Exploring the Hibiscus Coast Area: Why It Is One Of Auckland’s Most Sought-After Places To Retire
The Hibiscus Coast offers a rare combination of beautiful beaches, an older-skewing population, strong transport connections, and rapidly growing amenities that make it one of Auckland’s most compelling areas for retirement living. For retirees and their families, it provides the coastal lifestyle many dream of, without losing access to city-level healthcare, shopping, and transport.
Why the Hibiscus Coast stands out

The Hibiscus Coast covers communities such as Orewa, Silverdale, Millwater and the Whangaparāoa Peninsula in Auckland’s Hibiscus and Bays Local Board area. This part of the North Shore has grown rapidly over the past decade and now has more than 64,000 residents, with over one in five aged 65 or older – well above the Auckland average.
For someone planning their next chapter, that demographic profile matters.
- A higher proportion of residents aged 65 plus usually means more age-friendly services, clubs, and health providers.
- The median age in Hibiscus and Bays is over 41 compared to around 36 for Auckland overall, signalling a more established, lifestyle-focused community rather than a purely commuter suburb.
This balance of growth plus maturity has helped the Hibiscus Coast develop a reputation as one of Auckland’s most desirable coastal lifestyle destinations for later life.
Lifestyle benefits for retirees
Retirees looking at the Hibiscus Coast are usually weighing three things: lifestyle, convenience, and long-term security for themselves and their families. The area performs strongly on all three.
Lifestyle advantages include:
- Long, walkable beaches such as Orewa that are known for flat, accessible beachfront paths suited to a range of mobility levels.
- Easy access to regional parks and green spaces that support an active, outdoor life, which Auckland Council links with better physical and mental wellbeing for older residents.

At the same time, the area is not cut off from the city.
- Silverdale sits on the Auckland Northern Motorway with a major interchange that connects directly to the Hibiscus Coast and Whangaparāoa Peninsula, making it simple to reach the CBD or the wider North Shore.
- The Hibiscus Coast bus station at Silverdale anchors a fast busway connection, with express services that can reach central Auckland in around 30 to 35 minutes in typical conditions, which is attractive for part-time workers, volunteers and visiting family.
For many couples and adult children helping parents decide, this combination of relaxed coastal living plus real-world practicality is what tips the balance.
Key areas on the Hibiscus Coast
The Hibiscus Coast is not one place but a series of linked communities, each offering a slightly different flavour of retirement lifestyle.
Orewa – classic beachside village
Orewa has long been synonymous with beach holidays and, increasingly, year-round coastal living.
- The town wraps around a long, gently curving beach, and the waterfront esplanade offers a flat shared path that makes daily walking or cycling realistic for many older adults.
- A compact main street of cafes, restaurants and boutiques supports a strong village feel, and the proportion of older residents in the wider Hibiscus and Bays area means many businesses are used to serving retirees.
For retirees who want to stay active, meet friends for coffee and still feel part of an everyday community, Orewa’s walkability and social energy are strong drawcards.

Whangaparāoa Peninsula – peninsula living with room to breathe
Whangaparāoa Peninsula extends east from Silverdale with beaches on both the north and south coasts.
- Locals can choose from a string of safe swimming beaches, boat ramps and coastal reserves, making it well-suited to retirees who enjoy sailing, fishing, or simply having the water nearby.
- The peninsula has several golf courses and clubs, which are popular hubs for social connections and gentle exercise in later life.
At the end of the peninsula sits Shakespear Regional Park, one of Auckland’s oldest and busiest regional parks, with an estimated 700,000 visitors each year. Its gentle farm park landscape, predator-free wildlife sanctuary and mix of short walks and picnic spots are particularly friendly to multi-generational family outings.
Silverdale and Millwater – modern hub and master planned living
Silverdale is the practical heart of the Hibiscus Coast, acting as the main interchange between the motorway, the peninsula and the coastal settlements further north.
- The area has grown from a small service town into a modern hub with large format retail, everyday shopping, healthcare providers, and the main bus station for the Coast.
- Significant public investment is going into transport infrastructure around Silverdale, including upgraded walking and cycling links and work to future proof key corridors for the growing population.
Alongside Silverdale, master planned communities like Millwater have been designed with integrated parks, walkways, and local centres, which creates an attractive environment for downsizers moving from bigger family homes. For many prospective residents of a luxury retirement village, the appeal lies in being part of a community that feels modern and connected, rather than isolated or outdated.
Things to do for active retirees
For retirees, staying engaged and active is not a nice-to-have – it is directly linked to better health outcomes, reduced loneliness and sharper cognitive function in later life in multiple international studies. The Hibiscus Coast offers a high density of everyday activities that support this kind of lifestyle.
Coastal walks and regional parks
- Orewa Beach and the Te Ara Tahuna Estuary Pathway provide long, mostly flat walkways suitable for walking, mobility scooters and bikes, helping residents clock up daily movement without needing to drive far.
- Shakespear and Wenderholm Regional Parks both sit within easy driving distance and form part of a wider Auckland regional park network that saw a record 2.58 million visits in the first three months of 2024, highlighting how central these spaces are to residents’ wellbeing.
These parks offer short loop walks, accessible picnic spots, bird watching and gentle hills rather than extreme tramping, which suits a wide range of fitness levels among older visitors.

Cafes, clubs and community
When researching luxury retirement villages and where to live, many people place heavy emphasis on social connection, whether that is a retirement-age couple looking for book clubs and walking groups, or an adult child wanting to know their parent will not feel isolated.
- Across the Hibiscus Coast, there is a strong network of clubs, churches, Probus groups, U3A branches and hobby communities that cater to older adults, reflecting the area’s above-average share of residents aged 65 plus.
- Coastal cafe culture in Orewa and neighbourhood centres around Silverdale and Millwater makes casual meet-ups easy, lowering the friction for everyday social contact, which is known to reduce loneliness.
Day trips and gentle adventures
For those who enjoy getting out and about without committing to long travel days, the Hibiscus Coast is well placed.
- Day trips to historic Puhoi village, with its markets and riverside outlook, or north towards Warkworth and Matakana, are simple outings that many older residents enjoy.
- Because Silverdale connects directly to State Highway 1 and the toll road north, it is straightforward to reach more distant beaches and townships while still returning home the same day.
These smaller adventures appeal both to independent retirees and to adult children, who may want to spend quality time with a parent without complex logistics.
A community already shaped by older Aucklanders
One of the quiet strengths of the Hibiscus Coast as a retirement location is that it is already shaped by older residents, rather than trying to retrofit services later.
Recent census and local board data show that:
- Around 18 to 21 percent of Hibiscus and Bays residents are aged 65 or over, compared with roughly 13 percent for Auckland as a whole.
- The number of people aged 65 plus in the area has grown by about 50 percent since 2001, which has increased demand for health services, age friendly public spaces and relevant community programmes.
For prospective residents and their families, this trend means:
- A stronger voice for seniors in local decision-making and facility planning.
- A higher likelihood that everyday environments, from footpaths to bus services, have been considered through an older adult lens.
This demographic reality is an important signal for anyone weighing up different regions around Auckland, especially when combined with the transport and amenity investment flowing into the Coast.
Perfectly placed luxury retirement living
A luxury retirement village located in Silverdale – such as The Botanic – sits at the centre of this wider Hibiscus Coast ecosystem. While detailed information on facilities, care pathways and financial structures belongs in separate guides, the location story is clear.
Being based in Silverdale allows residents to:
- Reach Orewa Beach, Whangaparāoa, and key regional parks within short, manageable drives for everyday recreation.
- Access the motorway, busway station, and growing local services without feeling trapped in a purely urban environment, which aligns well with both independent retirees and adult children seeking peace of mind.
For retirees, the emotional challenge lies in leaving a long-loved family home without feeling they are giving up their independence. A village that is integrated with the Hibiscus Coast lifestyle – rather than remote from it – can make that transition feel more like an upgrade in day-to-day living than a loss.
The Botanic Hibiscus Coast – the perfect place to start your next chapter
Choosing where to live in retirement is about much more than four walls; it is about finding a community and location that feels like the right fit for the years ahead. The Botanic Hibiscus Coast brings together the coastal lifestyle, walkable amenities, and future-focused infrastructure that make this part of Auckland so appealing for retirees and their families.
If you can picture yourself starting the day with a coffee in Orewa, heading out for a walk in one of the nearby regional parks, and coming home to a modern, beautifully designed village in Silverdale, The Botanic is an ideal place to begin that next chapter. To explore what life here could look like, you can view the latest amenities and community spaces on the dedicated Amenities page, browse current property listings to see which homes best match your lifestyle and budget, or get in touch to book a personal tour with one of the sales team, Michelle or Kathryn, who specialise in helping retirees and their families make confident, informed decisions about Hibiscus Coast retirement living.
Discover retirement living perfectly placed on the Hibiscus Coast – talk to the team today.
FAQ – Exploring the Hibiscus Coast for retirement
Is the Hibiscus Coast a good area for retirees?
Yes, the Hibiscus Coast has one of the highest proportions of residents aged 65 plus in Auckland, along with beaches, parks and amenities that support an active, social lifestyle.
How far is Silverdale from Auckland City?
Silverdale is around 32 kilometres north of central Auckland via the Northern Motorway, and express buses on the Northern Busway typically take about 30 to 35 minutes in usual conditions.
What outdoor activities are available for older adults?
Residents can enjoy flat beachfront walks in Orewa, accessible paths around estuaries, and short loop tracks in regional parks such as Shakespear and Wenderholm that are popular with older walkers and families.
Is there good public transport on the Hibiscus Coast?
The Hibiscus Coast bus station in Silverdale is a major park and ride hub connecting into the Northern Busway, giving reliable access to the North Shore and CBD even at peak times.
Why choose the Hibiscus Coast over other Auckland suburbs for retirement?
Compared with many suburbs, the Hibiscus Coast offers a higher share of older residents, strong coastal and park environments, and significant ongoing investment in transport and amenities, making it well-suited to long-term retirement living.
