Key Takeaways
- Caregiving can quietly strain your finances, from higher daily costs to paused savings, making it easy to slip off your path to retirement.
- Create a simple system to track your income, caregiving costs, and retirement contributions so you can spot early signs that your financial plan is drifting.
- Draw on community resources and professional support to reduce financial pressure and avoid decisions that could jeopardize your long-term security.
The Financial Impact of Being a Caregiver
In 2025, 63 million Americans—nearly one in four adults—are caregivers for a family member with a disability or medical condition. If you’re among them, you already know how quickly the emotional weight of caregiving can turn into financial strain. Nearly half of caregivers report that caregiving has had a negative effect on their finances, including pausing savings, using up emergency funds, or taking on debt, according to AARP.
Those pressures can build quietly over time, making it harder to keep your own long-term plans on track. Before you start making decisions out of urgency or guilt, it helps to understand how caregiving changes your cash flow, savings habits, and retirement timeline. That awareness is a great place to start—it gives you a clearer view of what support you can sustainably offer while still protecting your future.
Why It Matters to You
With so many Americans now serving as caregivers, many may be draining savings or delaying retirement. Understanding how caregiving affects cash flow, retirement timelines, and emotional well-being can help you make sustainable financial decisions and protect your long-term security while supporting your loved one.
Steps To Protect—or Rebuild—Your Retirement Savings
To protect your retirement savings, you’ll want to stay focused on your goals and do what you can to avoid taking early withdrawals, said Stu Bradley, wealth advisor at Hightower in St. Louis. One smart move is to create a simple snapshot of income, expenses, and available resources for both you and the person you’re caring for. This lets you see what you can sustainably contribute without putting your own future at risk.
Once you have that picture, Bradley recommends agreeing on clear expectations with your loved one or family members, ideally in writing. “Keep tracking your own retirement contributions and projected retirement age so you can see early if caregiving is pushing you off track, and then adjust before there’s a crisis,” he said.
Understanding the cash-flow math also helps you map out any upcoming outlays—medical bills, home modifications, or in-home support—as well as any benefits your loved one may already qualify for, such as long-term care coverage. As you lay out those expenses and resources, you’ll also get a better read on whether your retirement contributions will be able to hold steady.
Once you understand the full financial picture, you can look at options for covering near-term costs. While “you can’t borrow for your retirement, you can borrow for expenses that are occurring now,” Bradley said, which means it can be worth comparing personal loans, 0% intro APR credit cards for medical purchases, or medical payment plans if you need short-term flexibility.
If you find that caregiving limits what you can save, focus on keeping your plan moving in smaller ways—such as maintaining even modest retirement contributions rather than stopping altogether, or directing extra cash once a month into a high-yield savings account.
Tip
Small, steady steps can help preserve momentum until your caregiving load eases.
How To Stay on Track for the Long Term
Spending wisely as a caregiver can help protect your retirement funds and keep you on track toward your long-term goals. Some of the biggest immediate savings can come from avoiding unnecessary purchases.
One way to reduce that strain is to turn to your community for in-home medical equipment. Before buying medical equipment such as wheelchairs, walkers, or shower chairs, Bradley suggests checking places like local medical equipment loan closets; churches, synagogues, or senior centers that lend donated equipment; and neighborhood platforms or senior-center bulletin boards where families often give away gently used items. These alternatives can save you hundreds of dollars per item.
Beyond trimming expenses, it also helps to build in a few long-term planning habits. A six-month check-in on your expected retirement age, current contribution levels, and overall budget can show whether caregiving is shifting your timeline—and give you time to adjust. An annual review of Medicare, Medicaid, and long-term care benefits can also ensure your loved one is accessing all available support, which may free up room in your own budget.
Related Education
Signs It’s Time To Bring In Extra Help
Sharing the load doesn’t just ease financial strain—it can help caregivers feel resourceful and less alone, Bradley said. It may be time to bring in reinforcements if you’re facing any of these situations:
- You are considering moving a parent into your home or quitting a job to provide care
- You’re unsure how to navigate Medicare, Medicaid, or long-term care rules
- Family members disagree about money or caregiving roles
Noticing these pressure points early can make it easier to bring in support before the situation becomes overwhelming.
Where To Turn for Support
As you evaluate your options, Bradley recommends a few places that can help you navigate both the financial and logistical sides of caregiving:
- An agency that focuses on aging in your local area
- Elder-law attorneys for powers of attorney, asset protection, and benefits planning
- Geriatric-care managers or social workers who can coordinate services
- Nonprofit caregiver support groups and hotlines
- A financial planner who can model different caregiving scenarios
Beyond the financial steps, emotional resilience is just as important. To maintain a positive mindset, Bradley recommends “noticing resentment or panic when they arise and choosing not to let those states dictate rushed financial promises—like ‘I’ll just pay for everything myself’—that can jeopardize your own retirement.”
Caregiving can bring up feelings of love, frustration, guilt, and financial strain simultaneously, Bradley said, and he suggested this reframe: “You are one person doing the best you can with finite time and money.” Keeping that balance in mind can help you support your loved one without losing sight of your own long-term security.