When to Claim Social Security.
The decision to claim at 62 vs 67 vs 70 is the largest irreversible financial choice most retirees will ever make. A wrong call can cost a married couple $200,000 or more over a lifetime.
The Three Claiming Windows
| Claim Age | % of PIA | Monthly Benefit ($2,500 PIA) | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 62 (earliest) | 70% | $1,750 | Short life expectancy, no spouse, immediate need |
| 63 | 75% | $1,875 | — |
| 64 | 80% | $2,000 | — |
| 65 | 86.7% | $2,167 | — |
| 66 | 93.3% | $2,333 | — |
| 67 (Full Retirement Age) | 100% | $2,500 | Average health, single or one-spouse household |
| 68 | 108% | $2,700 | — |
| 69 | 116% | $2,900 | — |
| 70 (maximum) | 124% | $3,100 | Long life expectancy, higher-earning spouse in couple |
Primary Insurance Amount (PIA) = benefit at Full Retirement Age. FRA is 67 for anyone born 1960 or later.
The Breakeven Math
If you claim at 62 you get $1,750/mo. If you wait to 70 you get $3,100/mo — but you gave up 8 years of checks. The breakeven age (where waiting comes out ahead) is around age 80.5.
- Die before 80.5: claiming at 62 wins.
- Die after 80.5: waiting to 70 wins — and the longer you live, the bigger the gap.
- Average 65-year-old in 2026: life expectancy 84 (male), 87 (female). Most people will outlive the breakeven.
Married Couples: The Survivor Strategy
When one spouse dies, the survivor keeps the larger of the two benefits. This is why the high-earning spouse should almost always wait to 70 — because that benefit becomes a lifetime check for whoever lives longer (typically the wife, by ~5 years).
Optimal Strategy for a Typical Married Couple
- Lower-earning spouse: claim at FRA (67) or slightly earlier if needed for cash flow.
- Higher-earning spouse: wait until 70. This locks in the 124% benefit as the eventual survivor payment.
- If one spouse has a shorter life expectancy: that spouse claims early; the healthier spouse waits to 70.
Spousal Benefits
A non-working or lower-earning spouse can claim up to 50% of the other spouse's PIA, starting at age 62 (reduced if taken early). Can't claim until the primary earner has filed. Divorced spouses qualify if married 10+ years and currently unmarried.
Widow/Widower Benefits
Starting at age 60, a surviving spouse can claim the larger of their own benefit or the deceased's benefit. Strategic split: claim your own at 60, switch to survivor at 70 (or vice versa) — tool opensocialsecurity.com optimizes this.
Taxation of Benefits
| Combined Income (Single) | Combined Income (Joint) | % of SS Taxable |
|---|---|---|
| Under $25,000 | Under $32,000 | 0% |
| $25,000–$34,000 | $32,000–$44,000 | Up to 50% |
| Over $34,000 | Over $44,000 | Up to 85% |
Combined income = AGI + tax-exempt interest + half of SS benefit. "Tax torpedo" zone between $25K-$50K combined income can push marginal rates over 40%.
The CalSTRS / CalPERS Wrinkle
If you worked in a job that didn't pay into Social Security (California teachers under CalSTRS before 2025, many CalPERS public employees), you're subject to two reductions:
- Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) — reduces your own SS benefit if you earned a non-SS pension. Max reduction ~$558/mo in 2026.
- Government Pension Offset (GPO) — reduces spousal/survivor SS by 2/3 of your non-SS pension. Can wipe out spousal benefit entirely.
Note: WEP/GPO reforms under the Social Security Fairness Act (Jan 2025) eliminated both for benefits paid after December 2023. Talk to us if you were affected before repeal or have lingering back-benefit questions.
Get a full Social Security analysis.
We'll pull your actual earnings record from ssa.gov, run all three claiming strategies (62, 67, 70), account for your spouse, and produce a breakeven chart with lifetime dollars on each axis. Takes 15 minutes. Free for prospective clients.