Other key findings:
- The share of Americans ages 85 and older living in nursing homes or other group quarters has declined dramatically. In 2014, 11% lived in a nursing home or other group quarter – down from 24% in 1990. This decline has been met with an increase in a variety of other living arrangements, including living alone or living with a spouse or child.
- Older women who live alone are more likely than men to say they spend more time on their hobbies. Fully 65% of women who live alone say they spend more time on their hobbies and interests as they age, compared with 49% of men.
- Older adults living alone are also in less frequent contact with their children and grandchildren than adults who live with others. 3 Among older adults with grandchildren, 43% who live alone say they are in contact with their grandchildren on at least a weekly basis, compared with 60% of those living with others.
2. Living arrangements of older Americans by gender
The share of older Americans living with their spouse has increased modestly since 1990, reaching 53% in 2014. This increase has been driven mostly by older women, as older men are less likely to live with their spouses (and be married) today than in 1990. Fully 41% of older women lived with their spouse in 2014 – up from 37% in 1990.
Even so, older men remain considerably more likely than older women to live with their spouse. In 2014, 67% of older men lived with their spouse (down somewhat from 73% in 1990). At the same time, the share of older adults who are divorced (and have not remarried) has grown since 1990.
Older unmarried women and men are increasingly likely to live with their own children. But older women are nearly three times as likely to do so as older men. In 2014, 15% of older women were unmarried and living with their children, compared with 5% of older men. Since 1990, this share has increased by 3 percentage points for women and 2 points for older men.
The increase in older unmarried adults living with their children is part of a larger trend in the rise of multi-generational households – and one that has fueled the decline in older adults living alone since 1990. 9 However, the increase in this living arrangement in recent years has largely been driven by young adults, ages 25 to 34.
The share of unmarried older adults living with relatives (other than children) or non-relatives has also grown slightly, from 6% in 1990 to 8% in 2014. Some of these unmarried older adults may be cohabiting with a partner – a growing trend among adults ages 65 and older. As of 2014, 2% of non-institutionalized adults ages 65 and older were unmarried and living with a partner. 10
Among older men, the share who are unmarried and living with other relatives or non-relatives rose to 7% in 2014 – up from 5% in 1990. The share of women living in this arrangement rose to 8% in 2014 from 7% in 1990.
Older adults not only are less likely to live alone today than in 1990, but they are also less likely to live in nursing homes or other group quarters. In 2014, 3% of older Americans lived in nursing homes or other group quarters, down from 6% in 1990. The share of both men and women living in nursing homes or other group quarters declined since 1990, but it fell more sharply for women. This decline may reflect both better health among older adults and increased preference for other types of long-term care. 11
Living arrangements of older adults differ sharply by age and gender
The trends in living arrangements of men and women differ greatly between those ages 65 to 84 and those 85 and older. The share of adults ages 85 and older living in nursing homes or other group quarters has declined substantially – one of the most notable trends in the living arrangements of older Americans. In 1990, about a quarter of women ages 85 and older (27%) lived in these types of living arrangements. By 2014, some 13% of women in this age group did so. Among men ages 85 and older, the share living in a nursing home has declined from 17% in 1990 to 8% in 2014.
This has been replaced by a variety of other arrangements, including living alone or with a spouse or children. Trends for those ages 65 to 84 are largely similar to those noted for all adults ages 65 and older in the previous section.
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