Most people pick a Social Security claiming age the same way they pick a box of cereal at the grocery store, by reaching for the most familiar option. The default for millions of Americans is age 62, the moment they first qualify. The numbers, however, suggest that decision can quietly cost a retiree more than $100,000 over a typical lifetime, and in some cases considerably more.
The decision is not just about a monthly check. It reshapes spousal benefits, survivor income, the value of an investment portfolio, and how long savings need to stretch. Below is a data-driven breakdown of what claiming at 62, 67, and 70 actually produces, where the break-even ages fall, and the scenarios where waiting genuinely pays off.
The Three Anchor Ages, In Dollars
The Social Security Administration sets three reference points that matter for almost every claimant. Age 62 is the earliest you can file. Age 67 is full retirement age (FRA) for anyone born in 1960 or later. Age 70 is the latest age that delayed retirement credits keep accruing. The maximum monthly benefit in 2026 is $2,969 at age 62, $4,207 at full retirement age, and $5,181 at age 70, according to figures published by the SSA.
Those numbers describe a worker who hit the taxable wage cap (which is $184,500 in 2026) for 35 years. Most claimants will not. The average retired worker collects closer to $2,000 per month, but the proportions are what matter for the timing decision. Filing at 62 instead of 67 triggers a permanent 30% reduction. Waiting from 67 to 70 produces an 8% delayed retirement credit each year, for a 24% boost. Stretched across the full window, the gap between the smallest and largest possible benefit on the same earnings record is roughly 77%.
The $100,000 Math, Spelled Out
Take a worker with a $2,500 primary insurance amount, the benefit they would receive at FRA. Filing at 62 cuts that to $1,750. Waiting until 70 lifts it to $3,100. Over a 20-year retirement that ends at age 82, the cumulative payouts come out roughly like this:
- Claim at 62: $1,750 a month for 20 years equals about $420,000.
- Claim at 67: $2,500 a month for 15 years equals about $450,000.
- Claim at 70: $3,100 a month for 12 years equals about $446,400.
That looks like a wash, but it is not. Push the endpoint to age 90, and the picture changes sharply. The age-62 path delivers about $588,000, the age-67 path about $690,000, and the age-70 path roughly $744,000. The $156,000 spread between filing at 62 and waiting until 70 is the part most people miss. Cost-of-living adjustments magnify the gap further because each annual increase is applied to a larger base.
None of those figures account for taxes, Medicare premium changes, or the value of investing benefits received early, but the headline holds: for retirees who reach a normal life expectancy, the timing decision is a six-figure decision.
Where the Break-Even Ages Actually Fall
The break-even age is the point at which cumulative benefits from a later claim catch up to and surpass cumulative benefits from an earlier claim. According to Charles Schwab, the break-even between filing early and waiting falls in the late 70s or early 80s for most people. The widely cited figures are roughly age 78 for 62 versus 67, age 80 for 62 versus 70, and age 82 for 67 versus 70.
Now compare that to actual longevity. The SSA estimates that a healthy 65-year-old man can expect to live to about 84 and a 65-year-old woman to about 87. For married couples, the probability that at least one spouse reaches 90 is meaningful. In other words, the average claimant clears every break-even age by years, not months. The math favors waiting for most people who are not in poor health.
Health is the variable that flips the verdict. A claimant with a serious medical condition or a family history of early mortality may never reach the break-even point, in which case taking benefits at 62 captures real income that would otherwise vanish. The honest version of the rule is that delay is the right call for the median retiree and the wrong call for the retiree with concrete reasons to expect a shorter life.
Why Spousal And Survivor Benefits Tilt The Decision
Looking at this purely as an individual cash-flow problem misses the point for married couples. A spousal benefit is worth up to 50% of the higher earner’s full retirement age benefit. A survivor benefit, paid after the higher earner dies, can equal 100% of what the deceased spouse was receiving. Both are calculated off the higher earner’s claiming age.
Practically, that means when the higher earner files at 62 and locks in a 30% reduction, the lower-earning spouse is locked into a smaller survivor benefit for the rest of their life. When the higher earner waits until 70, the surviving spouse can step up to a benefit that is 24% larger than the FRA amount. For couples in which one spouse is likely to outlive the other by a decade or more, this single mechanic can be worth tens of thousands of dollars in additional lifetime income.
A common coordinated strategy is for the higher earner to delay to 70 while the lower earner claims earlier, often at FRA. The household gets income flowing while the larger benefit keeps growing, and the survivor inherits the larger check.
The Scenarios Where Claiming At 62 Actually Wins
Waiting is not always the right answer. There are several situations where filing at 62 is the better financial move, and they deserve a clear-eyed look rather than a default delay.
- Health-driven shorter horizon. If a claimant has a serious diagnosis or a strong family history of early mortality and does not expect to reach the late 70s or early 80s, every dollar collected before the break-even point is income that would otherwise be forfeited.
- Forced retirement without savings. Roughly 60% of retirees stop working earlier than planned. A worker pushed out of a job at 62 with limited savings often needs the cash flow more than the optimization.
- Lower-earning spouse coordinating with a delayed higher earner. In a couple, the partner with the smaller earnings record can sometimes claim early while the higher earner waits, since the survivor benefit will eventually be based on the higher record anyway.
- High portfolio confidence. To beat the guaranteed roughly 8% annual increase from delaying, an investor would need to consistently earn 7% to 8% net of taxes on the benefits they take early and reinvest. That is a tall order for most retiree-aged portfolios, but a disciplined investor with a long runway can sometimes make the math work.
The Earnings Test, Quietly Punitive For Early Claimers
Anyone who claims before full retirement age and keeps working should know about the earnings test. In 2026, Social Security withholds $1 of benefits for every $2 earned above $24,360 if the claimant is under FRA for the full year. In the year a worker reaches FRA, the withholding eases to $1 for every $3 earned above $65,160, and stops entirely the month FRA is reached. The withheld amounts are eventually returned through a recalculated benefit, but the early-claim plus continued-work combination usually produces the worst of both worlds, which is reduced benefits now and reduced cash flow today.
How To Approach Your Own Decision
The right way to attack this is to run the numbers on your specific situation, not on a stranger’s hypothetical. The SSA’s my Social Security account gives projected benefit amounts at 62, FRA, and 70 based on the actual earnings record. Verifying that record is worth doing first, because errors are common and they reduce benefits permanently if uncorrected.
From there, the questions that matter are concrete. What is realistic life expectancy given health and family history? Is there a spouse whose survivor benefit depends on this decision? Are there other income sources, such as a 401(k), an IRA, or a pension, that can bridge the gap during a delay? Would continuing to work trigger the earnings test? Is the household tolerance for sequence-of-returns risk in retirement low enough that the inflation-adjusted, government-backed income stream from a larger Social Security check is worth more than the same dollars in a portfolio?
There is one more piece worth knowing. The Social Security Fairness Act, signed in January 2025, eliminated the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset, two rules that had cut benefits for teachers, firefighters, police officers, and federal workers with non-covered pensions. According to the SSA, more than 3.1 million beneficiaries had received roughly $17 billion in adjusted payments by mid-2025. Anyone in a covered occupation who has not seen their benefit recalculated should contact the agency directly.
The Bottom Line For Investors
Social Security is the closest thing most American retirees will ever own to a longevity-protected, inflation-adjusted, government-backed annuity. Claiming at 62 turns that asset into its smallest possible version. Claiming at 70 turns it into its largest. The five- or eight-year difference looks academic in your 60s, and looks decisive in your 80s.
For a healthy single retiree without immediate income needs, delaying typically produces the best lifetime outcome. For a married couple, the higher earner delaying often does even more, because the survivor inherits that larger check. For a retiree with serious health issues or no other income, claiming at 62 can be both rational and necessary. The error to avoid is making this choice on autopilot. The $100,000 figure in the headline is not a worst case, it is a fairly ordinary one for someone who claimed early without doing the math.
image credit: Author
Benzinga Disclaimer: This article is from an unpaid external contributor. It does not represent Benzinga’s reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.
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