AARP Hearing Center
Key takeaways
- To keep spending in check, consider creating a dating fund where you allot a certain amount of money each month for dating expenses.
- Dating scams often target older adults. Avoiding a video call or in-person meeting, or asking for money for any reason whatsoever, are red flags.
- When you’re first getting to know someone, don’t immediately label them as cheap or extravagant or anything in between. Learn a little about what has happened in their financial past.
When we dated in our teens and 20s, finances were pretty low on our list of priorities; after all, we were immortal and we’d figure out a way to get by. Now, as we nervously monitor our retirement account balances, those of us on a first date are looking across the table and thinking something along the lines of Sure, he’s got all his hair, but what’s his credit score?
Yes, it’s not just looks, values, charm and that elusive quality known as chemistry that matter when you’re an older dater. Whether you’re looking for something casual or hoping for a lasting love connection, money plays a role, too. And it can be a minefield. When you’re meeting for that first coffee date, there’s no way to know how close that stranger is to a financial precipice and what that might mean for a future relationship.
“A lot of men have been divorced, may still be supporting adult children, and they are less financially secure than they ever imagined they would be at 50 or 60 or 70,” notes Leslie Bennetts, author of The Feminine Mistake: Are We Giving Up Too Much? Many men are looking for a soft place to land — but then, so are women. What this has bred on both sides of the gender divide, says Bennetts, “is a lot of suspicion and mistrust because the old rules no longer apply and nobody knows how to act.”
“So many of the problems I have in dating revolve around money,” says Mark, a 74-year-old divorced physician in Florida who asked that his last name be withheld to protect his privacy. “Either women make it clear before they even meet me that they are looking for financial security, or I meet very wealthy women who intimidate me, and I worry I can’t keep up.”
You may not be able to avoid every pitfall of dating at this stage of life, but here are a few suggestions for sidestepping money problems.
Discuss who’s paying early on
With the question of who pays fuzzier than ever, you need to set the rules before there are any awkward silences. If you prefer to pay, etiquette expert and AARP Modern Manners columnist Lizzie Post suggests saying something like: “I’d love to meet up for a cup of coffee. Please let it be my treat, regardless of how this works out.” Prefer to share the cost? You can say something like: “My usual practice on first dates is to split the bill. Does that work for you?” Of course, if you still hew to the old rules of courtship, you could gently state that at the onset. “We’re all still living in the patriarchy,” says Lisa Zaslow, 62. “The least the guys could do is pay for the first date.” But be prepared for pushback.
Set a budget
Costs can pile up quickly. Single Gen Xers spend an average of $172 per date, while boomers shell out an average of $127 when they meet up, according to the BMO Real Financial Progress Index. To keep spending in check, create a dating fund, advises Lakshmi Rengarajan, a dating coach and creator of the Later Dater Today podcast for midlife daters. For instance, if you allot $200 a month for dates, you can have multiple low-cost coffee meetups or a couple of pricier nights out. The key is to honor your limit. “Once that money runs out, you’re not going on any more dates that month,” says Rengarajan.
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