In my experience working with individuals approaching retirement, a sense of urgency around retirement can develop. Often, however, it’s not necessarily full retirement they’re seeking right away — but rather some breathing room.
They’re worn down by the pace. The pressure. The sense that every year feels a little heavier than the last. They’re tired — but not finished.
And when we slow the conversation down, what I usually hear underneath it all sounds like this:
“I don’t think I can keep doing this until I’m 67… but I also don’t want to blow up our financial plan.”
That moment — when someone finally says that out loud — is often where the real planning begins.
That’s where the partial retirement conversation comes in.
Not as a consolation prize.
Not as “working forever.”
But as a bridge — financially and emotionally — between burnout and whatever comes next.
What Partial Retirement Actually Looks Like
Partial retirement isn’t one thing. It’s more of a category. And it looks different depending on the person and their individual circumstances.
For some, it means stepping out of a high-stress role and consulting part-time.
For others, it’s leaving a salaried position for project-based or seasonal work.
Sometimes it’s turning a skill they already have into income with fewer hours and more control.
Often, it involves one spouse dialing back while the other keeps working full-time.
The common thread isn’t how the income is earned.
It’s what it replaces.
Most of the time, the goal is pretty simple:
Explore if it’s possible to cover everyday expenses without having to tap Social Security, retirement accounts, or pensions just yet.
Why This Can Change the Whole Conversation
Let’s put real numbers on it, because this is usually where people pause and say, “Wait… really?”
If, in a simplified hypothetical example, a household earns $200,000 per year, but their planned retirement lifestyle only requires $100,000 a year, that gap creates options.
Instead of feeling pressure to replace an old income level, partial retirement shifts the focus to covering expenses — and only for a season.
That shift may (depending on individual circumstances):
- Buy time to delay Social Security
- Take pressure off retirement accounts
- Perhaps allow portfolios to remain invested longer (depending on market conditions and individual circumstances)
- Make the transition into full retirement feel far less abrupt
Time is one of the most valuable tools we have in planning. Partial retirement may create more of it.
The Unexpected Benefit No Spreadsheet Can Show
There’s another upside that many people report appreciating — usually after they’re living it.
Partial retirement can serve as a real-world test drive for retirement.
Living on a scaled-back income by choice answers questions spreadsheets can’t:
- Which expenses naturally fall away?
- What new costs show up?
- And maybe most important — how does it feel?
Instead of guessing what retirement will be like, you have the opportunity to get real feedback early enough to adjust. Calmly. Thoughtfully. Without panic.
One of the Most Impactful Conversations We Have
Some of the most meaningful conversations in financial planning are the ones people don’t expect to matter so much.
When we walk through partial retirement together, something often shifts. Seeing the numbers clearly — and realizing there are options — can change how someone feels almost immediately.
Some individuals have decided to stay exactly where they are. Not because they had to, but because they chose to. Just knowing they weren’t trapped made the work feel lighter.
For others, it opened a door they didn’t even know was there — a different way to get to the same destination, one that fits their life better at that moment.
This is one kind of planning I truly care about, and many individuals find meaningful. Not pushing people toward decisions but helping them see what’s actually possible so they can move forward with clarity.
A Quick, Practical Note on Health Insurance
This approach often works best when one spouse continues working full-time, especially if health insurance is part of that role.
Healthcare is usually the biggest wildcard in the years before Medicare. When that piece is covered, partial retirement may become more feasible.
It’s not a requirement — just an important part of the conversation.
Where Purpose Shows Up
One thing I’ve often observed: when people step back from full-throttle work, it can protect their sense of purpose.
More often, they rediscover it.
Partial retirement can create space to contribute differently. That might mean mentoring, consulting, teaching, serving, or creating — often with more energy and clarity than before.
Retirement doesn’t have to mean stopping.
Sometimes it simply means redirecting.
For many people, continuing to function with purpose isn’t optional. It’s essential. Partial retirement may allow that purpose to evolve without forcing financial decisions before you’re ready.
This Isn’t About Working Forever
Partial retirement isn’t about grinding it out indefinitely or reframing burnout as grit.
It’s about creating space:
- Space to breathe
- Space to think
- Space to decide what you actually want this next season to look like
And for many people, the moment they step off the treadmill, something changes. Some people report renewed energy or a shift in perspective. And whatever comes next — full retirement or something else entirely — gets chosen intentionally, not out of exhaustion.
The Question Worth Asking
If you’re feeling worn down but hesitant to make big, irreversible financial moves, the question may not be:
“Can I afford to retire right now?”
It may be:
“Do I really have to keep doing this exactly as I am right now?”
Asked early enough, that question can open up more possibilities than people realize.
The examples provided are hypothetical and for illustrative purposes only. Individual circumstances vary, and strategies discussed may not be appropriate for all individuals. Past experiences or observations do not guarantee future results. See full disclaimer below.