Social Security claiming at 62 trends online: experts warn it can slash lifetime benefits

By Jordan Keller

Social media posts pushing retirees to sign up for Social Security at 62 have been gaining traction, but retirement specialists warn those claims leave out important trade‑offs. The decision affects lifetime income, taxes and what a surviving spouse would receive — factors that matter more now as more people worry about Social Security’s future.

Why the popular “break‑even” argument is incomplete

Influencers often point to a so‑called break‑even age — the moment when the cumulative amount received by someone who claimed early equals what a delayed claimer has collected — to argue that it’s better to take benefits at 62. That math can be accurate on a narrow level, but experts say it’s a poor way to decide.

Jason Fichtner, who served in senior economics and leadership roles at the Social Security Administration and now works with retirement policy groups, says Social Security functions as longevity insurance. Because no one can predict their exact lifespan, comparing totals up to a single break‑even point ignores the risk of outliving other sources of retirement income.

Researchers and the SSA recognized this problem. The agency stopped offering a break‑even calculator in 2008 after internal and external reviewers warned it might push people toward early claiming. A 2011 RAND study found that showing break‑even results can have a “very strong” effect on people’s choices, nudging many to claim sooner and lock in permanently smaller monthly checks.

How monthly benefits change with your claiming age

You get the smallest monthly payout if you start at 62. Waiting until your full retirement age — usually 66 or 67, depending on birth year — yields the benefit you earned. Delay to age 70 and your monthly check reaches its peak.

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Claiming Age Typical Result
62 Minimum monthly benefit; may receive more in total early on
Full Retirement Age (66–67) 100% of earned benefit
70 Maximum monthly benefit (about a 77% larger monthly check compared with starting at 62)

Between full retirement age and 70, benefits increase by roughly 8% per year — a guaranteed boost that can be difficult to match with market investments.

Other essential factors to weigh

  • Longevity: Ask “How long could I live?” not “How long will I live?” — planning for the longer possibility shifts the case toward delaying benefits.
  • Overall financial picture: Consider taxes, other income, and how Social Security interacts with pensions, IRAs and investments.
  • Spousal and survivor considerations: For couples with unequal earnings, the higher earner’s choice affects the survivor benefit and can have lasting financial consequences for the surviving spouse.
  • Guaranteed vs. market returns: Early claiming gives cash sooner but forfeits the steady, actuarial increase that comes from waiting.
  • Health and cash needs: Immediate income can be necessary for some retirees; delaying isn’t feasible for everyone.

Joe Elsasser, a certified financial planner who leads a company that builds Social Security claiming tools, says focusing only on a break‑even calculation leaves out taxes and portfolio interaction — dimensions that often change the best choice for an individual or couple.

Research shows behavior doesn’t always follow the math: a 2022 study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research found only roughly 10% of people delay claiming until 70. A 2025 AARP poll indicates more retirees are filing earlier than in past years, in part because of growing concerns about Social Security’s long‑term solvency.

The practical takeaway

There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. For many people, delaying benefits increases protected monthly income and reduces pressure on savings. For others — those with pressing health issues or immediate cash needs — claiming earlier makes sense.

Before deciding, routinely weigh your health outlook, portfolio stability, tax situation and what a surviving spouse would need. Small changes in those variables can tilt the balance from early claiming to waiting.

If you want a clearer sense of the trade‑offs, talk with a qualified financial planner or use modeling tools that account for lifespan range, taxes and household income rather than relying solely on a single break‑even number.

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