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St James's Place says families with two generations in retirement at the same time set to exceed one million

A new study shows how people may need to reassess their future plans

St James's Place

A new study by St. James’s Place into intergenerational wealth and retirement planning has revealed that the number of families with multiple generations in retirement at the same time will exceed one million in the next 20 years, meaning people may need to start reassessing how they plan for the later stages of life.

St James's Place, based in Cirencester, is the largest company in Gloucestershire with a turnover of £15.7billion.

The study, which analysed ONS data and included research among 4,000 adults in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, forecasts there will be 1.2 million families containing more than one retired generation by 2039, rising from 624,000 families today. 

As the table below shows, it is anticipated that today’s number will grow by 13% to 704,000 over the next five years, with growth becoming steadily more dramatic as time goes on.

Year

Number of families with more than one generation retired

Change from 2019

% change

1999

328,000

-

-

2019

624,000

-

-

2024

704,000

+80,000

+13%

2029

863,000

+239,000

+38%

2034

996,000

+372,000

+60%

2039

1,192,000

+568,000

+91%

Source: ONS data

While, for many, retirement may still seem a long way off, the research reveals that people are already thinking about what the future may bring. A quarter (24 per cent) of future retirees expect to provide financial support in retirement to someone other than their current partner, such as children, grandchildren, a former partner or a partner’s children.

This compares with seven per cent of current retirees who already do so, and highlights how retirement income will increasingly need to stretch across generations within often complex family structures.

The most common ways future retirees anticipate providing financial support to other generations when they do retire is through everyday living costs (17 per cent), followed by school or university fees (14 per cent) and childcare (12 per cent). Over a fifth (22 per cent) feel either pressurised or worried by providing or the prospect of providing financial help to other generations.