Social Security Claimants Lose Checks After 70 as Benefit Increases Stop
Updated
Updated · Money · Jul 5
Social Security Claimants Lose Checks After 70 as Benefit Increases Stop
2 articles · Updated · Money · Jul 5
Summary
Age 70 is the cutoff for higher Social Security payments: delayed retirement credits stop then, so waiting longer does not raise benefits and can forfeit monthly checks.
Up to 6 weeks can pass between filing and the first payment, creating an "apply at 70" trap for retirees who wait until their birthday to submit a claim.
The SSA lets people apply months in advance and choose a first payment at 70, while retroactive benefits are generally capped at 6 months after full retirement age.
Full retirement age is 66 to 67 depending on birth year, and benefits are based on a worker's 35 highest-earning years, so extra work and higher earnings can also lift payouts.
Claiming earlier can still make sense based on health, finances and marriage; for couples, the higher earner often benefits most from waiting until 70 to maximize survivor benefits.