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A same-sex couple

Retirement Planning > Saving for Retirement

What Same-Sex Couples' Different Life Spans Mean for Their Retirement Planning

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What You Need to Know

  • Female same-sex couples have a much higher likelihood than others of at least one spouse spending 30 or more years in retirement.
  • It is crucial to understand that average life expectancy is a midpoint and not an endpoint, analysts say.
  • Nonsmokers in excellent health entering retirement also face big longevity projections.

J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s 2024 Guide to Retirement was published last week.

For the first time in its decade-plus history, the guide puts a spotlight on the experiences of same-sex couples — in particular, how their longevity experiences can differ from those of male-female couples.

The results are eye-opening, especially when it comes to demonstrating the excess longevity anticipated for female couples who find themselves entering retirement as nonsmokers in excellent health.

As the guide shows, such couples have a whopping 92% chance of at least one member living to age 85, as well as a 78% chance of one member surpassing age 90. Perhaps most notably, more than half (52%) of such couples should anticipate having at least one member live to age 95, and there is nearly a one-in-four chance (24%) of one member living to age 100.

Excess longevity is clearly a “challenge” for nonsmoking same-sex female couples, the guide shows, while same-sex male couples conversely have longevity projections that are skewed in the opposite direction — meaning their wealth may not have to stretch as far in retirement as different-sex couples or female couples.

What’s clear is that tailored longevity data is a key planning tool, whether one is taking about same-sex couples or considering retirees with different health statuses. Merely relying on population-level averages, as such, is not the best approach to thinking or talking about longevity in the actual retirement planning process.

During a press event in New York held to introduce the 2024 findings, chief retirement strategist Mike Conrath credited his colleague and fellow strategist Sharon Carson for pushing to include the new, more inclusive look at life expectancy in this year’s guide. In addition to emphasizing the utility of the data, the pair agreed that it is important for firms like J.P. Morgan to constantly reconsider and reassess the way they present information in order to stay relevant as the public’s expectations and experiences shift.

The Longevity Baseline

Before highlighting the outlook for same-sex couples, the 2024 Guide to Retirement sets a baseline for comparison by presenting population-level data for men and women at age 65 today. It provides both a general population projection as well as a more tailored projection for those who are nonsmokers in excellent health.

Generally speaking, an average woman entering retirement at age 65 has a 52% chance of living to age 85, and this number jumps to 72% for healthy nonsmokers. These figures fall to 30% and 54%, respectively, when looking at the chance of living to age 90. When considering age 95, they fall again to 11% and 31%. Finally, there is a 13% chance of a healthy female nonsmoker making it to age 100.

Men’s longevity is markedly lower, on average, both for the total population and for healthy nonsmokers. Generally speaking, an average man entering retirement at age 65 has a 39% chance of living to age 85, and this number climbs to 63% for healthy nonsmokers. These figures fall to 19% and 43%, respectively, when looking at the chance of living to age 90. When considering age 95, they fall again to 5% and 22%. Finally, there is a 8% chance of a healthy male nonsmoker making it to age 100.

Longevity Outlook for Mixed-Sex Couples

When crunching the numbers for mixed-sex married couples, the J.P. Morgan strategists find the chances are 71% that at least one member will live to age 85, and this number increases to 90% for healthy nonsmokers. For age 90, these numbers fall to 43% and 73%, respectively, and they fall again to 15% and 46% when considering age 95. Strikingly, some 19% of healthy nonsmoking couples can anticipate at least one member living to age 100.

As Conrath and Carson emphasized, these numbers show that retirement planning today must account for the very real potential of at least one member of the couple living well beyond 30 years in retirement. In fact, the data also shows that 46% of healthy nonsmoking couples will see both members live to 85, while 23% of such couples will see both members live to 90 and 7% will see both members live to 95.

“It is crucial to understand that average life expectancy is a midpoint and not an endpoint,” Conrath said. “You may need to plan on the probability of living much longer, perhaps 35 or 40 years in retirement, particularly if you’re a nonsmoker in excellent health entering retirement.”

One practical takeaway is that savers may want to consider the role of guaranteed annuities, and they may also consider investing a higher portion of their portfolio for growth early in retirement in order to maintain purchasing power over time.

The Outlook for Same-Sex Couples

The data shared in the guide suggests healthy nonsmoking female same-sex couples face a particularly daunting longevity outlook. As Carson noted, it’s wonderful to see their health habits pay off in the form of longer life expectancies, but there’s also a financial challenge baked in, especially given the earnings gap that persists between men and women.

As noted earlier, female couples who are healthy and don’t smoke face a 92% chance of at least one member living to age 85. This number falls to 77% for the total population of same-sex female couples. For healthy non-smoking female couples, there is a 78% chance of one member surpassing age 90. This number drops to 51% for the full same-sex female couple population.

Strikingly, more than half (52%) of healthy female couples should anticipate having at least one member live to age 95, compared with 20% for the total population average, and there is nearly a one-in-four chance (24%) of one member living to age 100.

The outlook for same-sex male couples looks a lot different, with only 67% of healthy nonsmoking couples anticipated to have one member live beyond age 90 and 38% anticipated to have one member live beyond age 95. When including smokers in the projections, these numbers fall to 34% and 10%, respectively.

What It Means in Practice

Carson and Conrath said they are gratified to know this year’s guide is a more inclusive document, but they also repeatedly acknowledged it is meant as a starting point for sparking deeper planning conversations between advisors and their clients. The fact of the matter is that every individual client or married couple is facing their own unique retirement outlook, and it’s important to make sure they understand what is and is not in their control when it comes to navigating retirement.

For example, people have more or less total control over their asset allocation decisions, as well as their choice of where to locate assets on a pretax versus post-tax basis. They also can largely control their commitment to saving and spending below their means.

People only have some control over their employment earnings and their duration in the workforce, the strategists observed, and they also have only marginal control over their own longevity. Generally, healthier habits will lead to longer lifespans, but that’s far from a guarantee.

Finally, there are elements that are out of clients’ and advisors’ control, particularly when it comes to things like tax and benefits policies, market returns and world events.

“The real planning wisdom is to make the most of the things that you can control,” Conrath said. “From there, you can evaluate and monitor the factors that are somewhat or completely out of your control within your comprehensive retirement plan.”

Credit: Adobe Stock 


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