun, safe and can even help you live a longer, healthier, and happier life.
Retirement villages are home to more than 250,000 older Australians, drawn by polished marketing that promises independent living in a safe community environment.
But ABC Investigations and 7.30 have uncovered another side to a sector that for years has managed to largely escape the interest of state and federal politicians and dodge the blowtorch of an aged care royal commission in 2021.
The industry, which has minimal regulatory oversight, has been described by retired actuary and academic Tim Kyng as peddling "cunningly designed rip-offs" and by crossbench federal MP Rebekha Sharkie as engaging in a form of "corporatised elder abuse".
Some of the elderly residents or their families describe them as a financial prison, a disaster and ethically bankrupt.
Many complaints centre on the fees charged when residents leave, which often include an exit fee and the cost of refurbishing the villa.
Adele Ferguson exposes the great retirement village financial trap.
Welcome to ABC News In-depth, where you'll find our long-form journalism and other videos to help you understand what's going on in the world around you.
Note: In most cases, our captions are auto-generated.
#ABCNewsIndepth #ABCNewsAustralia
Retirement villages are home to more than 250,000 older Australians, drawn by polished marketing that promises independent living in a safe community environment.
But ABC Investigations and 7.30 have uncovered another side to a sector that for years has managed to largely escape the interest of state and federal politicians and dodge the blowtorch of an aged care royal commission in 2021.
The industry, which has minimal regulatory oversight, has been described by retired actuary and academic Tim Kyng as peddling "cunningly designed rip-offs" and by crossbench federal MP Rebekha Sharkie as engaging in a form of "corporatised elder abuse".
Some of the elderly residents or their families describe them as a financial prison, a disaster and ethically bankrupt.
Many complaints centre on the fees charged when residents leave, which often include an exit fee and the cost of refurbishing the villa.
Adele Ferguson exposes the great retirement village financial trap.
Welcome to ABC News In-depth, where you'll find our long-form journalism and other videos to help you understand what's going on in the world around you.
Note: In most cases, our captions are auto-generated.
#ABCNewsIndepth #ABCNewsAustralia