I Asked ChatGPT What Seniors Over 65 Waste the Most Money On — The Answer Surprised Me
Commitment to Our Readers
GOBankingRates' editorial team is committed to bringing you unbiased reviews and information. We use data-driven methodologies to evaluate financial products and services - our reviews and ratings are not influenced by advertisers. You can read more about our editorial guidelines and our products and services review methodology.
20 Years
Helping You Live Richer
Reviewed
by Experts
Trusted by
Millions of Readers
As many are now on fixed incomes, seniors may be more concerned about saving money and spending wisely. The best way to make sure you’re doing that is to know where you’re wasting money.
I expected ChatGPT to say seniors waste money on unnecessary purchases or expensive hobbies. The real answer was way more subtle and honestly kind of depressing.
Medicare Plan Mistakes Cost Thousands
Seniors choose from dozens of Medicare plans through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Most don’t comparison-shop during open enrollment, stay in plans that no longer fit their prescriptions or overpay for Medigap coverage they don’t actually need.
Even small plan mismatches can cost $1,000 to $3,000 per year. That’s not pocket change on a fixed income.
Subscriptions Pile Up Quietly
Streaming platforms, magazine renewals, app subscriptions, club memberships and identity protection services all run on auto-renewal. Once income becomes fixed, these small charges add up fast.
Most people forget what they’re paying for until they actually review their bank statements line by line.
High-Fee Financial Products Drain Accounts
Some retirees get sold high-expense mutual funds, complex annuities or advisory services charging over 1% to 1.5% annually. Over decades, these fees can quietly reduce retirement savings by tens of thousands of dollars.
The products often sound sophisticated and safe. The fees are just buried in the fine print.
Credit Card Interest Eats Income
Many seniors carry credit card balances for medical bills, helping adult children or home repairs. Interest rates often exceed 20%, which is brutal when you’re living on a fixed amount each month.
Insurance Gets Expensive and Redundant
Life insurance that’s no longer needed, overlapping supplemental coverage, car insurance not adjusted for low mileage and home insurance policies that haven’t been requoted in years all waste money.
Insurance companies don’t call to tell you when you’re overpaying. You have to check yourself.
Big Houses Cost More Than Mortgages
Housing is usually the biggest expense through maintenance, property taxes, utilities and repairs. Many retirees stay in homes sized for raising children even though the kids moved out decades ago.
Downsizing feels like admitting defeat but it can save thousands per year.
Extended Warranties and Senior Marketing
Retailers market aggressively to older adults with appliance warranties that rarely get used, overpriced medical alert plans, travel clubs and phone add-ons. Sometimes the “senior discount” is just branding with no real savings.
Supporting Adult Children Drains Retirement
Cosigning loans, paying rent and covering emergencies for adult children is one of the biggest hidden drains on retirement funds. It comes from love, but it can wreck retirement security.
Scams Target Seniors Hard
According to the Federal Trade Commission, older Americans lose billions annually to tech support scams, romance scams, Medicare fraud and impersonation calls. Financial exploitation happens way more often than anyone wants to admit.
The Three Big Buckets
ChatGPT explained that senior money leaks usually fall into three categories: set-and-forget expenses like insurance and subscriptions, financial complexity around Medicare and investments, and emotional spending on family help or fear-based products.
What surprised me wasn’t that seniors waste money. It’s that most of the waste comes from systems designed to be confusing or from trying to help family members. These aren’t frivolous purchases. They’re expensive mistakes that happen because financial products got too complicated and predatory companies target older people specifically.
The answer wasn’t what I expected. Seniors aren’t blowing money on cruises and golf clubs. They’re getting quietly drained by subscription fees they forgot about, Medicare plans that don’t match their needs and financial advisors charging too much for basic services.
More From GOBankingRates
Written by
Edited by 


















