22 October 2024

Over the years, a number of notable trends, such as increased longevity and individuals taking on greater responsibility for their pension provision, have clearly altered the retirement landscape significantly. Now, new trends look set to further change the face of retirement, adding complexity to the retirement planning process and making early planning ever more essential. 

Multi-retirement households 

One of the new trends relates to families with more than one generation retired at the same time. A key impact of this trend will be the extra strain placed on families’ finances leaving many households needing to reassess retirement plans to navigate a multi-retirement reality. 

Age gap relationships 

Further complications also arise when there is an age gap in a relationship, as this means each partner will generally be looking at a different retirement timescale. Such a situation also heightens the need to plan at a family level, as it will typically mean other surrounding generations are at different life stages too, potentially adding greater complexity to family structures. 

Open and honest 

Discussing and planning for retirement has always clearly been vital but growth in multi-retirement families and age gap relationships makes this even more important. Open and honest conversations relating to retirement expectations need to take place between partners and with family, and key decisions over expected retirement timings and which family members will require financial support need to be discussed and agreed. 

The future can be bright 

While these trends will certainly change the face of retirement for many families, one thing that won’t change is our support. If you have any concerns about retirement, get in touch and we’ll help you create a plan to ensure a bright financial future for both you and your family. 

The value of investments can go down as well as up and you may not get back the full amount you invested. The past is not a guide to future performance and past performance may not necessarily be repeated.