Retirees are shifting from discretionary spending toward flexibility and cash preservation, adjusting investments, postponing big purchases and seeking extra income as inflation and market uncertainty strain fixed incomes.
High-interest debt has become a prime target because rising rates, healthcare bills and other living costs can quickly erode savings that retirees need for emergencies and long-term care.
Many older Americans are also working longer or phasing into retirement through remote, consulting, seasonal and freelance jobs to boost savings and future Social Security benefits.
Downsizing is gaining traction as smaller homes can cut taxes, insurance, utilities and maintenance while freeing cash reserves and moving retirees closer to family, healthcare and lower-cost areas.
Longer-term planning is widening to estate documents, beneficiary updates, emergency funds and insurance; the report also cites a Pew survey putting Americans' happiest retirement age at 61.8.
Is selling the family home becoming the only viable option for a secure retirement in today's uncertain economy?
As skilled seniors turn to low-paying AI work, is technology creating a new underclass of retirees?