When you start claiming Social Security is one of the most consequential financial decisions you’ll make in retirement. The difference between claiming at 62 and 70 can exceed $100,000 in lifetime benefits. This guide covers the math behind claiming decisions, break-even analysis, spousal strategies, and how claiming age affects how much you need to retire.
For a full claiming strategy, benefit formulas, and planning checklist, start with the Social Security master guide.
How Claiming Age Affects Your Benefit
For someone with a Full Retirement Age (FRA) benefit of $2,000/month, here’s how claiming age affects the monthly check:
| Claiming Age | Monthly Benefit | % of FRA Benefit | Annual Benefit | Reduction/Increase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 62 | $1,400 | 70% | $16,800 | -30% (permanent) |
| 63 | $1,500 | 75% | $18,000 | -25% |
| 64 | $1,600 | 80% | $19,200 | -20% |
| 65 | $1,734 | 86.7% | $20,808 | -13.3% |
| 66 | $1,867 | 93.3% | $22,404 | -6.7% |
| 67 (FRA) | $2,000 | 100% | $24,000 | Baseline |
| 68 | $2,160 | 108% | $25,920 | +8% |
| 69 | $2,320 | 116% | $27,840 | +16% |
| 70 | $2,480 | 124% | $29,760 | +24% |
After age 70, there is no additional increase for delaying.
The 24% bonus for waiting until 70 is substantial—an extra $480/month for life compared to claiming at FRA. For many retirees, especially those with adequate retirement savings, this represents the best “investment” available: a guaranteed 8% annual return for each year you delay past full retirement age.
Full Retirement Age by Birth Year
| Birth Year | Full Retirement Age |
|---|---|
| 1943-1954 | 66 |
| 1955 | 66 and 2 months |
| 1956 | 66 and 4 months |
| 1957 | 66 and 6 months |
| 1958 | 66 and 8 months |
| 1959 | 66 and 10 months |
| 1960 or later | 67 |
Break-Even Analysis: When Does Waiting Pay Off?
Claiming at 62 vs. 67 vs. 70
Assuming FRA benefit of $2,000/month:
| Age | Total Received (Claimed at 62) | Total Received (Claimed at 67) | Total Received (Claimed at 70) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 62 | $16,800 | $0 | $0 |
| 65 | $67,200 | $0 | $0 |
| 67 | $100,800 | $24,000 | $0 |
| 70 | $151,200 | $96,000 | $29,760 |
| 75 | $235,200 | $216,000 | $178,560 |
| 78 | $285,600 | $288,000 | $267,840 |
| 80 | $319,200 | $336,000 | $327,360 |
| 82 | $352,800 | $384,000 | $386,880 |
| 85 | $403,200 | $456,000 | $476,160 |
| 90 | $487,200 | $576,000 | $624,960 |
| 95 | $571,200 | $696,000 | $773,760 |
Break-Even Points
| Comparison | Break-Even Age | If You Live Past This, Waiting Wins |
|---|---|---|
| 62 vs. 67 | ~78 | Waiting to 67 pays more |
| 62 vs. 70 | ~80-81 | Waiting to 70 pays more |
| 67 vs. 70 | ~82 | Waiting to 70 pays more |
The average 62-year-old is expected to live to about age 83-85, which means waiting tends to pay off for most people.
Claiming Strategy Recommendations
| Situation | Best Strategy | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Excellent health, family longevity | Wait until 70 | Maximize lifetime benefits |
| Average health | Wait until 67-70 | Break even by 80-82 |
| Poor health or terminal illness | Claim at 62 | Maximize total received |
| Spouse earns significantly more | Lower earner claim early, higher earner wait | Maximizes survivor benefits |
| Need income to survive | Claim when needed | No point in going into debt to delay |
| Still working at 62-66 | Wait (earnings test reduces benefits) | Benefits withheld if earning too much |
| Large retirement savings | Wait until 70 | Use savings to bridge, then get higher SS |
| Little savings, no pension | Consider 62-64 | May need income immediately |
The Earnings Test (Working While Claiming Before FRA)
If you claim Social Security before FRA and still work:
| Your Age | Earnings Limit (2026) | Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Under FRA all year | ~$24,480 | $1 withheld per $2 over limit |
| Year you reach FRA | ~$65,160 | $1 withheld per $3 over limit |
| FRA or older | No limit | No reduction |
Important: Withheld benefits aren’t lost permanently — they’re added back to your benefit at FRA.
Spousal Claiming Strategies
Spousal Benefit Rules
| Rule | Detail |
|---|---|
| Spousal benefit amount | Up to 50% of higher earner’s FRA benefit |
| When available | After higher earner files (or at age 62) |
| Reduced for early claiming | Yes, reduced if claimed before FRA |
| Both benefits available? | You get the higher of your own or spousal benefit |
Survivor Benefit Rules
| Rule | Detail |
|---|---|
| Survivor benefit amount | 100% of deceased spouse’s benefit |
| Earliest claiming age | 60 (or 50 if disabled) |
| Reduced for early claiming | Yes, reduced before FRA |
| Strategy impact | Higher earner waiting = higher survivor benefit |
Optimal Spousal Strategy
| Situation | Strategy |
|---|---|
| Similar earnings | Both wait as long as possible |
| One earner much higher | Higher earner wait to 70 (protects survivor), lower earner can claim earlier |
| Both low earners | Both claim at FRA or earlier if needed |
| Large age gap | Consider timing benefits for maximum overlap |
Social Security Taxation
| Filing Status | Combined Income* | % of SS Benefits Taxed |
|---|---|---|
| Single | Under $25,000 | 0% |
| Single | $25,000-$34,000 | Up to 50% |
| Single | Over $34,000 | Up to 85% |
| Married filing jointly | Under $32,000 | 0% |
| Married filing jointly | $32,000-$44,000 | Up to 50% |
| Married filing jointly | Over $44,000 | Up to 85% |
*Combined income = AGI + nontaxable interest + 50% of Social Security benefits
How to Minimize SS Taxes
- Roth conversions before claiming (Roth withdrawals don’t count as income)
- Manage other income sources to stay below thresholds
- Consider which accounts to draw from in each year
- Municipal bond interest can push you over (it counts for combined income!)
Common Social Security Mistakes
- Claiming at 62 without analysis: The permanent reduction seems small monthly but compounds over decades
- Ignoring spousal/survivor benefits: The higher earner’s decision affects the surviving spouse
- Working while claiming early: Earnings test can eliminate most of your benefit
- Not checking your statement: Errors in your earnings record affect your benefit calculation
- Forgetting about Medicare: Medicare Part B starts at 65 regardless of when you claim SS
The average retirement age in the US is 62.6 — most Americans claim Social Security before their full benefit age, permanently locking in a reduced payment.
For more on Social Security, see the Social Security hub.
For more on Social Security, see the Social Security hub.
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