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The Social Security Break-Even Calculator determines the age at which delaying Social Security benefits becomes financially advantageous compared to claiming earlier. You can begin claiming benefits as early as age 62 (with a permanent reduction of up to 30% from your full benefit), at your Full Retirement Age (FRA) of 67 for those born in 1960 or later, or delay until age 70 to receive delayed retirement credits of 8% per year above your FRA benefit. The break-even point is the age at which the cumulative total received from a later claiming strategy surpasses the cumulative total from an earlier strategy. This analysis is critical for retirement planning because the difference between claiming at 62 versus 70 can amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars over a lifetime, depending on longevity.
Break-Even Age = Age where Cumulative Benefits (Later Start) = Cumulative Benefits (Earlier Start). Cumulative Benefits at age A = Monthly Benefit x 12 x (A - Claiming Age). With COLA: sum of Monthly Benefit x (1 + COLA)^(year - start year) x 12
- 1Enter your Primary Insurance Amount (PIA), which is the monthly benefit you would receive at your Full Retirement Age (67 for birth year 1960+). You can find this on your Social Security Statement at ssa.gov/myaccount.
- 2The calculator applies the early filing reduction: claiming at 62 reduces your PIA by 30% (5/9 of 1% per month for the first 36 months early, plus 5/12 of 1% for each additional month). Claiming at 63 reduces by 25%, at 64 by 20%, at 65 by 13.33%, at 66 by 6.67%.
- 3The calculator applies delayed retirement credits for claiming after FRA: 8% per year (2/3 of 1% per month) for each year of delay past 67, up to age 70. Delaying to 70 gives a 24% increase over the FRA amount.
- 4Choose two or three claiming ages to compare (typically 62, 67, and 70). The calculator computes monthly benefit amounts for each scenario after applying reductions or credits.
- 5Annual Cost-of-Living Adjustments (COLAs) are applied to project future benefits. You can use the historical average (~2.5%) or enter a custom assumption. COLA applies starting at age 62 regardless of when you claim, so delayed claimers benefit from COLA on a higher base.
- 6The calculator generates cumulative benefit curves showing when the later-claiming strategy overtakes the earlier one. The intersection point is your break-even age.
- 7Optionally apply a discount rate to account for the time value of money (what you could earn investing early benefits). This shifts the break-even age later, since early dollars have more investment potential.
At 62: $2,500 x 70% = $1,750/month ($21,000/year). At 67: $2,500/month ($30,000/year). By 67, the early claimer has collected $21,000 x 5 = $105,000. The late claimer catches up at $9,000/year more ($30,000 - $21,000). $105,000 / $9,000 = 11.67 years past 67, so break-even is at age 78.67.
At 62: $3,000 x 70% = $2,100/month base. At 70: $3,000 x 124% = $3,720/month base. Both receive COLA increases, but the higher base at 70 means COLA adds more absolute dollars each year. By age 80.5, cumulative benefits from claiming at 70 surpass those from 62.
At 67: $2,800/month. At 70: $2,800 x 124% = $3,472/month. The delayed claimer gives up 3 years of benefits ($2,800 x 12 x 3 = $100,800 base) to earn $672/month more forever. With COLA compounding on the higher base, break-even occurs around 82.25.
When early benefits are assumed to be invested at 5%, the time value of money pushes the break-even point later. The early claimer not only collects 5 extra years of checks but earns returns on that money. This makes delaying less attractive unless you expect to live well into your mid-80s.
Couples planning retirement income by coordinating one spouse's early filing with the other's delayed filing to maximize both lifetime and survivor benefits.
Early retirees at 62 deciding whether they need Social Security income immediately or can bridge the gap with savings and delay for a permanently higher benefit.
Financial advisors modeling different claiming strategies for clients based on health status, other income sources, and risk tolerance.
Workers evaluating whether to continue working past 62 to increase their Social Security benefit through both delayed credits and potentially replacing lower-earning years in their top-35 calculation.
Widows and widowers determining whether to claim survivor benefits early (available at 60) and switch to their own higher benefit later, or vice versa.
Survivor Benefits Strategy
A surviving spouse can claim survivor benefits as early as age 60 (50 if disabled). The optimal strategy often involves the lower earner claiming their own reduced benefit at 62, then switching to the higher survivor benefit when their spouse passes. Alternatively, claiming the survivor benefit first and delaying your own benefit to 70 can maximize lifetime income. Survivor benefits equal 100% of the deceased's benefit (including any delayed retirement credits) if claimed at FRA, or reduced if claimed earlier.
Government Pension Offset (GPO) and WEP
If you receive a pension from work not covered by Social Security (many state/local government employees, some foreign pensions), the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) may reduce your Social Security benefit by up to $587.50/month (2025). The GPO reduces spousal/survivor benefits by two-thirds of your government pension. These provisions can dramatically change the break-even calculation and should be factored in if applicable.
Divorce and Social Security
If you were married for 10+ years and are currently unmarried, you may claim spousal benefits based on your ex-spouse's record (up to 50% of their PIA at your FRA). This does not reduce your ex-spouse's benefit. You can also claim survivor benefits on a deceased ex-spouse's record. If your own benefit is higher, you receive your own benefit instead. This can significantly affect break-even analysis for divorced individuals.
| Claiming Age | % of PIA | Monthly Benefit (if PIA = $3,000) | Reduction/Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| 62 | 70.0% | $2,100 | -30.0% |
| 63 | 75.0% | $2,250 | -25.0% |
| 64 | 80.0% | $2,400 | -20.0% |
| 65 | 86.67% | $2,600 | -13.33% |
| 66 | 93.33% | $2,800 | -6.67% |
| 67 (FRA) | 100.0% | $3,000 | 0% |
| 68 | 108.0% | $3,240 | +8.0% |
| 69 | 116.0% | $3,480 | +16.0% |
| 70 | 124.0% | $3,720 | +24.0% |
What is the average break-even age for 62 vs 67?
Without considering COLA or investment returns, the simple break-even for claiming at 62 vs 67 is approximately 78-80. With typical 2.5% COLA, it shifts to about 79-81. With investment returns factored in, it pushes to 82-85. The actual average life expectancy for a 62-year-old in the U.S. is about 84 (men) and 87 (women).
Does working while collecting Social Security reduce my benefit?
Before FRA, the earnings test reduces benefits by $1 for every $2 earned above $23,400 (2025 limit). In the year you reach FRA, $1 is withheld per $3 earned above $62,160. After FRA, there is no earnings test. Benefits withheld due to the earnings test are restored (benefit is recalculated higher) after you reach FRA, so you eventually recover the withheld amounts.
Can I change my mind after claiming Social Security?
Within 12 months of starting benefits, you can withdraw your application (Form SSA-521) and repay all benefits received. You can then refile later at a higher benefit. After 12 months, you cannot withdraw, but you can voluntarily suspend benefits at FRA to earn delayed retirement credits of 8%/year until 70.
How does claiming affect my spouse's benefits?
Your claiming age does not affect your living spouse's retirement benefit, but it directly impacts the survivor benefit. If you die, your surviving spouse receives the higher of their own benefit or yours (including any delayed retirement credits). Delaying your claim to 70 can significantly increase the survivor benefit for your lower-earning spouse.
Should I claim early if I have health problems?
If you have a shortened life expectancy (due to terminal illness, serious chronic conditions, etc.), claiming at 62 may be advisable since you may not live to the break-even age. However, consider your spouse's survivor benefit, as delaying increases the benefit your surviving spouse would receive for the rest of their life.
Pro Tips
For married couples, focus on maximizing the higher earner's benefit by delaying to 70. The higher benefit becomes the survivor benefit when one spouse passes, providing longevity protection for the surviving spouse. The lower earner can often claim at 62 or FRA to provide income during the delay period. This strategy maximizes the household's lifetime Social Security income in most scenarios.
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The first Social Security check was issued to Ida May Fuller of Ludlow, Vermont on January 31, 1940, for $22.54. She had paid only $24.75 in Social Security taxes over three years of work. She lived to age 100, collecting $22,888.92 in total benefits, a return of over 92,000% on her contributions. Her case is an extreme example of why longevity is the most important factor in the break-even analysis.