This summer, at dinner with her best friend, Jacki Barden raised an uncomfortable topic: the possibility that she might die alone.
鈥淚 have no children, no husband, no siblings,鈥 Barden remembered saying. 鈥淲ho鈥檚 going to hold my hand while I die?鈥
Barden, 75, never had children. She鈥檚 lived on her own in western Massachusetts since her husband passed away in 2003. 鈥淵ou hit a point in your life when you鈥檙e not climbing up anymore, you鈥檙e climbing down,鈥 she told me. 鈥淵ou start thinking about what it's going to be like at the end.鈥
It鈥檚 something that many older adults who live alone 鈥 a growing population, 鈥 wonder about. Many have family and friends they can turn to. But some have no spouse or children, have relatives who live far away, or are estranged from remaining family members. Others have lost dear friends they once depended on to advanced age and illness.
More than 15 million people 55 or older don鈥檛 have a spouse or biological children; nearly 2 million have no family members at all.

Still other older adults have become isolated due to sickness, frailty, or disability. Between , who do not live in nursing homes, aren't in regular contact with other people. And research shows that isolation becomes even more common as death draws near.
Who will be there for these solo agers as their lives draw to a close? How many of them will die without people they know and care for by their side?
Unfortunately, we have no idea: National surveys don鈥檛 capture information about who鈥檚 with older adults when they die. But dying alone is a growing concern as more seniors age on their own after widowhood or divorce, or remain single or childless, according to demographers, medical researchers, and physicians who care for older people.
鈥淲e鈥檝e always seen patients who were essentially by themselves when they transition into end-of-life care,鈥 said Jairon Johnson, the medical director of hospice and palliative care for Presbyterian Healthcare Services, the largest health care system in New Mexico. 鈥淏ut they weren鈥檛 as common as they are now.鈥
Attention to the potentially fraught consequences of dying alone surged during the covid-19 pandemic, when families were shut out of hospitals and nursing homes as older relatives passed away. But it鈥檚 largely fallen off the radar since then.
For many people, including health care practitioners, the prospect provokes a feeling of abandonment. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 imagine what it鈥檚 like, on top of a terminal illness, to think I鈥檓 dying and I have no one,鈥 said Sarah Cross, an assistant professor of palliative medicine at Emory University School of Medicine.
Cross鈥 research shows that more people die at home now than in any other setting. While hundreds of hospitals have 鈥淣o One Dies Alone鈥 programs, which match volunteers with people in their final days, similar services aren鈥檛 generally available for people at home.
Alison Butler, 65, is an end-of-life doula who lives and works in the Washington, D.C., area. She helps people and those close to them navigate the dying process. She also has lived alone for 20 years. In a lengthy conversation, Butler admitted that being alone at life鈥檚 end seems like a form of rejection. She choked back tears as she spoke about possibly feeling her life 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 and didn鈥檛 matter deeply鈥 to anyone.

Without reliable people around to assist terminally ill adults, there鈥檚 also an elevated risk of self-neglect and deteriorating well-being. Most seniors don鈥檛 have enough money to pay for assisted living or help at home if they lose the ability to shop, bathe, dress, or move around the house.
Nearly $1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid planned under President Donald Trump鈥檚 tax and spending law, previously known as the 鈥淥ne Big Beautiful Bill Act,鈥 probably will , economists and policy experts predict. Medicare, the government鈥檚 health insurance program for seniors, generally doesn鈥檛 pay for home-based services; Medicaid is the primary source of this kind of help for people who don鈥檛 have financial resources. But states may be forced to eviscerate Medicaid home-based care programs as federal funding diminishes.
鈥淚鈥檓 really scared about what鈥檚 going to happen,鈥 said Bree Johnston, a geriatrician and the director of palliative care at Skagit Regional Health in northwestern Washington state. She predicted that more terminally ill seniors who live alone will end up dying in hospitals, rather than in their homes, because they鈥檒l lack essential services.
鈥淗ospitals are often not the most humane place to die,鈥 Johnston said.
While is an alternative paid for by Medicare, it too often falls short for terminally ill older adults who are alone. (Hospice serves people whose life expectancy is six months or less.) For one thing, hospice is underused: Fewer than half of older adults under age 85 take advantage of hospice services.
Also, 鈥渕any people think, wrongly, that hospice agencies are going to provide person power on the ground and help with all those functional problems that come up for people at the end of life,鈥 said Ashwin Kotwal, an associate professor of medicine in the division of geriatrics at the University of California-San Francisco School of Medicine.
Instead, agencies usually provide only intermittent care and rely heavily on family caregivers to offer needed assistance with activities such as bathing and eating. Some hospices won鈥檛 even accept people who don鈥檛 have caregivers, Kotwal noted.
That leaves hospitals. If seniors are lucid, staffers can talk to them about their priorities and walk them through medical decisions that lie ahead, said Paul DeSandre, the chief of palliative and supportive care at Grady Health System in Atlanta.
If they鈥檙e delirious or unconscious, which is often the case, staffers normally try to identify someone who can discuss what this senior might have wanted at the end of life and possibly serve as a surrogate decision-maker. Most states have laws specifying default surrogates, usually family members, for people who haven鈥檛 named decision-makers in advance.
If all efforts fail, the hospital will go to court to petition for guardianship, and the patient will become a ward of the state, which will assume legal oversight of end-of-life decision-making.
In extreme cases, when no one comes forward, someone who has died alone may be classified as 鈥渦nclaimed鈥 and buried in a common grave. This, too, is an increasingly common occurrence, according to 鈥淭he Unclaimed: Abandonment and Hope in the City of Angels,鈥 a book about this phenomenon, published last year.
Shoshana Ungerleider, a physician, founded End Well, an organization committed to improving end-of-life experiences. She suggested people make concerted efforts to identify seniors who live alone and are seriously ill early and provide them with expanded support. Stay in touch with them regularly through calls, video, or text messages, she said.
And don鈥檛 assume all older adults have the same priorities for end-of-life care. They don鈥檛.
Barden, the widow in Massachusetts, for instance, has focused on preparing in advance: All her financial and legal arrangements are in order and funeral arrangements are made.
鈥淚鈥檝e been very blessed in life: We have to look back on what we have to be grateful for and not dwell on the bad part,鈥 she told me. As for imagining her life鈥檚 end, she said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 going to be what it is. We have no control over any of that stuff. I guess I鈥檇 like someone with me, but I don鈥檛 know how it鈥檚 going to work out.鈥

Some people want to die as they鈥檝e lived 鈥 on their own. Among them is 80-year-old Elva Roy, founder of Age-Friendly Arlington, Texas, who has lived alone for 30 years after two divorces.
When I reached out, she told me she鈥檇 thought long and hard about dying alone and is toying with the idea of medically assisted death, perhaps in Switzerland, if she becomes terminally ill. It鈥檚 one way to retain a sense of control and independence that鈥檚 sustained her as a solo ager.
鈥淵ou know, I don鈥檛 want somebody by my side if I鈥檓 emaciated or frail or sickly,鈥 Roy said. 鈥淚 would not feel comforted by someone being there holding my hand or wiping my brow or watching me suffer. I鈥檓 really OK with dying by myself.鈥
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