Social Security is one of the largest sources of retirement income for most Americans. Understanding how it works — and when to claim — can be the difference between tens of thousands of dollars over your lifetime.
This guide explains how Social Security benefits are calculated, when you can start collecting, and how to make the best claiming decision for your situation.
What Is Social Security?
Social Security is a federal program funded by payroll taxes. During your working years, you and your employer each pay 6.2% of your wages into Social Security (self-employed people pay the full 12.4%). When you retire, become disabled, or die, the program pays benefits to you or your eligible family members.
How Are Social Security Benefits Calculated?
Your benefit amount is based on your earnings history. The Social Security Administration (SSA) takes your highest 35 years of earnings, adjusts them for inflation, and applies a formula to calculate your primary insurance amount (PIA) — the monthly benefit you receive if you claim at your full retirement age.
You need at least 40 credits (roughly 10 years of work) to qualify for retirement benefits. In 2026, you earn one credit for each $1,730 in covered earnings, up to four credits per year.
What Is Full Retirement Age?
Your full retirement age (FRA) depends on when you were born:
- Born 1943–1954: FRA is 66
- Born 1955–1959: FRA rises gradually (66 and 2 months for 1955, up to 66 and 10 months for 1959)
- Born 1960 or later: FRA is 67
If you claim benefits at your FRA, you receive 100% of your PIA. Claiming earlier or later changes the monthly amount.
When Can You Start Claiming?
You can claim Social Security retirement benefits as early as age 62. But claiming before your FRA permanently reduces your monthly benefit. Claiming after FRA permanently increases it.
How Claiming Age Affects Your Benefit
For someone with an FRA of 67:
- Claim at 62: benefit reduced by about 30%
- Claim at 64: benefit reduced by about 20%
- Claim at 66: benefit reduced by about 6.7%
- Claim at 67 (FRA): 100% of PIA
- Claim at 68: benefit increased by 8%
- Claim at 69: benefit increased by 16%
- Claim at 70: benefit increased by 24%
Benefits do not increase after age 70. There is no reason to delay past 70.
Should You Claim Early or Wait?
There is no single right answer. It depends on your health, financial needs, and other retirement income sources.
Reasons to Claim Early (Age 62)
- You need the income now and have no other options
- Your health is poor and life expectancy is shorter than average
- You have limited other retirement assets
Reasons to Delay (Until 67 or 70)
- You are healthy and expect to live into your 80s or beyond
- You have savings or other income to bridge the gap
- You are still working — benefits claimed before FRA are reduced if you earn over a certain threshold
- Your spouse may rely on your benefit — higher benefits mean larger survivor benefits too
The “break-even” point for delaying from 62 to 70 is typically around age 80. If you live past 80, waiting pays off. If you do not, claiming early may have been the better financial move.
Working While Collecting Social Security
If you claim benefits before your FRA and continue working, your benefits are temporarily reduced if you earn over certain limits. In 2026, you lose $1 in benefits for every $2 you earn above $22,320. In the year you reach FRA, the limit is higher and the reduction is smaller.
After you reach FRA, there is no earnings limit. You can work and collect your full Social Security benefit at the same time.
Taxes on Social Security Benefits
Depending on your total income, up to 85% of your Social Security benefits may be taxable at the federal level. States vary — some tax Social Security benefits and some do not.
If your combined income (adjusted gross income plus nontaxable interest plus half of your Social Security benefits) is below $25,000 for single filers or $32,000 for married couples filing jointly, your benefits are not taxed.
Spousal and Survivor Benefits
Spouses may claim benefits based on their own work record or up to 50% of their spouse’s full retirement benefit, whichever is higher. To claim spousal benefits, you must be at least 62 and your spouse must have already claimed their own benefit.
Survivor benefits allow a widow or widower to receive up to 100% of their deceased spouse’s benefit, depending on the survivor’s age at the time of claiming. This is one reason delaying your own benefit can be valuable — it increases the survivor benefit for your spouse.
How to Check Your Estimated Benefit
Create a free account at ssa.gov/myaccount to see your full earnings history and estimated benefits at different claiming ages. Review it annually to catch any errors in your record. Mistakes in your earnings history can reduce your benefit.
Key Strategies to Maximize Social Security
- Work at least 35 years. Each zero-earnings year in your record reduces your average.
- Delay to 70 if possible. An 8% per year guaranteed increase for delaying is hard to beat.
- Coordinate with a spouse. If one spouse has a much higher benefit, that person should delay as long as possible to maximize both the monthly payment and the future survivor benefit.
- Do not claim while working and under FRA unless you need the money — the earnings test temporarily reduces your benefit.
Final Thoughts
Social Security is a significant part of retirement planning and deserves careful thought. The claiming decision is one of the few retirement choices that is truly permanent. Understand your options, run the numbers, and consider working with a fee-only financial advisor if the decision is complex for your household situation.
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