pushed to work longer

Design Highlights

  • Many older Americans work longer due to financial necessity, as rising living costs and inadequate retirement savings compel them to remain employed.
  • The shift from defined-benefit pensions to defined-contribution plans has left many without guaranteed income, forcing them to delay retirement.
  • Policy changes, such as raising the full retirement age for Social Security, incentivize continued employment rather than early retirement.
  • Healthcare and long-term care expenses significantly strain finances, making it essential for older adults to work longer.
  • Despite these pressures, older workers face stigma and blame for their prolonged employment, overlooking the systemic factors at play.

Older Americans are clocking in longer hours, and it’s not just for the love of the grind. In fact, the number of employed Americans aged 65 and older has surged by more than 33% from 2015 to 2024. That’s right—over 11 million older adults are still working. So, what gives? The reality is tough. About two-thirds of these workers are on the job out of necessity, not because they’re living their best lives at work. Financial concerns loom large. Costs are rising, and retirement savings often fall short. Many retirees and near-retirees find themselves grappling with the harsh truth: they can’t afford to stop working.

Older Americans are working longer hours out of necessity, not choice; financial pressures make retirement a distant dream for many.

If you think it’s all about personal choice, think again. The shift from defined-benefit pensions to defined-contribution plans has made retirement planning a gamble. With DC plans, there’s no safety net pushing workers to retire early. Instead, they’re left holding the bag, often with inadequate savings. As a result, many older adults are stuck in jobs they’d rather leave behind, but can’t. The consequences of these pension shifts are stark. The tax on continuing to work has decreased, making it less painful for older Americans to stay on the clock.

Social Security isn’t exactly throwing a lifeline either. Reforms in the 1980s raised the full retirement age from 65 to 67. This means waiting longer to collect benefits, which can be financially beneficial for some. But let’s be real: it’s just another nudge to keep working longer. It’s not about passion—it’s about survival. Higher retirement ages assume we’re all living longer lives, which is true, but they also mean longer years of expenses. And who wants to run out of money in their twilight years?

Then there’s health. Longer life expectancy and medical advances mean many older adults can still work, but that doesn’t make it easy. Healthcare costs are skyrocketing, and long-term care expenses are looming. It’s a financial pressure cooker. With many older Americans facing insufficient retirement savings, the reality is clear: they have to keep working to maintain their household financial security. Compounding this pressure, only 43% of working Americans owned disability insurance in 2025, leaving many older workers financially exposed if illness or injury forces them out of the workforce prematurely.

In the end, older Americans are often blamed for working longer. But it’s not a choice. It’s a necessity. It’s a harsh truth wrapped in a shiny veneer of “the grind.” They deserve better than the stigma that comes with their extended work lives. They’re not just clocking in; they’re clocking in to survive.

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