Key facts
- Full Retirement Age (FRA) is 67 for anyone born 1960 or later. FRA is 66 + 2 months for those born 1955, sliding up by 2 months per birth year.
- Delaying past FRA earns 8% annual delayed retirement credits, capped at age 70 (no benefit to delaying further).
- Claiming at 62 reduces the monthly benefit by 30% versus FRA. At age 70, the benefit is 124% of FRA.
- The 2026 maximum monthly benefit at age 70 is $5,108. The taxable wage base for Social Security is $176,100.
- A 65-year-old has a 50% chance of living to 84 (men) or 87 (women). The break-even age between claiming at 62 vs 70 is roughly 80–82.
- Surviving spouses get the higher of their own benefit or 100% of the deceased spouse's — making the higher earner's delay decision protect both lifetimes.
- Up to 85% of Social Security is taxable when combined income exceeds $44,000 (MFJ) or $34,000 (single). The thresholds are not indexed to inflation.
- You can withdraw a Social Security claim within 12 months of starting (one-time only) by repaying all benefits received and refiling later.
Common follow-up questions
What is the break-even age for delaying Social Security?
For someone choosing between claiming at 62 versus 70, the cumulative benefit lines cross at roughly age 80. If you live past 80, you collect more by delaying. Past 85, the gap is substantial — often $100,000–$200,000 in lifetime benefits. Healthy 62-year-olds with a family longevity history almost always come out ahead by waiting.
Should I claim early if I have shorter life expectancy?
Yes — if you have a serious medical condition that reduces life expectancy below 75, claiming at 62 typically produces a higher lifetime benefit. The decision is more nuanced for couples: the surviving spouse inherits the higher earner's benefit, so a sick higher-earner may still want to delay to protect the spouse.
Is Social Security going to run out?
The Social Security Trust Fund is projected to be depleted in 2033. After depletion, ongoing payroll taxes are projected to cover about 79% of scheduled benefits, meaning a potential 21% benefit cut absent legislation. Most planning assumes Congress will act before that happens — partial benefit cuts, payroll tax increases, or means-testing are all on the table.
How does working affect Social Security if I claim early?
If you claim before FRA and continue working, the Earnings Test applies. In 2026, $1 of benefits is withheld for every $2 earned above $23,400. In the year you reach FRA, the threshold rises to $62,160 with $1 withheld for every $3. After FRA, no earnings limit applies. Withheld benefits aren't lost — they're recalculated into a higher monthly benefit later.
Should both spouses delay Social Security?
Usually no. The optimal strategy for most couples is the higher-earning spouse delays to 70 (locking in the maximum survivor benefit), while the lower-earning spouse claims at FRA or earlier to provide cash flow. This protects the household: whoever survives gets the larger benefit for life.
When this doesn't apply
These ages and amounts apply to U.S.-citizen retirees with at least 35 years of covered earnings. Government pension offsets, foreign work, divorce, and disability claims follow different rules. Run your own benefit estimate at ssa.gov/myaccount.
Disclaimer: This calculator is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or investment advice. Results are estimates based on the assumptions and inputs provided and are not guaranteed. Actual outcomes may vary. Consult with a qualified financial advisor or tax professional before making any financial decisions.