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Social Security Timing

jJ_Chub·Updated Feb 2026

Benefit Calculation

Social Security benefits vary based on claiming age relative to Full Retirement Age (FRA). Benefits are reduced for early claiming and increased for delayed claiming:

Benefit Adjustment by Claiming Age (FRA = 67)
Claiming Age Monthly Benefit % of FRA
62 $1,400 70%
65 $1,733 86.7%
67 (FRA) $2,000 100%
70 $2,480 124%

Example based on $2,000 FRA benefit. Actual benefits depend on earnings history.

delay_benefit = 8% per year from FRA to 70 | early_reduction = ~6.67% per year from FRA to 62

Guaranteed Return: Delaying from 62 to 70 increases monthly benefit by 77%. This represents an ~8% annual guaranteed return — difficult to match with market investments, and impossible to match with the same risk-free profile.

Two features make Social Security uniquely valuable that break-even analysis misses:

Break-Even Analysis

The break-even age is when cumulative benefits from delayed claiming exceed cumulative benefits from early claiming. But break-even framing is subtly misleading — it treats Social Security as a gamble on lifespan rather than insurance against living too long:

Longevity Context: Life expectancy for a 65-year-old is approximately 85 (male) to 87 (female). Most retirees live past break-even age, meaning delayed claiming typically maximizes lifetime benefits.

Insurance vs. Investment Framing: You don't buy homeowner's insurance hoping your house burns down. Similarly, Social Security delay isn't about "winning" by living long — it's about protection if you do. The worst financial outcome isn't dying early (your heirs get your assets). It's living to 95 with depleted savings.

Factors Favoring Early Claiming (62-66)

Factors Favoring Delayed Claiming (67-70)

Survivor Benefits: Surviving spouse receives the larger of the two benefits. Higher earner delaying maximizes this insurance value for the couple.

Spousal Coordination Strategies

For married couples, claiming decisions should be coordinated:

Try It

Compare claiming Social Security at 62 vs 67 vs 70 for someone with $2,500 FRA benefit and $1M portfolio.