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The 3 Top Reasons People Claim Social Security Early

Social Security benefits can be claimed as early as 62 years of age, and many older Americans take advantage of the opportunity to start receiving them as soon as possible. Unfortunately, those who claim early often wish they hadn’t, according to the 2019 MassMutual Social Security Pulse Check.

Claiming benefits at age 62 comes with a big loss in monthly income, thanks to early filing penalties. Sadly, many retirees who start their benefits at this young age do so not because they want to, but out of financial necessity.

In fact, the MassMutual research identified three big reasons why people end up claiming benefits sooner rather than later.

Financial necessity and two unexpected events

According to the Social Security Pulse Check, the No. 1 reason people claim Social Security at age 62 was financial necessity.

A full 53% of survey respondents indicated this was the driving force behind their decision. These seniors either had to retire or chose to retire, and simply did not have enough savings to sustain them without relying on Social Security.

The other top two reasons for claiming Social Security at 62 instead of waiting longer had to do with events that people couldn’t foresee happening. They included unanticipated employment issues that led to their facing a change in job status, as well as changes to their health status that had impacts on their income-generating ability. Around 30% of those who claimed at 62 indicated these issues lead to their early benefits claim.

How to avoid claiming early

No one wants to be forced to claim Social Security before they’re ready. To make sure this doesn’t happen to you:

The only option you have full control over is your savings, so aggressively putting aside funds for retirement is the single best way to ensure you won’t be forced to claim Social Security at 62.

Plan for claiming Social Security benefits early

Because so many people claim Social Security benefits early out of necessity, it’s important not to plan your retirement around the idea that you’ll be able to work well into your 60s.

Prepare for retirement at 62, and if you’re able and willing to work longer, you’ll just end up with extra money to enjoy your golden years.

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