The age at which you decide to claim your Social Security benefits largely determines how much money you’ll receive for the rest of your life, which is no small feat, because all your living expenses will depend on that money in the golden years to come.
The final amount is determined by the Social Security Administration using a formula that weights taxable income over the worker’s longest working life, typically 35 years. This base calculation is adjusted annually through a Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA, which was 2.5% this year), designed to offset the effects of inflation on retirees’ purchasing power.
How to decide the age to claim Social Security
First, the age at which you decide to start receiving your retirement benefits depends on your financial circumstances and overall health. This determines whether you’re able (or willing) to continue working, or whether you feel ready to delegate your work to the next generation and move toward the joy of not having to go back to the office.
Benefits are not distributed evenly; there are three crucial ages that determine the value of the monthly benefit. Age 62 is the earliest opportunity to apply for retirement, although with a permanent reduction in the allowance.
On the other hand, the Full Retirement Age (FRA) is 67 for individuals born in 1960 or later, at which point 100% of the calculated benefit is received. Finally, postponing the claim beyond the FRA, until age 70, results in a substantial monthly increase due to the accumulation of delay credits.
Reaching the Maximum Social Security Benefit in 2025
To be eligible to claim the maximum benefit, two specific conditions must be met during one’s career. First, the worker must have earned income equal to or greater than the maximum wage subject to Social Security taxes, which is set at $176,100 per year in 2025.
Second, they must have accumulated at least 35 years of work history at those levels of pay. Failure to meet any of these criteria will result in a monthly benefit calculation that is lower than the allowable limit.
Now, let’s look at the maximum amounts by retirement age:
- A beneficiary who chooses to retire at the minimum age of 62 will receive a monthly payment of $2,831. A 30% penalty applies for early retirement.
- Those who wait until their Full Retirement Age of 67 will be eligible for the full calculated benefit, with no reductions for early retirement. For this group, the maximum monthly payment will be set at $4,018. This is 100% of the corresponding amount, with no reductions for early retirement.
- The absolute maximum is reserved for individuals who defer claiming their benefits until age 70. In these cases, the monthly floor rises to $5,108. For each year a beneficiary delays claiming, beyond the FRA, the SSA will add 8% to their maximum retirement benefit. It won’t grow beyond 70.
The contrast of the average retirement
The reality for most retirees differs markedly from the maximum figures. Average benefits, which represent what the typical population receives, are considerably lower. After the 2025 COLA adjustment, the average monthly benefit for a retired worker is $1,976.
For beneficiaries in a married couple where both spouses receive payments, the combined average will be $3,089 per month. Other groups show a different set of realities: widowed beneficiaries without children will receive an average of $1,832, while workers receiving disability benefits will receive an average of $1,580 per month. A household consisting of a widowed mother and two children could receive up to $3,761 per month.