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//// Financial · Retirement
Social Security Claiming Strategy
Claim at 62, 67, or 70? See break-even ages, cumulative lifetime benefits, and the optimal claiming age based on your life expectancy — with spousal benefit analysis.
Where this fits
This tool lives inside Retirement Plan and is most useful for employees.
401(k) Limit 2024$23,000
Roth IRA Limit$7,000
S&P 500 Avg Return~10%/yr
Claiming at 62 vs 70 means a 77% difference in monthly income. The right answer depends on your health, life expectancy, and whether you need the income now. The break-even math is what matters.
Your Social Security Estimate
From your SSA statement — ssa.gov/myaccount
$/mo
FRA: 67 (born 1960+)
Age 62
$1,400
−30% reduced
Age 67 (FRA)
$2,000
full benefit
Age 70
$2,480
+24% max
Break-Even: Wait 62 → 67
Age 79
Live past 79 and claiming at 67 beats 62 in total lifetime income.
Break-Even: Wait 67 → 70
Age 83
Live past 83 and waiting until 70 beats 67 in lifetime income.
Recommendation based on your life expectancy
Claim at Age 67
With average life expectancy (to ~83), claiming at FRA (67) is generally optimal. You reach break-even vs 62 and still collect for 16 years.
Estimated lifetime total: $384K ($2,000/mo × 16 years)
Lifetime Benefit by Claiming Age (to Age 83)
62
$353K
63
$360K
64
$365K
65
$375K
66
$381K
67
$384K
← recommended
68
$389K
69
$390K
70
$387K
Simple cumulative (monthly × 12 × years), not inflation-adjusted or discounted.
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