If you’re younger than full retirement age during the whole year
- However, you can still get full Social Security checks if for the remainder of the year after you retire you earn less than $1,950 a month and don’t spend more than 45 hours a month on a small business (15 hours if it’s a “highly skilled occupation”).
- After that first year, you’re subject to the annual limit until you hit full retirement age.
See where you stand compared to households like yours, and get steps you could take to grow from here.

If this is the year you will hit full retirement age
- This special rule exists because sometimes people who retire in the middle of the year have already earned more than the limit.
- However, you can still get full Social Security checks for the remainder of the year after you retire you earn less than $5,180 a month and don’t spend more than 45 hours a month on a small business (15 hours if it’s a “highly skilled occupation”).
The year after you hit full retirement age
1. Know what your full retirement age is
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%. |
2. Understand how the limits are enforced
- The Social Security Administration withholds entire checks (no partial reductions) and refunds any overages the subsequent year.
- For example, if you retired early and your retirement benefit is normally $1,200 per month but you incurred a $500 penalty, the Social Security Administration may withhold your entire January 2026 payment of $1,200 to recoup the $500 from 2025. In January 2027, it would refund the extra $700 it took.
3. You may get some back
- If you retire early and the Social Security Administration withholds some of your benefits because you earned too much, it recalculates your benefit to reincorporate those withheld benefits when you hit full retirement age, meaning you could get a higher benefit later.
- For spouses and survivors who receive benefits because they have children in their care who are minors or have disabilities, there is no increase in benefits at full retirement age if benefits were withheld because of work.
What counts as income?
- Wages earned by working for someone else.
- Net earnings from self-employment.
- Contributions you make to a pension or retirement plan if the contribution is included in your gross wages.
- Other government benefits.
- Investment earnings.
- Interest.
- Pensions.
- Annuities.
- Capital gains.
Article sources
- 1. Social Security Administration. Receiving Benefits While Working. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 2. Social Security Administration. How We Deduct Earnings From Benefits. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 3. Social Security Administration. Special Earnings Limit Rule. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 4. Social Security Administration. Starting Your Retirement Benefits Early. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 5. Social Security Administration. How Work Affects Your Benefits. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 6. Social Security Administration. How Much Can I Earn and Still Get Benefits?. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 5. Social Security Administration. How Work Affects Your Benefits. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.








