Blog Post

The Great British Retirement Survey

14 February 2020
interactive investor, the UK's second largest investment platform, has published the interactive investor Great British Retirement Survey, a comprehensive study exploring the attitudes and experiences of 10,000 Brits approaching or in retirement.

More than half of people do not know how much debt their partner has.
In the dark - almost a third (31%) don't know how much their partner earns.
Women are more likely than men to admit to lying about the price of things they have bought (11% versus 4% of men).
Money talks? Almost a third (32%) of those in a relationship only talk about money with their partner once a month. 
Leaving an inheritance is a top priority for 35% of respondents, although only 25% admitted to having written a will and, shockingly, 70% of retired respondents have no lasting Power of Attorney.
Doubts about lifestyle: Less than a fifth (17%) of women are confident they will be able to maintain their standard of living in retirement – and just 30% of men. 
Big adjustments: over a third (37%) of women say they will need to make major lifestyle changes to maintain their standard of living in retirement, compared to 18% of men.
Work 'til you drop: more than half (52%) of non-retirees plan on staying in work after retirement as are one in four (25%) current retirees.
Men are more than twice as likely as women to work in retirement for enjoyment, and women twice as likely to work out of financial necessity.
Regrets: not starting a pension sooner is a regret for 17% of respondents, while 32% of non-retired regret not saving enough generally.
interactive investor, the UK's second largest investment platform, has published the interactive investor Great British Retirement Survey, a comprehensive study exploring the attitudes and experiences of 10,000 Brits approaching or in retirement.

The study blows a hole into the image of retirement that frequently verges on the cliché: of tanned, silver-haired couples smiling from golf courses and cruise ships. Almost two-thirds of respondents disagree that retirement is a time of pleasure, and financial worries loom large. 

One rallying conclusion is the need to address the ‘gender agenda'. Men are twice as likely to work into retirement for enjoyment (34% versus 14%) and women more likely to do so for the money (41% versus 20%). Meanwhile, retired women are more than twice as likely as men to say they are just getting by financially.
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