What’s the Maximum Social Security Benefit for Married Couples?
Many, or all, of the products featured on this page are from our advertising partners who compensate us when you take certain actions on our website or click to take an action on their website. However, this does not influence our evaluations. Our opinions are our own. Here is a list of our partners and here's how we make money.
The investing information provided on this page is for educational purposes only. NerdWallet, Inc. does not offer advisory or brokerage services, nor does it recommend or advise investors to buy or sell particular stocks, securities or other investments.
- Health (and how long you are likely to live).
- Tax consequences related to when you claim benefits.
- Whether you have enough savings to cover retirement expenses before you turn 70 and can collect the maximum Social Security retirement benefit.
Your actual benefit may be lower or higher than estimate made with this calculator, because it does not take into account your actual earnings history.
We assume you have earnings every year until you begin receiving Social Security benefits. If you had several years of noncovered employment or your earnings changed significantly from year to year, this calculator will overestimate or underestimate your benefit.
This is your estimated benefit
if you begin taking Social Security at age 62
This is your estimated benefit
if you begin taking Social Security at age 67
Estimated benefits from age 62 to 70
Social Security break-even age
Your break-even point is the age at which the cumulative amount you may receive if you file later equals the cumulative amount you may receive if you file early. It signifies the point at which it may "pay off" to wait.
Age 77.4 is the age at which the total number of dollars you receive if you retire at age 70 exceeds the total number of dollars you'll receive if you retire at 67.
About these results
We estimated and then indexed your past earnings by using your current annual salary, the national average wage indexing series and the Social Security Administration's annual wage base.
We assume that people age 18 to 22 are less likely to have full-time earnings.
Future earnings are based on correct annual salary and expected annual salary increase.
With the exception of the indexing factor applied to past earnings, the calculations do not include an inflation rate. The results are presented in today's dollars.
Strategy 1: The higher earner waits as long as possible to claim benefits
- When one spouse dies, the other receives the higher of the two Social Security benefits for the rest of their life.
- It might make sense to live off retirement savings first so the higher earner can collect a higher retirement benefit later. Delaying benefits can increase checks by 8% for each year you wait .
- Your full retirement age, the age at which you’re entitled to 100% of your monthly Social Security retirement benefit, depends on the year you were born. For people born in 1960 or later, it’s 67. People who apply for benefits before reaching full retirement age typically get a reduced benefit .
Strategy 2: Each spouse retires at 70
Strategy 3: One or both spouses claim benefits early
Strategy 4: Maximize the survivor benefit
- If the higher earner retires before full retirement age and thus gets a reduced benefit, the surviving spouse’s benefit will be lower, too.
- If the higher-earning spouse dies after full retirement age but before age 70, the survivor gets the amount the deceased would have been entitled to as of the month of their death.
- A strategy called “file and suspend,” which allowed a spouse to file and then suspend their own benefits and instead collect spousal benefits while their own check continued to grow, was eliminated in 2015 .
- 50% of their partner’s benefit, or
- The benefit they qualify for on their own.
Article sources
- 1. SSA.gov. What is the maximum Social Security retirement benefit payable?. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 2. Social Security Administration. Delayed Retirement Credits. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 3. Social Security Administration. Starting Your Retirement Benefits Early. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.
- 4. Social Security Administration. Filing Rules for Retirement and Spouses Benefits. Accessed Oct 24, 2025.