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Social Security Break-Even Calculator

Find the exact age when delaying Social Security beats early claiming — cumulative benefit chart with crossover points for all four claiming ages.

⚠️Toolisk is a free calculator. Results are estimates based on the inputs you provide — kindly review them before making financial decisions. Always consult a qualified financial advisor for professional advice.

About this tool

Enter your FRA monthly benefit and birth year, then watch the cumulative chart show you exactly where the benefit lines cross — the break-even age between each claiming strategy pair (62 vs 65, 65 vs 67, 67 vs 70).

⚖️Break-even ages for all four claiming strategy pairs
📈Cumulative lifetime benefit chart with crossover lines
🏛️Exact SSA Full Retirement Age by birth year (66 to 67)
📊Monthly benefit comparison at each claiming age
🎯Optimal claiming recommendation based on your lifespan

How to use it

Quick steps to get the most out of this utility.

  1. 1

    Enter birth year

    Determines your FRA — the reference point for all benefit adjustments.

  2. 2

    Enter FRA monthly benefit

    From your SSA statement at ssa.gov/myaccount. The benefit you receive at exactly FRA.

  3. 3

    Set lifespan assumption

    The break-even ages are fixed; your lifespan determines which strategy wins for you.

  4. 4

    Read break-even ages

    Each strategy pair shows the age where cumulative benefits equalize.

  5. 5

    Compare on the chart

    The cumulative line chart shows where lines cross — visual confirmation of the break-even ages.

Why the break-even age matters — and when it does not

The break-even framework assumes you are neutral between receiving fewer larger payments vs more smaller payments. But Social Security isn't just longevity insurance — it's sequence-of-returns insurance. Delaying to 70 while drawing down your portfolio in early retirement may actually hurt your long-term wealth if markets perform well. Conversely, delaying locks in a larger guaranteed income floor, which can allow more equity risk in the portfolio.

If you are married, the survivor benefit strategy matters more than the individual break-even: the higher earner should almost always delay to 70 to maximize the survivor benefit for the lower-earning spouse.

Frequently asked questions

What is the typical Social Security break-even age between claiming at 62 vs 67?+

For someone born 1960+ (FRA = 67), claiming at 62 vs 67 has a break-even around age 78–79. If you live to 80+, waiting to 67 wins on cumulative dollars. If you live to 75 or less, claiming at 62 wins. The exact age depends on your FRA benefit amount — use this calculator to see the precise crossover for your situation.

What is the break-even between claiming at 67 vs 70?+

Delaying from FRA (67) to 70 earns 8%/year in delayed retirement credits — a 24% increase in monthly benefit. The break-even is typically around age 82–83. Given that average life expectancy for a 65-year-old American is about 84–85, the 67 vs 70 decision is close for the average person. With longevity in your family, 70 wins clearly.

Does the break-even change if I account for investment returns on early benefits?+

Yes. If you invest early SS payments at a real return of 4–5%, the investment-adjusted break-even for claiming at 62 vs 67 shifts to roughly age 82–84 — a few years later than the simple crossover. This argument slightly favors early claiming if you can reliably invest the difference, but Social Security is a guaranteed, inflation-adjusted income stream that is hard to replicate with portfolio returns.

Should I use average life expectancy or my own estimate?+

Your own health status and family history are more predictive than population averages. A 65-year-old in good health with parents who lived to 90 should weight lifespan assumptions toward 88–92. A 65-year-old with serious chronic conditions might weight toward 75–80. The break-even analysis is only useful if you ground it in your personal longevity outlook.

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