How We Think About Retirement

How We Think About Retirement

Life-After-Work is rarely a single decision. It is often a series of changes that unfold over time. Daily routines change. Relationships evolve. Priorities shift.
Health, finances, living arrangements, and responsibilities may all be affected,
sometimes at the same time.

Without a way to step back and see the bigger picture,
it can be difficult to know where to focus.

Many important aspects of retirement are also managed through systems and institutions, including retirement funds, medical schemes, healthcare providers, insurers, and government structures. While retirees remain responsible for their own lives, they often have to make decisions within systems that were not necessarily designed around their
individual needs and priorities.

BetterWell helps people understand these changes, ask better questions,
and think more broadly about retirement and life beyond work

Purpose
& Identity

Purpose & Identity

How you see yourself, and how you spend your time

Health
& Movement

Health & Movement

Health, mobility and the habbits that support it

Relationships
& Connection

Relationships
& Connection

The people in your life and the groups you are part of

Contribution
& Work

Contribution
& Work

The work you do and the roles you choose to take on

Learning
Growth

Learning
& Growth

How you learn, adapt and keep up with changes

Living
Environment

Living
Environment

Your living environment and how well it fits your daily life

Money & Financial Security

Money &
Financial Security

Your income, spending and financial arrangements- and whether they support the life you want

What People
Do Next

What People
Do Next

If any of the above raised questions for you, we discuss how others have responded

Retirement life stages

At the same time, retirement is often spoken about as though it were a single stage of life.
In practice, it is not. People experience retirement differently. Some move gradually into retirement, while others experience sudden change. Health, finances, family responsibilities, mobility, and personal circumstances all influence the experience.

The Retirement Life Stages provide a broad way of thinking about
how priorities often change over time.

Preparation & repositioning

Often begins
45+


Transition

Typically
mid 50s to late 60s

established
retirement

Commonly
60s - 75

changing capacity years

Often
70s - 85

later life
7 care

Usually
80s and onwards

These stages are guides rather than fixed categories. A person of 68 may still be navigating the transition into retirement,
while another may have been retired for a decade. Some people remain highly active well into later life, while others face significant changes much earlier.

The important point is not age itself but recognising that retirement evolves over time. What matters at one stage may become less important later, while new opportunities, responsibilities, and challenges emerge.

The Seven + 1 Domains and Retirement Life Stages work together. One helps us think about the different parts of life; the other helps us understand how those parts often change over time.

Ready to start planning?

Contact us