The traditional relationship script — meet, date, commit, cohabit, marry, merge — was designed for a specific life stage and a specific set of priorities. It worked reasonably well as a default when people married in their twenties and needed a structure that could accommodate child-rearing, shared economic building, and a lifetime of cohabitation.
In later life, the priorities are different. The assets are already built. The children are raised. The identity is formed. The time remaining — precious and finite — is to be filled with what actually matters to you. In this context, the old script is often the wrong script. And a growing number of adults over 50 are writing new ones.
This article maps the major non-traditional relationship models that seasoned adults are choosing — not as compromises, but as deliberate, considered structures that genuinely serve their lives.
Living Apart Together (LAT)
We cover this in depth in a dedicated article, but it belongs here too: committed romantic partnership in which both people maintain their own separate residences is the most common non-traditional relationship model among adults over 60. Both partners consider themselves fully committed. Neither considers their arrangement a lesser version of a relationship. The separate households are not a way station to cohabitation — they are the destination.
For people who prize autonomy, who have established lives they do not want to disrupt, or who have asset and family complexity that makes full financial merger inadvisable, LAT provides the emotional reality of partnership without the structural integration of shared domestic life.
Committed Non-Cohabiting Partnership (Without Marriage)
Distinct from LAT (which focuses on separate residences) but related: some couples are deeply committed to each other and to a shared future, but choose not to marry. This may be for financial reasons (marriage would affect pension benefits, Social Security calculations, tax situations, or Medicaid eligibility), for estate planning reasons, or simply because the legal institution of marriage does not feel necessary to either partner’s sense of the relationship’s meaning.
Non-married committed partners should attend carefully to legal documents that provide the protections marriage would otherwise confer: healthcare proxy, durable power of attorney, updated wills and beneficiary designations. Without these, a committed non-married partner has no automatic legal standing in medical or financial emergencies.
The Companionate Partnership
A companionate partnership is primarily organized around shared life, shared activities, and mutual care — with romantic and physical intimacy present but not central. Two people who genuinely enjoy each other’s company, who provide emotional support and practical assistance, who travel together and share meals and call each other first with news — but for whom the intense romantic charge of earlier-life love is not the organizing principle of the relationship.
Many people in their 60s and 70s describe something like this as their actual preference, even when they hesitate to name it as such — because the culture does not have a fully dignified word for it, and because it can sound, from the outside, like a relationship that is settling for less. It is not. For many people at this life stage, it is the relationship that is most genuinely nourishing.
Intentional Community and Co-Housing
An emerging model that is gaining significant attention among adults over 50: intentional community, in which a group of people — sometimes couples, sometimes singles, sometimes a mix — choose to live in close proximity and organize shared aspects of their domestic lives. This might mean a group of friends purchasing adjacent condos in the same building. It might mean a more formally structured co-housing community with shared common spaces and collectively organized meals and activities.
Co-housing for older adults addresses the social isolation problem directly: you are surrounded by people you know, who know you, in a setting that provides both privacy and community. The Partners for Life model, the Village Movement, and purpose-built senior co-housing communities are worth researching for anyone drawn to this approach.
Chosen Family as Primary Relationship Network
For some adults — particularly those who are genuinely content being single, who have not found a romantic partner who meets their needs, or who have rich networks of deep friendship and family — the “relationship” they are building in later life is not a dyadic romantic partnership but a web of chosen relationships: close friends, adult children, former colleagues, community members.
This is not a consolation prize for people who could not find a partner. It is a legitimate and, for some people, genuinely preferred structure — one that provides connection, meaning, care, and belonging without the complications and compromises of romantic partnership.
The practical challenge of this structure is the same as for non-married committed partners: ensuring that the people in your chosen network have the legal authority to act on your behalf in emergencies. Healthcare proxy, power of attorney, and clear estate planning are essential.
The Common Thread
What unites all of these alternative models is intentionality: the decision to choose a relationship structure that genuinely fits your life, rather than defaulting to a structure that was designed for a different life stage and different priorities.
The couples and individuals who describe the most satisfying later-life relationship lives are almost universally people who made conscious choices — who asked themselves what they actually wanted, were honest about the answer, and built a life around it. The specific structure mattered far less than the deliberateness with which it was chosen.
You have permission to build something that has not been built before. The question is simply: what does it look like for you?
Related Articles
- The Companionship Question: What Kind of Partnership Do You Actually Want After 50?
- Living Apart Together: Why More Couples Over 60 Are Choosing LAT Relationships
- LGBTQ+ Relationships in Later Life: Love, Community, and Identity After 50
- Adult Stepchildren: Why This Is the Hardest Relationship in Any Blended Family — and How to Navigate It
