When to claim Social Security is one of the highest-stakes retirement decisions a US worker makes — and one of the most-debated. The math says delay; the emotion often says claim early. The right answer for any individual depends on health, marital status, longevity expectations, and other income sources.
Here's the 2026 framework.
What changed in 2026
- 2026 COLA is 2.5% announced October 2025, in line with broad inflation. Benefits keep pace; don't gain ground.
- Full retirement age (FRA) for those born 1960 or later is 67. Early claim still possible at 62 with reduction; delayed credits still earn 8% per year up to age 70.
- Trust fund reform discussions ongoing through 2026 — current projections show full benefits payable through ~2034 absent legislative action; the political reality is reform of some kind likely before then.
The basic numbers (for FRA 67)
If your benefit at FRA (67) is $2,000/month:
- Claim at 62: $1,400/month (-30%)
- Claim at 65: $1,733/month (-13%)
- Claim at 67 (FRA): $2,000/month
- Claim at 70: $2,480/month (+24%)
That's a 77% bump from age 62 to age 70. Compounded across 20–30 years of retirement, the difference is substantial.
Break-even math
How long do you need to live for delaying to pay off?
Claiming at 62 vs claiming at 70:
- Annual benefit at 62: $16,800
- Annual benefit at 70: $29,760
- 8-year head start at 62 = $134,400 received before claim at 70
- Annual gap from 70 onwards: $12,960
- Break-even age: 62 + 8 + ($134,400 / $12,960) ≈ 80.4 years old
For most healthy people, life expectancy at age 70 is about 86 (men) to 89 (women). So delaying past 70 typically pays off.
When claiming early at 62 makes sense
- You expect to live below 80 (specific health condition or family history)
- You need the income to avoid drawing down high-cost portfolio assets in a market downturn
- You're a non-working spouse and the household needs cash flow
- You want to fund leisure activities while in good health
When delaying to 70 makes sense
- Healthy, expecting to live to mid-80s+
- Married — and you're the higher earner (survivor benefit)
- Have other income sources to bridge from retirement to age 70
- Want longevity insurance against living to 95+
Spousal and survivor coordination
For married couples:
- The lower-earning spouse can claim a spousal benefit equal to up to 50% of the higher-earner's FRA benefit
- When one spouse dies, the survivor receives the higher of the two benefits (own benefit or survivor benefit based on spouse's record)
- Therefore the higher earner's claim age determines what the surviving spouse receives — biggest argument for the higher earner to delay
If the higher-earner delayed to 70 and dies at 80, the surviving spouse receives the delayed benefit ($29,760) for the rest of their life rather than the FRA benefit ($24,000) or the early claim ($16,800).
Working while collecting
If you claim before FRA and continue working:
- Earnings limit in 2026: ~$22,500. Above this, $1 of benefits withheld for every $2 earned.
- In year you reach FRA, limit rises to ~$60,500 with $1 withheld for every $3 earned.
- After FRA, no earnings limit.
The withheld benefits aren't lost forever — they're recouped via increased benefits later. But cash flow matters in the meantime.
The trust fund question
Social Security trust fund projected depletion year is 2034 in current projections. Without legislative changes, scheduled benefits would reduce to 80% of promised levels at depletion.
Realistically, every prior round of trust fund worry has been resolved by Congress (raising payroll tax cap, raising FRA, modest benefit cuts). Most realistic plans assume some combination of those changes by ~2030. Don't plan for zero benefits, but also don't assume 100% indefinitely.
Comparison: claim ages
| Claim age |
Monthly benefit (FRA $2,000) |
Break-even vs 62 |
Break-even vs 70 |
| 62 |
$1,400 |
— |
— |
| 65 |
$1,733 |
~76 yrs |
— |
| 67 (FRA) |
$2,000 |
~78 yrs |
— |
| 70 |
$2,480 |
~80 yrs |
— |
FAQ
Should I claim early to invest the proceeds?
Almost never. Social Security is an inflation-adjusted annuity backed by the federal government. Replicating it via a private SPIA at the comparable benefit level is significantly more expensive than what delaying provides.
What if I'm divorced?
You can claim ex-spouse benefits if marriage was 10+ years and you're unmarried. Doesn't reduce ex-spouse's benefit. Survivor benefits also available if ex-spouse dies.
Does delaying after FRA still earn 8% credits?
Yes, until age 70. After 70, no further increases for delaying. Almost no reason to delay past 70.
Where to go next
For related guides see FIRE movement explained for 2026, Retirement bucket strategy for 2026, and Annuities explained for 2026.