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CalcWolf Finance Social Security Benefits Estimator
Finance

How Much Will Social Security Pay You?

Estimate your monthly Social Security benefit based on your earnings and claiming age. See how much you gain by waiting.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

How Social Security Benefits Are Calculated

Your benefit is based on your Average Indexed Monthly Earnings (AIME) — the average of your 35 highest-earning years, adjusted for wage inflation. The Social Security Administration applies a progressive formula (bend points) that replaces a higher percentage of lower earnings. The result is your Primary Insurance Amount (PIA) — your benefit at full retirement age (67 for those born 1960+).

The Case for Waiting Until 70

Each year you delay past FRA adds 8% to your benefit — guaranteed, inflation-adjusted, for life. Claiming at 62 reduces your benefit by 30%. Claiming at 70 increases it by 24% over FRA. For someone with a $2,000 FRA benefit: $1,400/month at 62 vs. $2,480/month at 70. The breakeven point is typically age 80-82.

When to Claim Early

Claiming at 62 makes sense if: you have a shortened life expectancy, you need the income to avoid high-interest debt, or you can invest the benefits at returns exceeding the 8% delay credit. For most healthy adults, waiting is financially optimal.

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

Delaying Social Security from 62 to 70 increases your benefit by 77% (30% reduction avoided + 24% delay credits). No other guaranteed, inflation-adjusted investment offers this return.

Frequently asked questions
What is full retirement age?
67 for anyone born in 1960 or later. For those born 1955-1959, it is between 66 and 67. FRA is the age at which you receive 100% of your calculated benefit (PIA).
Can I work and collect Social Security?
Yes, but before FRA, benefits are reduced if you earn above $22,320/year (2026) — $1 reduction per $2 earned over the limit. After FRA, there is no earnings limit and no reduction.
Will Social Security run out?
The trust fund is projected to be depleted around 2033-2035, after which payroll taxes would fund about 77-80% of scheduled benefits. Congress is expected to act before then, but the form of the fix (tax increases, benefit cuts, or both) is uncertain.
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Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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