Your full retirement age depends on the year you were born.
You can start collecting Social Security at 62 but will receive reduced benefits.
If you wait until 70, your monthly check will be more than if you’d retired at your full retirement age.
Age may be just a number, but it’s an important one for Social Security retirement benefits. After paying into the federal program throughout your working life, you can start collecting benefits in your 60s. How much you receive monthly depends in part on how old you are when you apply for benefits.
What is full retirement age for Social Security?
Full retirement age for Social Security is the age at which a person is entitled to 100% of their monthly Social Security retirement benefit. It ranges from 66 to 67. The Social Security Administration determines a person’s full retirement age based on their birth year.
The advantage of waiting until you reach your full retirement age to claim Social Security is that you can collect your entire Social Security retirement benefit. You can start collecting benefits earlier (as early as age 62), but the Social Security Administration permanently reduces your monthly benefit if you do that.
How to find your full retirement age
If you were born in 1960 or later, your full retirement age is 67. However, if you were born before 1960, your full retirement age will be earlier. Use the table below to find out when you can get 100% of your Social Security retirement benefit.
Full retirement age for Social Security
Year you were born | Full retirement age | If you start receiving benefits at 62, your retirement benefit is reduced by... |
---|---|---|
1943 through 1954 | 66. | 25%. |
1955 | 66 and 2 months. | 25.83%. |
1956 | 66 and 4 months. | 26.67%. |
1957 | 66 and 6 months. | 27.5%. |
1958 | 66 and 8 months. | 28.33%. |
1959 | 66 and 10 months. | 29.17%. |
1960 and later | 67. | 30%. |
Source: Social Security Administration
» Get started: Social Security, explained
In 1983 the SSA began a steady increase of the full retirement age to account for people living longer. It rose from 65 to 67.
Why your full retirement age matters
Regardless of the year you were born, the earliest you can begin claiming Social Security benefits is age 62. However, the SSA permanently reduces monthly benefits for people who claim benefits that early — the move could cost you 25% to 30% of your full retirement age benefit.
Your benefit reduction is determined by how much time you have left before reaching your full retirement age. In other words, the earlier you retire, the lower your monthly check is.
For someone with a full retirement age of 67, for example, the Social Security Administration cuts their monthly benefit by 30% if they claim benefits at age 62.
If that person is eligible for $1,000 per month at full retirement age, their monthly benefit would shrink to $700 if they retire at 62.
However, if that person waits two more years to claim benefits at 64, their benefits would shrink by 20% instead of 30%, giving them an extra $100 a month.
» Be prepared: Thinking of taking Social Security early? What to know
Waiting until after full retirement age to claim benefits
The SSA increases benefits for people who delay retirement beyond full retirement age. Your Social Security benefits increase 8% for every year after full retirement age that you delay claiming them. If you wait until age 70 to claim benefits, for example, you receive 124% of your full retirement benefit amount.
For someone entitled to $1,000 per month at full retirement age, waiting until age 70 would mean getting $1,240 a month instead of $1,000.
The Social Security Administration does not apply the 8% benefits increase after age 70, meaning there is no incentive to wait longer than that to start receiving Social Security retirement benefits.
How to determine when to start Social Security benefits
When you can retire depends on several personal factors, such as how much you have in savings and what your other sources of income will be. A few things to consider as you figure out the right time to start Social Security benefits include:
How long you’re likely to live.
If you’ll continue to work during retirement.
If you’ll invest the money or use it for living expenses.
» Find the answer: When can I retire?
Average retirement age
The average retirement age in the United States is 61, according to a 2022 Gallup survey ; the same poll found that people who were still working plan to retire at 66 on average.
SSA data shows that 29.3% of people who started claiming retirement benefits in 2021 were 62 years old; the second most popular retirement age was 66 (24.7%).
Actual retirement age differs by gender, with women retiring an average of three years sooner than men.
Though the average retirement age roughly coincides with the earliest age you're eligible to draw Social Security, when you retire doesn't necessarily have to revolve around Social Security or retirement account rules. Often it will depend on how much you have saved.
According to the Insured Retirement Institute's 2021 Retirement Readiness Among Older Workers research series, about a quarter of respondents have no retirement savings. Half have less than $250,000 saved for retirement and half of those respondents have saved less than $50,000.
Other retirement ages to know
Benefit | Age | Event |
401(k) and IRA catch-up contributions | 59 1/2. | May qualify to contribute more money than the annual limit to eligible plans. |
Roth IRA | 59 1/2. | Nonqualified distributions of earnings allowed without taxes or early withdrawal penalty. |
Traditional IRA, 401(k), 403(b), SEP IRA and SIMPLE IRA | 59 1/2. | Nonqualified distributions of earnings allowed without an early withdrawal penalty. |
Medicare | 7 months surrounding your 65th birthday. | Enroll for Medicare Part B to avoid a late penalty of a 10% monthly premium increase for every 12-month period of delayed enrollment; there are exceptions that allow a delayed enrollment. |
Think it through and get a second opinion
Deciding when to make the call on Social Security benefits isn't a decision to make lightly. Once you start taking benefits, the amount you receive generally sets the base for how much you'll get for the rest of your life. Also, annual cost of living adjustments will be based on that amount.
Social Security represents a major income artery for retirees — roughly one-third of the money they have to live on, according to the SSA.
You get one do-over in your lifetime: If you start receiving Social Security benefits and decide you can hold out longer to get a higher payout, you have a 12-month window to reverse course and repay the money you've received.
A financial advisor can help you run through scenarios taking into account the income streams available to you, ongoing investment returns, taxes and other parts of retirement planning.