Anyone planning for FIRE 1 knows it’s hard to think about retirement living standards while you’re still having a blast in your 20s and 30s – or even when you’re neck-deep in your responsible 40s and 50s.
Like a precog from Minority Report, you can only glimpse fragments of your future.
Happily, intrepid retirees have sent us back reports from the frontier. And they’ve supplied just enough detail to fill in the ‘Here Be Dragons’ gaps in your FI map.
The resultant research – Retirement Living Standards in the UK: 2025 update – plots three tiers of retirement spending: from Minimal to Moderate to Comfortable.
This annually-updated paper also reveals what kind of retirement living standards such spending really gets you – from people who are already doing it.
Much ado about much more than nothing
Retirement research gives us a shortcut to answering that perennial awkward cocktail party question: How much do I need to retire?
Okay, maybe it’s only personal finance bloggers who get asked such questions at parties…
Anyway, instead of doing laborious calculations on a spreadsheet, you could just pick one of the consensus retirement income answers published by the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA). 2
We’ll get to those in a minute. But a bonus of this research is it also includes testimonies from retirees and near-retirees drawn from various socio-economic backgrounds and regions across the UK.
If our retirement future is an unknown country, then their words act like an audio tour guide. We learn something about what really matters – and as ever, the experience of others might help us find our own path.
Plus it’s interesting to read. There’s nowt so queer as folk!
Okay, let’s start with the hard data. We’ll then move on to the fluffy anecdotal evidence.
Retirement living standards 2025: income targets
Source: PLSA
This table is a bronze, silver, and gold rostrum of annual retirement incomes – as determined by sampling members of the UK public aged 55 or older.
There’s also more granular detail on what you get for your money at each level. We’ll get to that shortly but – spoiler alert – the Minimum lifestyle isn’t factoring in many trips to Florida.
What’s not clear from the table is the income numbers are after-tax.
This makes it an interesting contrast with the UK median household disposable income 3 of £36,700 as of the end of 2024, according to the most recent ONS data.
The poorest 20% of households are on £16,800 (including benefits) and the richest 20% have £71,100 to spend. Remember this is disposable income.
As for the median retired household income, that’s £29,728 – about 9% shy of the Moderate spending level for couples in the table.
Note that the PLSA expects the State Pension to do much of the heavy lifting in retirement. Especially at the Minimum standard.
This is why we think there’s no need to fear the State Pension being done away with. Scrapping it would be catastrophic for any government.
Solo sorrows
Another thing that leaps out from the table? Life is expensive for singletons.
The most effective cost-saving measure any retiree can make is to couple-up. No wonder there are so many senior Casanovas out there!
Be sweet to your significant other and keep them healthy. Give flowers, not chocolate.
What you get for your money
To understand the life of Riley promised by the numbers in the table, we need to dive deeper to see what our pounds are purchasing.
Here’s the singles version:
And for couples:
There is much social division written into these lines – especially in the contrast between the top and bottom. Please draw your own conclusions. I’d love to hear them in the comments.
While the table forces a statement of spending priorities, the reality is that many of us will drift back and forth across the tiers, depending on where we prefer to direct our financial firepower.
For example, The Accumulators are in the Minimum zone for clothing. But we’re in the Comfortable bucket for transport.
Retiree vox pops
What I most like about such research isn’t the numbers, however. It’s the voices.
The 2023 edition featured study participants discussing their lived experience for each major spending category. From this, a portrait emerges of retirement reality, painted in the primary colours of what money can buy.
The anonymous quotes below are excerpts from the study’s 2023 group sessions. (Sadly the 2025 report doesn’t feature these breakdowns, though they received a light update in 2024.)
Food spending
The snapshot above shows the foodie living standard each income band afforded in 2023.
The Comfortables are clearly loading their plates with much more spice of life than the Minimums. At least on the surface.
I say that because one of the things that the FIRE community has been great at is uncovering ways to enjoy life without throwing money at it.
For instance, you can take turns hosting dinners with your friends, which keeps you all socially engaged – and hopefully well-fed – without the overheads of eating out.
Still, rampant inflation in recent years hasn’t helped on this score, either. As one woman told the study:
I don’t think it’s just so much taking people out, but it is having people to the house to cook for them… which you are spending quite a lot of money to then invite people round to, you know, feed five or six people which I would probably do once a month.
In my 20s I spent like The Comfortables on eating out. That was just how I lived the life.
Now I’m under-spending The Minimums and I’m happy with that.
Housing spending
There’s been a sea change in how the study treats housing costs. Prior to 2025, it was assumed Minimums pay social housing rent while Moderates and Comfortables would have paid off their mortgages by retirement.
However, participants no longer believe it’s reasonable to assume that Brits can access social housing if they need it – especially in London. And costs escalate dramatically if you add in rent (figures from the 2025 report):
Earlier on, we saw a retired couple required about £24,100 to scrape a Minimum standard of living in London in 2025 (Green lozenge).
But the minimum cost soars over 81% (red lozenge) if retirees are fully exposed to the private rental market, according to this research.
Much of that hike can apparently be covered by housing benefit. However I’m none too sanguine about that. Wouldn’t it be better to build more social housing than line landlord’s pockets with taxpayers’ money?
2023’s study participants forecast trouble ahead for the researchers’ mortgage-free retirement assumptions, too:
I think that it is probably reasonable now that they would own it but in ten years’ time perhaps they would be more likely to rent?
Personally, I think we’ve fallen short as a country on home ownership. It’s hypocritical to hoover up housing stock and lock future generations out of the market by failing to build. We’re creating a generational divide that puts social cohesion at risk – even as younger generations are still meant to bankroll the NHS, long-term care, State Pensions, and fixing the climate crisis.
Also, the study appears to radically underestimate other housing cost. These are set at £1,300 per year for the Comfortables in 2025. That amount seemingly covers energy costs, maintenance and decoration, plus buildings and contents insurance.
There’s not a cat in hell’s chance you can keep a £1,300 lid on that lot.
I’d suggest the researchers need to redo their sums. Bear in mind the rule-of-thumb: 1% to 4% of your property’s value annually for upkeep and repairs.
Til divorce do us part
Finally on keeping a roof over your head, divorce looms large as a catastrophic roll of the dice in the game of housing snakes and ladders:
Lifestyles nowadays, people like myself got divorced a couple of times, I ended up on my own and … I live in rented. I have had houses and owned them in the past, but because of circumstances and stuff I don’t.
Divorce is often mentioned by readers in the Monevator comments as a third-party calamity. (Excuse me while I google ‘thoughtful gifts’.)
Speaking of unhappy endings I’d rather not think about…
Body disposal etiquette
Being at an age where they’ve seen plenty of family and friends pass away, the study’s focus-grouped retirees are very pragmatic:
You could die with a million pounds but have your family got access to that million pounds to bury you?
Probably not because it has got to go through probate and solicitors so they might not have the £3K, £4K, £5K to bury you next week or in a fortnight’s time.
Pre-paid cremation plans are included in the Moderate and Comfortable budgets. The interviewees confirmed they didn’t want their loved ones to foot the bill.
Mrs Accumulator is under instruction to pop me out with the bins. But she says she will put me in the freezer so she can still chat to me.
We’re gonna need a bigger freezer.
Health issues
We all have teeth that get holes in them and eyes that go wonky, whatever our financial means.
So for dentistry, for example, each of the retirement living standards bands includes the cost of a check-up every six months and one treatment per year, such as a filling, as well as including the cost of replacing dentures every five years.
In an ominous sign of the times, contributors voiced fears about being able to rely on the State for medical treatment:
You need to be able to have money available in case you need [it] because you can’t rely on the NHS well unless you want to wait in pain for ten years or something.
Private healthcare is always a talking point for the study’s focus groups, but it apparently loomed extra large back in 2023. It was not included in the retirement budgets this time – but for how much longer?
Funding the NHS feels like another slow-moving car crash that we’re not grappling with as a society.
Are we prepared to pay more in taxes? Can we reduce the burden on the NHS by looking after ourselves more? (I mean by living healthier lifestyles that increase our chances of staving off chronic conditions, not DIY brain surgery!)
No amount of private health insurance will save us if we need urgent assistance but must wait two days for an ambulance.
Moolah for manscaping
At least if you’re hit by the proverbial bus, you might be more likely to have your best face on for it these days.
The various spending budgets have always included beauty treatments for women.
But now there’s a budget for men too at the Moderate and Comfortable levels.
The researchers note:
“a shift in social norms and expectations and that, as one participant put it, ‘they like it all these men nowadays, they are all grooming themselves aren’t they?’.
The budget included for women covered the cost of beauty treatments, such as manicures and eyebrow threading.
However the focus groups suggested the budget for men could cover the cost of ‘grooming’ such as a shave at the barber or a facial massage, as well as, for example, occasional physiotherapy appointments or sports massages.
While some may despair of ever escaping from society’s expectations about personal appearance, at least it seems positive that:
…in general, groups talked about retirement now being a far more active period and as a consequence there should be a budget to cover these sorts of treatments.
Social and cultural participation
Comfortables are spending 150% more per person per week on leisure activities than The Minimums.
The potential impact of that spending power on a life well-lived is captured in this quote:
It is really important for mental health and everything as well isn’t it? So you know even day classes or evening classes are everything. You don’t get much… I don’t think you get much less if you’re retired.
Interestingly, this budget area hasn’t increased much over time. Perhaps that reflects more flexibility within this category? Gym memberships can give way to running shoes and walking boots, for example.
Early Mr Money Mustache was a trailblazer in rethinking life’s riches so they don’t cost a packet.
I’m not sure anyone has replaced him in this respect? Let me know who I’m missing in the comments.
Tech tock
The social participation category also includes spending on technology – an ever-changing hit to our (increasingly digital) wallets.
DVD players are long gone, obviously. But streaming services are now considered an essential at every income level:
I was going to say it is for your mental health well-being as well, socially included because if you’re not able to watch Netflix you know a small series like that, I just feel that is you socially excluded as well.
Interestingly, ‘cleverer’ home technology such as passive cameras and smart speakers crept into the budgets and anecdotes as more of a necessity.
One participant explained in 2023 why she’d sorted out a smart speaker for her father:
A couple of months ago he did fall and had we set up in time he would have been able to call one of us because he couldn’t reach his mobile phone.
You can ask Alexa to phone so they are a good feature on that so they’re well worth the money to be honest.
But smart speakers were already considered surplus to requirements in 2024 as phones have colonised the space.
The spread of smartphones among retirees is notable in itself. All the Boomers in my life have upgraded, after years of resistance. Though they do still sometimes stare at the thing like a caveman facing a mortgage application.
Will an AI subscription be de rigueur the next time the research is overhauled?
“Hello Future Me”
Retirement is difficult to imagine until you get there. We plan it out on bland spreadsheets and struggle to relate our parents’ experiences to our own.
Making it even harder is that friendship groups tend to be intra-generational. I know more about the trials of my elders via Monevator readers than I do from real-life.
That’s why I found the retirement thumbnails in this research so fascinating. I heard things people don’t normally talk about.
What have you got to say for yourselves? Please do flesh out the picture for all of us in the comments below.
Take it steady,
The Accumulator
P.S. It’s interesting to contrast the 2025 numbers above with the 2023 figures:
Weirdly, the Minimum lifestyle is cheaper in 2025:
- £13,900 for a singleton outside London
- £14,600 for London singles despite all those Tinder dates
- £24,100 for couples in the capital
- £22,500 for provincial double-acts. Not down but well below an inflationary rise from 2023
The drop occurred in 2024, when the researchers re-analysed the assumptions underpinning the Minimum lifestyle’s budgetary requirements.
It helped that utility bills fell after the energy crisis. But sadly people also allocated less money for the fun stuff like celebratory food and drinks.
The historical detail for 2023:

- Financial Independence Retire Early.[↩]
- The PLSA is a financial industry group. It includes asset managers, consultants, law firms, and fintechs. They’re so keen to get Britain saving for retirement that they commission this research from Loughborough University’s Centre for Research in Social Policy.[↩]
- Disposable income is what’s left after direct taxes, such as Income Tax, National Insurance, and Council Tax.[↩]






