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Social Security lesson

When to Claim Social Security

A simple example showing how claiming age changes monthly income and estimated lifetime totals.

Example: $2,000 at age 67

Assume the person's full-retirement-age benefit is $2,000 per month at age 67.

Age 62$1,400 monthly$16,800 annually
Age 65About $1,733 monthly$20,796 annually
Age 67$2,000 monthly$24,000 annually
Age 70$2,480 monthly$29,760 annually

How the lifetime estimate works

  1. Assumed lifetime age minus claiming age equals years receiving benefits.
  2. Monthly benefit times 12 equals annual benefit.
  3. Annual benefit times years receiving benefits equals estimated lifetime benefits.

Estimated lifetime benefits

Assumed lifetime ageClaim at 62Claim at 65Claim at 67Claim at 70
75$218,400$207,960$192,000$148,800
80$302,400$311,940$312,000$297,600
85$386,400$415,920$432,000$446,400
90$470,400$519,900$552,000$595,200
95$554,400$623,880$672,000$744,000

Break-even depends on the comparison

There is no single break-even age that applies to everyone. Comparing age 62 with age 67 produces a different crossover point than comparing age 67 with age 70. Taxes, health, work plans, survivor needs, and how benefits are used can also change the decision.

Estimate notice: These examples exclude cost-of-living adjustments, taxes, investment returns, and differences in individual earnings records. Use your personal Social Security statement for an individualized estimate.