Record 8 MILLION Britons live alone as ‘silver splitter’ divorces lift total by 290,000 in a year 

Record 8 MILLION Britons now live alone as ‘silver splitter’ divorces lift total by 290,000 in a year

  • Nearly a third of Brits are living alone and outnumber couples without kids, according to new figures
  • Development of ‘solo Britain’ sees women in their late 40s upwards living alone and men from 65 to 74, Office for National Statistics stats show
  • ‘Cohabiting couples’ like Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds have grown by more than 25 per cent in the past decade

It’s a fast-growing trend in modern Britain as ‘silver splitter’ divorces soar and marriage rates remain at a historic low.

The number of Britons living alone rocketed by 292,000 last year to a record eight million – nearly a third of all households.

Opposite-sex marriages are around half the rate of 1940 and more and more middle-aged people find themselves alone after a break-up, hence the ‘silver splitters’ tag.

‘Silver splitter’ divorces are on the rise – leading more than a third of people opting for living alone (stock image)

Now 3.4m couple cohabit like Boris

 The number of cohabiting couples like Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds leapt more than 25 per cent from 2.7 million to 3.4 million over the past decade, official figures show.

They are the fastest-growing type of family. Twice-wed Mr Johnson, 55, is the first Prime Minister to live in Downing Street with his girlfriend. However, statistics show that cohabiting couples like the Premier and Miss Symonds, 31, are much more likely to break up than married partners.  

The chances of separation are said to be three times greater. Harry Benson, of the Marriage Foundation think-tank, said cohabitation had failed to deliver stability in relationships. He stressed: ‘Among those in their 60s today, just 9 per cent of men and 6 per cent of women have never lived with anyone else. So why are more older people single?

‘Reliable love goes hand in hand with a public declaration of commitment. Divorce rates have fallen sharply. Whereas stability is the norm for couples who marry, it is the exception for those who do not.’

The new figures from the Office for National Statistics showed there were 8,007,000 homes with just one person in 2018. For the first time, they outnumber couples who live together without children – 7.9 million households.

The development of ‘solo Britain’ has been pushed by the growing likelihood that women will live by themselves in their late 40s, 50s and early 60s, and a similar jump in the number of men alone between the ages of 65 and 74.

It has come alongside a leap over the past decade in the number of cohabiting couples – whose relationships are more likely to end in a break-up. The figures show there were 19.1 million families, including couples without children, in the UK last year – 8 per cent more than the 17.7 million in 2008.

Families headed by married couples continue to be most common, but their proportion has shrunk from 69.1 per cent of all homes to 67.1 per cent since 2008.

Sophie Sanders of the ONS said: ‘The number of families and households has continued to rise in line with the growth of the population over the past decade.

‘However, the ways that people live have been changing. While married couple families remain the most common, cohabiting couples are the fastest-growing family type as people increasingly choose to live together before, or without, getting married. There are also more people living alone than ever before, an increasing number of same-sex couple families and more young adults living with their parents.’

The ONS said the increase in singletons was being driven by the growing numbers of middle-aged people and a ‘rise in the proportions who are divorced or single and never married’.

Most people living alone – 4.1 million – were under the traditional retirement age of 65. Commentators linked the increasing likelihood that middle-aged people will live alone with the rise of cohabitation and the impact of divorce.

There were just over 100,000 divorces in England and Wales in 2017. Around a quarter involved women over the age of 50. Divorce at older ages has become more common as women have achieved greater financial independence.

However ‘silver splitter’ break-ups also include the end of a high proportion of cohabiting relationships, which have no legal status, and which can end instantly when one partner walks out.

There were 243,000 marriages in England and Wales in 2016, compared with 471,000 in 1940 when the UK population was 46 million – much lower than today’s 66 million. 

Employees over the age of 50 shouldered the burden of pulling the UK out of recession by working harder, ONS figures showed yesterday. They carried out 30 per cent of all working hours last year compared to a quarter in 2008 – when the global financial crisis pushed Britain into a long-term slump.

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