Working adults ages 60-plus are more pessimistic than younger colleagues that they will be able to retire by age 65.
So reports Northwestern Mutual in its annual "2014 Planning and Progress Study: Talking Money & Retirement." Based on a survey of 2,092 U.S. adults ages 18 and older, the survey aims to ascertain, among other objectives, Americans' attitudes toward money and financial decision-making, perspectives on working with a financial advisor and the client experience, and people's preparedness for retirement.
The report reveals that nearly two in five (38 percent) of working adults estimate they will have to work until age 75 or older before they can retire. Those who are now working believe they will retire at a "much later age" than do individuals already retired (68 years old for those now working versus age 59, the average age of current retirees when they stopped working).
Recommended For You
The following tables list age ranges of retirement (estimated or actual) among survey respondents:
Will work until retirement (until I am … years old)
Less than 50 years old | 2% |
50-64 years sold | 19% |
65-74 years old | 57% |
75-plus years old | 20% |
I have already retired | 22% |
I don't work | 19% |
Mean estimated age of retirement | 68.4 |
Age when retired among those already retired
Less than 55 years old | 21% |
55-59 years sold | 25% |
60-64 years old | 32% |
65-69 years old | 15% |
Age 70 or older | 15% |
Mean age of retirement | 59 |
© 2025 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.