What Decade Does Your Heart Still Live In?

Some years never quite let go. Answer ten quick questions about the sounds, places, and little habits that still feel like home — and find out which decade shaped you most.
Start QuizYour retirement lifestyle and the kind of senior travel you picture say a lot about the decade that shaped you — and so does the way you think about life insurance for the people you love most.
Medicare — health coverage many Americans use after 65 — is just one of the topics that comes up when people start thinking about what later life looks like for them. Your memories, your routines, and the things you still reach for without thinking all point toward a picture of how you want to live. This quiz taps into that.
The questions pull from real life: the music you still hum, the road trips your family took, the kitchen table where big decisions got made. Your answers can surface a retirement lifestyle pattern that feels genuinely like yours — not someone else's version of later life. That kind of self-knowledge is a good place to start thinking about home insurance, income planning, and everything else that comes with the next chapter.
The ten questions here are short and easy. They cover everyday choices, not trivia facts. Here are the kinds of things you'll pick from:
Your result comes in three layers. First you get a warm snapshot of the decade your heart still lives in. Then you see how that memory pattern connects to the kind of senior travel and home life you tend to prefer today.
The final layer bridges to topics like Medigap — extra coverage that fills Medicare's gaps — and the idea of an annuity, a contract that can pay income later in life. Nothing prescriptive, just context that fits your result.
This quiz is for entertainment and personal learning only. Your result describes a nostalgic life pattern and general comfort preferences — it is not financial, insurance, medical, or retirement advice. Topics mentioned here, including Medicare, life insurance, home insurance, and senior travel, are general information areas. This page does not recommend any specific plan, policy, or company. For personal questions, you may speak with a licensed insurance agent, a financial planner, or a Medicare counselor.