This age could be the new benchmark for retirement

Personal finance

Most workers have an age in mind for when they would be willing to call it quits.

But the traditional retirement age — 65 — could be changing.

Research by Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies and the Aegon Center for Longevity and Retirement looked at what age workers around the world expect to retire from all-paid employment.

While the median (the middle in a list of numbers) age in the U.S. was 66, other countries varied. The Netherlands came in with the highest age, 67. China and Turkey came in with the lowest at 58.

The median was 65.

The retirement age is creeping higher in the U.S. and elsewhere, said Catherine Collinson, CEO and president of the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies.

In the U.S., according to the Social Security Administration, full retirement age for individuals born in 1960 and later is 67.

Other countries are also moving in that direction, Collinson said. The Netherlands is already at 67, while France, Spain and Poland all have plans to move towards that age.

“That tends to be the prevailing benchmark,” Collinson said.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., many anticipate extending their working years, according to recent research from Transamerica.

A majority of workers — 54% — said they expect to stop working sometime after age 65 or never retire at all, the research found.

Meanwhile, just 24% said they plan to retire at 65, and 22% said they plan to retire earlier.

“People want to extend their working lives and plan to keep working in retirement,” Collinson said. “By and large, many simply have not yet saved enough to retire comfortably.”

More than half of workers — 55% — said they plan to work either part-time or full time in retirement. While most of those respondents cited financial reasons, many also pointed to other motivations, many related to healthy aging, such as avoiding social isolation.

U.S. workers may also be driven to work longer for another reason: concerns about the future of Social Security, Collinson said. Three in 4 workers said they are worried that Social Security will not be there for them when they retire.

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