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More and more Americans over age 50 are choosing to live with their partner instead of getting married, according to a new study, which found that cohabitation among adults in that age range has more than doubled in the past decade.
The number of unmarried adults over 50 living together jumped from 1.2 million in 2000 to 2.75 million in 2010, the study showed. The research is based on data from the 1998-2006 Health and Retirement Study and the 2000 and 2010 Current Population Survey.
"Similar to their younger counterparts, older Americans are embracing cohabitation in record numbers," said lead researcher Susan Brown, who is co-director of the National Center for Family and Marriage Research at Bowling Green State University.
While the trend mirrors an embrace of cohabitation
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Couples who were living together when the study began had been together for an average of eight years. Over the next eight years covered by the study, just 18 percent of these couples separated and only 12 percent got married, the researchers said.
As previous studies
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The researchers also found that women are especially hesitant to tie the knot later in life because of the perceived loss of freedom and caregiving strains marriage may involve. Demographically, most older people living with their partner are divorced, followed by those who have been widowed and then those who never married, the researchers said.
The study is detailed in the August issue of the Journal of Marriage and Family.