Two people can grow old with the same health, the same age and the same number of years ahead. And still, age in completely different ways. The difference, very often, lies in the bank account.
When we talk about longevity, we tend to think about diet, exercise, rest or social relationships. These are essential pillars. But there is another one we barely talk about, and it can profoundly shape how we live the last decades of our lives: economic stability.
It’s not about being rich or accumulating assets. It’s something simpler: reaching 70, 80 or 90 with enough peace of mind to keep making decisions about your own life.
María and Javier retire at the same age, 67, and both enjoy reasonably good health. But their retirements are very different. María receives a modest pension. Every time she needs new glasses, a dentist appointment or a household repair, worry appears. She has stopped travelling, goes out less with her friends, monitors every expense, and when the physiotherapist recommends sessions for early arthritis, she spaces them out because she can’t afford them.
Javier isn’t a millionaire either. But he saved consistently, paid off his home before retiring and has a financial cushion. He can take painting classes, go on short trips, hire a physiotherapist when he needs one or help his children without putting his finances at risk.
They are the same age, going through the same process of ageing. But not with the same peace of mind.
Money doesn’t buy health, but it does buy the conditions to take care of it. It reduces chronic stress, allows for quality food, adequate housing, unexpected healthcare expenses, and maintaining an active social life.
Something similar happens when illness enters the home.
Carmen has been caring for her husband, diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, for five years. They can barely afford a few hours of help each week. She has stopped going out, sleeps worse, hardly moves, and her own health is starting to suffer. In a family with more financial ease, a professional caregiver allows the spouse to keep part of her life, see friends, continue looking after herself. The illness is the same. The strain is not.
British epidemiologist Michael Marmot has spent decades studying this relationship and sums up his findings in one sentence: social causes produce the causes of disease. His work has shown that health depends not only on genetics or the healthcare system, but also on education level, employment, housing and income. The WHO itself places economic and social conditions among the decisive factors explaining why some people live longer and better than others.
In Spain, much of the security of older people isn’t in the bank, but in the bricks. Reaching retirement with the home paid off works as a cushion. It doesn’t appear in any savings statistic, but it shapes almost everything else: whether a rent increase can push you out of your neighbourhood, whether you can adapt the bathroom when a disability appears, whether a modest pension is enough to live with some peace of mind.
Longevity also forces us to rethink our relationship with time. Two generations ago, retirement lasted ten or fifteen years. Today it can last thirty or even more. Preparing for a long life is no longer just about taking care of the body; it’s also about sustaining your finances, continuing to learn, staying professionally active when possible, and planning for a future much longer than our parents ever imagined.
Reaching 80 with the mortgage paid off is not just owning a home. It’s knowing that a rent increase won’t threaten the place where you built your life. Being able to adapt the bathroom if a disability appears. Changing your glasses without anxiety. Paying for the physiotherapy that keeps you walking. Inviting your grandchildren for Sunday lunch. Maintaining a social life that protects against loneliness.
We often say that the best investment for living many years is walking, strength training, sleeping well, eating well. It remains essential. But perhaps another investment is just as important: building economic stability that allows you to face the future with serenity.
Money doesn’t buy more years of life. What it does buy, very often, are more years of autonomy, less stress and more freedom to keep living the life you chose.