Will you take Social Security in 2025? Better know your official full retirement age
A new year, a new number for Social Security and the benefit program’s full retirement age.
Most people associate the age of 65 with retirement – although there’s data suggesting the average American retires at 62. That’s the age at which you can begin to take Social Security, but you can boost the size of your monthly benefits check if you wait longer.
You can get the most Social Security benefits if you wait until your “full retirement age,” which used to be 65, but it’s gradually increased over the years – and it’s up to 67 years of age for those born in 1960 or later.
This isn’t exactly news, because the “full retirement age” timetable for program was set in legislation passed in 1983 by Congress gradually raising the “full retirement age” by a few months every year – from 65 to 67. What’s made it important is that people who may be reaching retirement age need to keep the figure in mind as they consider joining the 68 million Americans currently getting benefits..
“There’s nothing that kicks in January 1. It’s more connected to when your birth is and therefore when your full retirement age is,” Joel Eskovitz, senior director for Social Security and savings at the AARP Public Policy Institute, told USA TODAY. “You get lower benefits if you claim before that retirement age. Every month early you claim, you get a reduction.”