%0 Journal Article %T Differential Aging in Place and Depressive Symptoms: Interplay Among Time, Income, and Senior Housing %A BoRin Kim %A Sojung Park %A Yoonsun Han %J Research on Aging %@ 1552-7573 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/0164027517697106 %X We examined cumulative and differential experiences of aging in place. Data came from the 2002 and 2010 wave of the Health Retirement Study. We modeled the trajectory of later-life depressive symptoms, and how senior-housing environments moderate the negative association between economic disadvantages and depressive symptoms. At baseline, economically disadvantaged older adults were more likely to exhibit depressive symptoms. However, detrimental effects of income group (non-low income vs. moderate income; non-low income vs. low income) on depressive symptoms did not significantly change over time. The age-leveler hypothesis may account for nonsignificant effects of disadvantaged income groups over time. Findings suggest that moderate-income seniors may experience positive differentials if they age in place in a supportive senior-housing environment. Moderate-income seniors may have broader opportunities in senior housing compared to private-home peers. Senior housing might partially counter risks such as low mental health, emerging from life-course disadvantage %K person¨Cenvironment fit %K aging in place %K low income %K later-life depressive symptoms %K life course %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0164027517697106