Normally, a huge sigh of relief is heard from workers embarking on the more easy-going days of retirement. However, for many such people, their next thought may be, “Now what?”
Retiring can mean more than leaving the full-time workforce. It can sometimes mean loss of purpose, lack of social interaction, and less physical activity and mental stimulation. All of these can diminish a life during what’s supposed to be a happy and rewarding time.
What’s a retiree to do? One possible answer: volunteer.
Key Takeaways
- By volunteering your time, you can fill a void in your life that may be caused by the end of your full-time job.
- Volunteering can involve welcome physical activity and exercise that can help stave off arthritis and cardiovascular problems.
- Volunteering can come with some small tax advantages, and fewer recreational expenditures because you’re busy.
Volunteers can be a boon to the organizations that need them. In fact, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) reports that 85% of charities have no employees. Just as important, volunteering offers some terrific benefits to retirees, too. Keep reading to learn how it might enrich your life.
1. The Mental Health Boost
Volunteering your time can fill a void that can sometimes leave you feeling down. Your employment days may have been full and scheduled down to the minute. The adjustment when that regimen abruptly ends can be difficult.
Volunteering can replace your old responsibilities with new and exciting ones. It can be a source of newfound happiness. The impact of this can be especially agreeable and lasting if you’re giving your time and effort to what you feel is a worthy cause.
“We take pride in our work and many of us tie our identities to our work,” says Nik Agharkar, Esq., owner and managing member at Crowne Point Tax. “We can lose purpose when that stops. Volunteering can add that purpose back to your life.”
Depending on where you volunteer and your responsibilities, you may meet some deadlines and schedule your time again.
It’s been found that this can slow the cognitive decline often associated with life as you age. You might be challenged to learn a few new skills as well to better perform in your role.
The social interactions and new friendships that can arise from volunteering stoke feel-good brain neurotransmitters as well, including dopamine. The Mayo Clinic indicates that those who volunteer are less likely to suffer from anxiety and depression.
2. Positive Effects on Physical Health
Aging brings about many bodily changes. Your volunteer duties may include some physical work and exercise that can mitigate the effects of certain conditions, such as arthritis, and increase cardiovascular capacity. Cardiovascular health goes hand in hand with better mental health, as well.
The activity it involves can help keep weight off (by burning calories and focusing your attention away from eating) and relieve physical symptoms of depression and anxiety.
All told, volunteering could simply help you feel better. It can get you out and about when you might otherwise be sitting on the sofa at home with the remote in your hand.
Fast Fact
An article in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine indicates that volunteering more than 100 hours annually was found to increase lifespan and decrease the risk of dying.
3. New Relationships
When you volunteer, you get to meet new people: those you work with and those you help. These ongoing social interactions can lead to new and lasting friendships.
The impact of meaningful relationships, especially in later years, can have a heartening effect on someone’s view of life and sense of purpose.
The relationships that come out of volunteering can also strengthen a person’s ties to their community. New ties can encourage participation—and reduce isolation—as new acquaintances and friends take on larger roles in someone’s life.
4. New Knowledge
Your volunteering may require you to learn something new or acquire new skills. By doing so, you may add to what you have to offer as a volunteer and improve your volunteering prospects and trajectory.
Learning can also enhance a person’s life by building their confidence. What’s more, there’s the sheer joy felt by many when they encounter new ideas and knowledge or suddenly understand something they’d never grasped before.
5. Financial Benefits
Then, there’s your bank account. Volunteering your time comes with a few financial benefits, although they’re not outright or perhaps as significant as getting a weekly paycheck.
“It might not add money into your bank account, but it can reduce what you’re spending,” Aaron Cirksena points out. Cirksena is the founder and CEO of MDRN Capital. “You’re staying busy, social, and engaged without spending money on entertainment when you’re actively involved with a cause.”
Volunteering can have a few tax advantages, as well. “It doesn’t offer a direct tax deduction,” Cirksena says, “but you can write some things off.”
“Mileage is deductible if you drive to and from a nonprofit. Supplies you purchase for the organization might be deductible as well. It’s not going to move the needle on your tax return, but every bit helps.”
The tax perks come with a good many rules. The charity can’t reimburse you for what you spend, and the organization must be “qualified.” That means that it’s recognized as a 501(c)(3) organization at the federal level, although some organizations can qualify if they’re recognized at the local or state level.
Travel expenses can’t be included if the excursion involves any “personal pleasure, recreation, or vacation,” but otherwise, you can deduct 14 cents per mile for tax year 2025, as well as tolls and parking costs.
Important
You must itemize your deductions on Schedule A of your Form 1040 tax return to claim these deductions. This means foregoing the standard deduction, which could provide a greater deduction from your taxable income unless you have a lot of other itemized expenses to claim as well. You can’t itemize and claim the standard deduction, too.
What Counts As Volunteering?
Yes, running errands for your incapacitated neighbor counts as volunteering. You’re giving something and presumably receiving nothing in return.
A more technical definition of volunteer work is that your good deeds are provided to organizations under defined guidelines. Most importantly, you’re not receiving any form of payment in exchange.
However you decide to volunteer your time and efforts, you may realize valuable and lasting benefits that can enrich your life.
Where to Volunteer?
You might be thinking that some of the above reasons for volunteering sound pretty compelling. So, how do you transition from running your neighbor’s errands to a role as a bona fide volunteer?
Miami Jewish Health suggests first asking yourself what’s most important to you. Poverty issues and homelessness? Animals? Did you spend your working career in a field that has provided you with some unique skills that can help others?
You can narrow your focus when you’ve identified these issues.
“Accounting and a financial background can certainly come in handy if retirees volunteer for their local places of worship’s finance or investment committees,” says Myles McHale, a former financial executive and educator at Cannon Financial Institute.
“Those who have a background in accounting can volunteer at local libraries and help others do their tax returns.”
The list of potential charities is extensive, ranging from soup kitchens and food pantries to certain animal shelters and school systems. So go ahead. Roll up your shirtsleeves.
The Bottom Line
Volunteering doesn’t have to be a major, time-consuming commitment. Even offering an hour or two a week can have positive effects on your physical and mental health.
It can ease the transition from your career to your golden years. It can provide you with a new personal mission and broader purpose in life. You’ll almost certainly meet new people and potential friends along the way.
With all its benefits, volunteering could prove to be a sure way to enrich your life in retirement.