Who would have thought lawyers would find an untapped market in silver splitters? If you’re wondering what that means, it’s another phrase for gray divorce – a term coined by Dr. Susan L. Brown and Dr. I-Fen Lin in 2012 to describe marriages that end after the age of 50.
The Numbers Tell the Story
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, divorce rates among people over 50 have roughly doubled since 1990. While divorce rates in other age groups have stayed stable or even declined, couples in their 50s, 60s, and beyond are increasingly choosing to part ways. And interestingly, women are often the ones initiating these later-in-life divorces – perhaps because they’re more proactive, or simply because they now have more independence and options than generations before them.
As a woman in her 50s, I’ve seen this firsthand among friends and acquaintances. It’s never easy, but what I’ve observed is transformation: women who emerge happier, freer, and more themselves. Honestly, who wouldn’t crave that kind of transformation after being unhappy for so long?
A Number of Reasons Drive Silver Splitting
So, let’s explore why the silvers are splitting?
Less Stigma
Divorce isn’t the scandal it once was. Pop culture – from the movie The First Wives Club to the high-profile separations of Bill and Melinda Gates, Hugh Jackman and Deborra-Lee Jackman or Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban – has normalized it. Bringing the idea into the open has a way of stripping the taboo of its sting.
Financial Independence
Women today often have careers, education, retirement savings, and the ability to support themselves. They aren’t bound by the same economic dependence their mothers faced. We don’t carry the same constraints that the generations of women once had to navigate.
Empty Nest Syndrome
Children can be the glue holding a marriage together. Once they leave, couples sometimes realize they no longer share common ground – or even affection. So, when the chicks fly the nest, one may realize that they may want to kick the big bird out of the nest as they are no longer needed or wanted. When the binding force disappears, the relationship or nest can fall apart.
Infidelity
After decades together, betrayal can feel unbearable, and forgiveness less likely. Infidelity doesn’t just “break trust,” it changes the entire emotional architecture of a relationship. Unspoken truths may be exposed in such a fashion as to re-evaluate the relationship. It is then one must decide if they are aligned enough to continue with the marriage or separate.
Retirement Realities
Spending every day with someone whose company you don’t enjoy, or whose retirement dreams clash with yours, can be a breaking point. When one finally reaches their breaking point, something inside you shifts in a way that doesn’t shift back.
If you’re looking for ways to find joy in retirement with your spouse, read Retirement: How to Find New Joy with Your Spouse.
Longer Life Expectancy
“Till death do us part” once meant fewer decades together. Now, with longer lives, people want those years to be joyful – not endured in misery. They question turns from “Can I endure this?” to “Do I want to endure this?” Women realize they can have a life that feels good and not one that simply looks good from the outside looking in.
Of Course, Gray Divorce Isn’t Easy
Ending a marriage after decades means grieving not just a partner, but a shared history. Financial recovery is harder at 50+. But for many, the choice is worth it. Making sure that your future years are happy by ending a marriage should not be seen as defeat; it can be a reckoning.
This post is not suggesting one course of action over another. This is a personal choice. However, if you’re considering this path, be smart: consult an attorney and a financial planner. Lean on friends and family or seek support groups and therapists if needed. Most importantly, remember that choosing divorce later in life isn’t failure – it’s choosing yourself.
Life is too short to spend it unhappy. If you decide to split, may your new chapter be refreshing, freeing, and full of joy. It may not necessarily be filled with romance, it might be friendship, companionship, travel, community or simply peace. But it will be yours to design. Here’s to silver splitters everywhere who are brave enough to put their happiness first.
Let’s Talk:
What pushed you toward divorce? Do you think it was a good decision? What have you learned about yourself since?