Apr 13, 2026

Retirement isn’t sticking: older Australians are quietly heading back to work

Turner worker working on drill bit in a workshop

Retirement used to be a line in the sand.

You worked. You stopped. That was it.

Except now, that line keeps moving.

New UK data shows one in six retirees are either back in work or considering it. It sounds like a local problem. It isn’t. The same thing is already happening here, just without the headlines.

The quiet rise of “unretirement” in Australia

In Australia, the numbers tell a similar story, whether we’re paying attention or not.

Around one in six Australians have delayed retirement or returned to work in recent years. Among retirees, nearly one in five have already gone back to paid work or would consider it.

That’s not a lifestyle trend. That’s a signal.

Older Australians aren’t just choosing to stay busy. Many are recalculating, mid-retirement, because the maths no longer works.

The problem isn’t retirement. It’s what comes after

For a lot of people, retirement is landing harder than expected.

The Age Pension for a single person sits at just over $31,000 a year. That might have sounded workable a decade ago. It doesn’t stretch far now.

At the same time, the cost of living has moved in one direction. Up.

Super balances are often lower than planned. People are living longer than expected. And the idea of a “comfortable retirement” keeps drifting further out of reach.

So people do what they’ve always done when the numbers don’t add up.

They go back to work.

This isn’t just about money

It would be easy to frame this as purely financial. It’s not that simple.

Some older Australians are returning to work because they want structure, connection, or purpose. Retirement, it turns out, isn’t always the dream people were sold.

But here’s the uncomfortable part.

When financial pressure is the driver, those “lifestyle” benefits become a convenient narrative. It sounds better than saying the system didn’t hold up.

Retirement is becoming a revolving door

The bigger shift is this: retirement is no longer a single event.

People are moving in and out of it. Phasing down. Picking up part-time work. Stepping back again.

It’s less a destination, more a loop.

That creates a different kind of pressure, not just on individuals, but on the systems around them.

Because everything from superannuation to workforce planning to aged care assumes something much simpler: that people stop working at some point, and stay stopped.

They don’t.

Why this matters beyond the individual

This isn’t just a personal finance story. It lands directly in aged care and community services.

If older Australians are working longer because they have to:

  • they delay entering care
  • they arrive with more complex needs when they do
  • and they carry financial stress deeper into later life

At the same time, the sector itself is relying more heavily on older workers.

So the same group is propping up the workforce while also trying to secure their own retirement.

It’s efficient. It’s also a bit alarming.

The bottom line

The UK data might be new. The Australian version of this story isn’t.

Retirement isn’t failing all at once. It’s eroding slowly, quietly, and unevenly.

And instead of one clear break between working life and later life, we’re getting something messier.

A system where people don’t fully retire.

Because, increasingly, they can’t afford to.

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