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Social Security at 62, 67, or 70? Here's How to Actually Decide

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$100k+ Lifetime difference between claiming at 62 vs. 70
70% Benefit at 62 vs. full retirement age
124% Benefit at 70 vs. full retirement age

The Most Expensive Decision You'll Make in Retirement

When to claim Social Security might be the single biggest financial decision you make in retirement. We're talking about a choice that can mean a difference of $100,000 or more over your lifetime. And yet most people spend more time deciding which TV to buy.

I get it. The Social Security website is confusing. Your neighbor told you to claim early. Your brother-in-law says wait until 70. And every online calculator gives you a different answer.

Let me try to cut through the noise.

The Basic Math

Your "full retirement age" (FRA) is somewhere between 66 and 67, depending on when you were born. That's when you get 100% of your calculated benefit.

70% Claim at 62 — permanently reduced
100% Claim at FRA (age 67 for most)
124% Claim at 70 — permanently increased

So if your full benefit is $2,500/month, you're choosing between roughly $1,750 at 62, $2,500 at 67, or $3,100 at 70. Every month. For the rest of your life.

The Break-Even Analysis

The classic way to think about this is break-even analysis: at what age does the person who waited end up with more total money than the person who claimed early?

Cumulative Social Security Benefits by Claiming Age

$0 $250k $500k $750k 62 67 70 78 82 90 Break-even ~age 80 Claim at 62 Claim at 67 Claim at 70

The break-even point between claiming at 62 and waiting until 70 is typically around age 80. If you live past 80 — and statistically, most healthy 62-year-olds will — delaying pays off. Often by a lot.

But It's Not Just About the Math

Here's where most online advice falls short. The "right" age to claim depends on your whole picture:

  • Your health. If you have serious health concerns, claiming earlier can make sense. But be honest with yourself — people consistently underestimate how long they'll live.
  • Your spouse. If you're the higher earner, delaying benefits can significantly increase your spouse's survivor benefit. This is huge and often overlooked.
  • Your other income. If you have a pension or other guaranteed income, you might be able to afford to wait. If you have nothing else, early claiming might be necessary.
  • Taxes. Social Security benefits can be taxable. The timing interacts with your other income sources in ways that matter.
  • Your bridge strategy. Can you create a temporary income stream to cover expenses while you delay?

The Spousal Strategy Most People Miss

Survivor Benefit Impact

When one spouse dies, the surviving spouse keeps the higher of the two benefits. If you're the higher earner and you claim at 62, you're not just reducing your own benefit — you're potentially reducing your spouse's income for the rest of their life.

I've seen this scenario play out too many times. The husband claims early, passes away at 78, and the wife is stuck with a permanently reduced survivor benefit for the next 15 years. It doesn't have to be that way.

What I Tell My Clients

There's no universal right answer. But in my experience working with pre-retirees here in Orange County, most people benefit from waiting at least until their full retirement age. And if you can swing it, waiting until 70 often turns out to be the best financial decision you'll ever make.

The Key Insight

The key is having a plan that covers the gap years between when you stop working and when you start collecting. That's where smart income planning makes all the difference.

Want to run your own numbers? I do this analysis for people all the time — it takes about 20 minutes and the clarity is worth it. Give me a call or shoot me an email. No pressure, no sales pitch.

Ready to build your retirement income plan?

Johnny Hong has helped hundreds of Orange County families retire with confidence. A focused 30-minute conversation can help you see your next best move clearly.

Schedule a Free Call