You may think of your work life in two distinct eras: the years you climbed the career ladder and the golden years of retirement, when the only climbing you need to do is on an afternoon hike.
But you may worry that without the mental stimulation of the workday, you’ll drift into boredom. You may also be concerned about the lack of reliable income — especially as the cost of, well, everything continues to rise. If only there were a middle ground: a “work-optional” retirement that lets you enjoy freedom while still building stable sources of income and benefiting from the perks of work.
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That’s exactly the kind of retirement many baby boomers are creating. Not only are boomers working longer, but many are also embracing a phased approach to retirement.
Transamerica reports: “Sixty-five percent of baby boomer workers plan to work past age 65 or do not plan to retire. More than half (52%) plan to continue working after they retire … For most baby boomer workers, retirement is no longer a point in time in which one immediately stops working.”
So what does this approach look like — and how can you plan for it now? GOBankingRates spoke to experts to find out.
Jannese Torres, a financial educator and author of “Financially Lit!,” has watched a major shift away from the decades-old mindset that you work for 40 years so you can retire at 65. Though Torres focuses mostly on millennials, she said the attitude shift crosses generations.
“What I’m seeing across the board is a change in how people define retirement itself,” she said. “That might mean fewer hours, contract roles, remote work or projects that tap into their passions … For most people I work with, ‘retirement’ isn’t about checking out of life. It’s about having the time and space to prioritize what matters.”
This perspective aligns with what James DesRocher, a financial advisor at TrueView Financial, is hearing from his own clients.
“The modern retiree doesn’t necessarily want to sit still,” he said. “Many of my clients tell me, ‘I don’t want to stop working — I just want to stop needing to.’”
To DesRocher, once your investments and passive income streams can cover your living expenses in retirement, earning a paycheck becomes optional. That’s the foundation of financial freedom — and financial freedom means choice.
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Giving yourself the freedom to spend your golden years as you choose — whether that means going part time to stay socially connected, consulting on passion projects or volunteering — starts with a solid financial foundation.






