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The rise of ‘gray divorce,’ and why so many Boomers are splitting up late in life

Add The New York Post on Google Americans age 50 and older are getting divorced more than ever, with almost half of all broken marriages in recent years coming from aging Gen Xers and Baby Boomers.

Nearly 40% of all divorces nationwide are among couples 50 years and older — separations known as “gray divorces.” The alarming rate has held steady since the pandemic, but followed about four decades of increases.

Gray divorces doubled between 1990 and 2010, until they comprised about one in four of all divorces nationally, and then climbed to today’s four in 10 rate, according to the New York Times.

Gray divorces — among people 50 years and older — account for about 40% of divorces in America. LIGHTFIELD STUDIOS – stock.adobe.com And though divorce has been dropping in most age groups across America, it has not among people 50 years and older.

Experts have given a variety of explanations for this phenomenon — including longer lifespans, people marrying older, “empty nester” syndrome, and even wives being less tolerant of insensitive spouses after menopause.

But, Michael Stutman — a top New York City divorce lawyer — thinks a “popular culture” shift around modern marriage expectations, coupled with staring down the barrel of mortality, could be playing a part.

“The thing about people who are over 50 is that they’re getting cognizant that the fuel gauge is starting to go down to empty,” Stutman told The Post. “And there’s one thing money can’t buy, which is time.”

“People finally realize that if they’re starting to drain the second half of the tank, if they have bucket list items or a wish list or whatever, they don’t want to spend the limited time that they may have left investing in something that they feel will not give them an appropriate rate of return,” he added.

Stutman felt the 40% rate felt higher than what he’s personally seen, but acknowledged that “the trend line for our practice, of seeing the age of our clients increasing, is definitely a thing.”

One woman, 58-year-old Ruchi, said she decided to leave her husband after he completely forgot her 50th birthday.

“You’ve put all these things aside because you’re a mom and you’re taking care of a family,” she said,

“Then you think: Is that all I am good for? When did I stop being a person?”

Divorce among every age group is dropping — but holding steady in Americans over 50 years, shocking studies showed. Vasyl – stock.adobe.com “I actually thought I was crazy, because I was irritated at everything,” she said.

Ruchi also said she’s become much less tolerant of her forgetful husband after menopause — which is a well-documented phenomenon.

“I actually thought I was crazy, because I was irritated at everything,” she told the Times.

Another possible motivator could be a societal shift towards getting married later.

People are increasingly getting hitched in their 30s or 40s, instead of the old norm of marriage in people’s 20s — which Stutman said would naturally affect the age people are if their marriages fall apart.

“Over the last 20 years, the age of people getting into their first marriage has expanded. It has been elongating,” Stutman said.

“So if you believe there’s some inherent process that goes on in a marriage that leads people to end it after their children are in college, or if there’s a 15 or 20 year old lifetime — their first marriages are 20 years old by the time they’re 50, as opposed to when it would have been maybe 40,” he said.

But the gray divorce rates don’t mean romance is over for the silver-haired.

About 14% of Americans in their 60s have hit up the dating apps, according to a 2023 Pew Research Center survey.

And 12% of Americans 70 years and older have also used dating apps, the Times reported.

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Divorce rates on the whole have been steadily dropping since 1980, with the Pew Research Center showing 14.4 divorces per 1,000 marriages as of 2023 — compared to the 22.6 divorces per 1,000 marriages nearly 50 years ago.

Those reduced rates were largely driven by an increase in the number of people with higher levels of education getting married, and a decrease in those with lower levels, according to Pew.

Marriage rates have also declined in recent decades — 69% of adults had been married as of 1970, compared to 50% in 2021.

Read original at New York Post

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