Retirement Social Security

Here's the Average Social Security Benefit of 64-Year-Old Americans (How Do You Compare?)

When you claim benefits could shape your monthly income.

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Updated March 7, 2026
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Most Americans don't retire on a neat, predictable schedule. Age 64 often becomes a year of "almost there" decisions. Maybe you're still working but thinking about slowing down, or maybe you're already eyeing Social Security as part of your retirement plan. Seeing what people your age actually receive can make the decision feel less abstract and more grounded in reality.

Here's how current benefits compare, and how making smart money moves for seniors now could shape the income you rely on for decades.

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What is the average Social Security benefit at age 64?

According to Social Security Administration data, the average benefit for retired workers around age 64 is about $1,425 per month. Because 64 is before full retirement age, this number is lower than the average Social Security check of around $2,000.

The exact check amount you receive depends on your lifetime earnings, work history, and the timing of your claim (even a month matters).

The "average" is not a promise. Many retirees will find their benefit much lower or much higher than $1,500.

How 64-year-old benefits compare to other ages

Benefit amounts rise as people claim later, so younger retirees often receive smaller monthly payments than older ones.

Typical patterns look like this:

  • Early claimers in their early 60s usually receive smaller checks.
  • Benefits rise for people claiming closer to full retirement age.
  • Those waiting until 70 often receive the largest monthly payments.

By comparison, the projected average retirement benefit across all recipients in 2026 is about $2,071 per month, meaning many 64-year-olds are still receiving below the overall average. In general, claiming at 64 instead of full retirement age will reduce your monthly benefit by 20%.

Why age 64 is a turning point

Age 64 is often the year right before you can start making major decisions. Medicare eligibility arrives at 65, and full retirement age is only a few years out for most. Retirement starts to feel like it's just around the corner.

Because claiming early permanently reduces monthly payments, this age becomes a moment where many people pause and reconsider their timeline. Some realize waiting just a year or two might significantly change their long-term income.

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How claiming age changes your monthly benefit

Social Security tries to spread out your total benefit over the number of years it expects your retirement to last. If you retire early, this means it must spread the same amount of money over more years, reducing your benefit permanently.

On the other hand, if you wait past full retirement age, your benefit will increase. It ends up looking something like this:

  • Claim at 62: benefits may be reduced by up to 30%
  • Claim at full retirement age: you receive your full earned benefit
  • Wait until 70: payments increase about 8% per year after full retirement age.

This difference is permanent. Claiming early could mean smaller checks for decades, while delaying can lead to noticeably larger monthly income later.

Why many people claim before full retirement age

Even though waiting boosts benefits, many workers still claim early for practical reasons. For instance, health concerns that could potentially shorten your lifespan may make it more profitable to claim early. Smaller checks over a longer period can lead to a higher lifetime benefit than larger checks over a shorter period.

Others may find themselves needing the extra income earlier, whether due to a job loss or caregiving responsibilities.

For some households, starting benefits early makes sense, even if it means a lower check each month.

Earning history matters more than age alone

Your benefit is calculated using your highest 35 years of earnings, adjusted for wage growth. This means that years with low or no earnings can pull your average down dramatically. Working longer to replace those low-income years can have more of an impact on your monthly check than claiming early alone.

In many cases, late-career earnings are higher than in previous years, making those last few years of work the most impactful on your Social Security check.

When you retire early, you aren't just taking a permanent reduction. You're also lowering your average earnings, reducing your check even further.

What if your benefit looks lower than average?

If your projected benefit is smaller than you expected, there are still steps you can take:

  • Working a few additional years to raise your earnings record
  • Delaying claiming if possible
  • Adjusting retirement spending plans
  • Increasing retirement savings contributions while still employed
  • Checking for potential errors in your earning history

Longevity impacts the math

One factor many retirees underestimate is how long retirement might last.

Someone retiring in their mid-60s today could reasonably spend 20-30 years in retirement. Waiting to claim benefits sometimes pays off for people who live longer, because higher monthly checks continue for life and adjust annually with cost-of-living increases.

At the same time, someone who expects to live fewer years may retire early, both to make the most of their healthy years and to increase their lifetime benefit.

How healthy you are at 64 should impact when you plan to claim Social Security.

Bottom line

The average Social Security benefit for 64-year-olds is typically lower than the overall retiree average because many people claim before reaching full retirement age, locking in smaller monthly payments. Knowing where you stand compared with others your age can help guide smarter decisions while planning for retirement.

If you claim benefits at 64 and continue working, the Social Security earnings test may temporarily reduce your payments until you reach full retirement age. This is worth factoring in before deciding whether to claim now or wait.

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