Working part-time in retirement is one of the most powerful ways to extend portfolio longevity, reduce sequence of returns risk, and maintain purpose and social connection. Even modest part-time income — $15,000-$25,000/year — can dramatically change retirement math.
The Financial Impact of Part-Time Work in Retirement
Portfolio Longevity Extension
How part-time income extends a $1,000,000 portfolio (6% average return, 3% inflation adjustments):
| Part-Time Income | Net Portfolio Draw | Starting Withdrawal Rate | Estimated Portfolio Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0/year | $50,000 | 5.0% | ~22-26 years |
| $10,000/year | $40,000 | 4.0% | ~30+ years |
| $20,000/year | $30,000 | 3.0% | ~40+ years (likely indefinite) |
| $30,000/year | $20,000 | 2.0% | Perpetual |
$20,000/year in part-time income is mathematically worth ~$500,000 in retirement savings at a 4% withdrawal rate.
Even Short Stints Matter Enormously
Working part-time only in the first 5 years of retirement protects against the critical early sequence-of-returns risk window:
| Scenario | Portfolio Value at Age 75 |
|---|---|
| Full retirement at 65, bad market sequence | ~$650,000 |
| Part-time work (ages 65-70), then full retirement | ~$950,000 |
| Difference | ~$300,000 |
The “bridge” approach — working modestly for 3-5 years while delaying full portfolio draws — dramatically improves late-retirement outcomes.
Social Security Earnings Limits: The Key Rules
If you claim Social Security before your Full Retirement Age (FRA) and work, earnings above the exempt amount reduce your benefit:
| Rule | 2026 Details |
|---|---|
| Annual exempt amount (under FRA) | $22,320/year ($1,860/month) |
| Reduction rate (under FRA) | $1 withheld for every $2 earned over exempt amount |
| Exempt amount in the year you reach FRA | ~$59,220/year |
| Reduction rate in FRA year | $1 withheld for every $3 earned over the higher limit |
| After reaching FRA | No earnings limit — earn as much as you want |
Withheld benefits are not lost. Benefits withheld before FRA are credited back, resulting in a permanently higher monthly benefit after FRA. So working heavily before FRA effectively delays claiming — which is generally beneficial anyway.
Best Strategy for Working Retirees
| Situation | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Under FRA, meaningful part-time income | Delay SS until FRA or 70; use earnings + portfolio withdrawals for income |
| At or past FRA | Claim SS whenever optimal; no earnings limit applies |
| Near the earnings limit (close to $22,320) | Track income carefully; may be worth staying under the limit |
Health Insurance Considerations for Working Retirees
Between retirement and Medicare eligibility at 65, health insurance is a significant concern:
| Situation | Options | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Under 65, retired | ACA marketplace plan | $500-$2,000+/month (subsidies available) |
| Part-time job with benefits | Employer group plan | $200-$600/month employee share |
| COBRA from prior employer | 18-36 months | $600-$2,200/month (full premium + 2% admin) |
| Spouse’s employer plan | Join spouse’s group plan | Varies by plan |
Part-time work that includes health insurance is worth considerably more than the wages alone — employer group coverage can be worth $8,000-$20,000/year in pre-tax benefits.
After 65 on Medicare, this concern goes away and part-time work is purely financial and lifestyle-driven.
Best Part-Time Jobs for Retirees in 2026
Using Existing Professional Skills (Highest Return)
| Job Type | Hourly Rate | Hours/Week | Annual Income |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consulting (former field) | $75-$200+/hour | 5-15 hours | $20,000-$80,000 |
| Freelance writing/editing | $40-$100/hour | 10-20 hours | $20,000-$50,000 |
| Bookkeeping/accounting | $35-$75/hour | 10-20 hours | $18,000-$40,000 |
| Financial/legal consulting | $100-$300/hour | 5-10 hours | $25,000-$75,000 |
| Executive coaching | $100-$250/hour | 5-10 hours | $25,000-$60,000 |
Teaching and Education
| Role | Income | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Community college instructor (adjunct) | $3,000-$5,000/course | Typically 2-3 courses/year |
| K-12 substitute teaching | $100-$200/day | Flexible; credential may be required |
| Private tutoring | $30-$100/hour | Self-scheduled; builds on own |
| Online course creation | Passive + launch effort | $5,000-$50,000/year after creation |
| Corporate training | $500-$2,000/day | Former professionals; in-person or virtual |
Service and Retail
| Role | Annual Income | Notable Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| Retail (senior-friendly chains) | $18,000-$25,000 | Employee discounts; social engagement; structured hours |
| Golf course staff | $15,000-$22,000 | Free/discounted golf; outdoor; active |
| Natural food/hobby store | $18,000-$25,000 | Aligns with interests; community |
| Library assistant | $18,000-$28,000 | Intellectual; stable; benefits possible |
| Seasonal tax preparer (H&R Block, etc.) | $15,000-$25,000 | Seasonal; high demand; training provided |
Healthcare Adjacent
| Role | Income | Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Patient advocate/navigator | $20,000-$45,000 | Healthcare background helpful |
| Medical transcription | $20,000-$35,000 | Home-based; certification available |
| PACE center aide | $18,000-$28,000 | Older adult services; flexible |
| Health coach | $25,000-$60,000 | Certification recommended |
Work in Retirement: Non-Financial Benefits
Part-time work provides significant non-financial benefits that support health and longevity:
| Benefit | Research Finding |
|---|---|
| Social connection | Strong social networks linked to 50% reduced risk of early death |
| Cognitive engagement | Active minds show lower dementia rates in longitudinal studies |
| Purpose and identity | Work provides structure and meaning; loss of identity is a major retirement adjustment challenge |
| Physical activity | Many part-time jobs involve movement |
| Reduced healthcare costs | Active retirees use healthcare slightly less; mental health benefits |
Research finding: Retirees who engage in some form of paid or volunteer work in early retirement report significantly higher life satisfaction than those who abruptly stop all work activity.
How Part-Time Work Interacts With Medicare
After 65:
- Medicare Part A: Free; no work impact
- Medicare Part B: $185/month base premium; income from work adds to MAGI, potentially triggering IRMAA surcharges
- Part-time earnings and IRMAA: If total MAGI (including work income) exceeds $212,000 (MFJ) or $106,000 (single), Medicare premiums increase by $888-$4,860/year per person
If you are working significantly (>$100,000/year) post-65, calculate the IRMAA impact in your retirement income planning.
Related: Encore Career Guide | Retirement Side Hustles | Outliving Your Money | Retirement Income Planning