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Retirement Social Security

Why 2 Retirees With the Same Work History Can Get Completely Different Social Security Checks

One retirement decision can change your monthly check for life.

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Updated July 9, 2026
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Two retirees can have nearly identical careers and still end up with Social Security checks that are more than $1,000 apart.

It is an outcome that surprises many people because the difference often has very little to do with their careers. Instead, it usually comes down to when they decide to claim their benefits. Your earnings record determines the benefit you've earned, but your claiming age decides how much of it you'll receive each month.

Understanding how those two pieces fit together is one of the easier ways to avoid financial mistakes that can affect your income for years to come.

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How the same career can produce very different checks

Your earnings record determines the benefit you've earned, but the age you choose to claim decides how much of that benefit you actually receive each month:

  • Claim at your full retirement age of 67 (for anyone born in 1960 or later), and you'll receive your full benefit.
  • Claim at 62, and your monthly check is permanently reduced.
  • Wait until 70, and delayed retirement credits increase your monthly benefit.

Take two people who each earned enough to qualify for a $2,000 monthly benefit at 67. If one claims at 62, the earliest age allowed, Social Security applies a 30% reduction, bringing the check down to $1,400 a month.

If the other waits until 70, Social Security adds delayed retirement credits of about 8% per year for each year past 67, bringing the check up to about $2,480 a month.

By the time both are retired, one receives about $1,080 more every month, even though their careers looked almost identical. Over a year, that's nearly $13,000, and the gap continues for as long as they both collect Social Security.

When waiting tends to pay off

Waiting to claim Social Security is not always the right choice, but it often pays off for people who expect a longer retirement.

Your monthly benefit continues to grow until age 70, and once you've lived past the break-even point, usually in your early 80s, the larger check can leave you with more total Social Security income than if you had claimed at 62.

Waiting also raises the benefit your spouse could receive after your death. Social Security's survivor benefit is based on the deceased spouse's check. A higher check at the time of death means a higher survivor benefit for the spouse who lives longer.

For couples where one spouse earned considerably more than the other, waiting to claim gives the surviving spouse a higher monthly income for years to come.

When claiming early can be the better choice

A larger monthly check is appealing, but waiting until 70 does not always leave you better off. If your health has declined or your family history points to a shorter life expectancy, claiming earlier can mean collecting more total benefits because you'll receive payments for a longer period of time.

The same can be true if delaying would put too much pressure on your finances. Using up a large share of your retirement savings just to wait for a bigger Social Security check can leave you with less flexibility later, making an earlier claim the more practical choice.

Also, if you're still working before your full retirement age and earning above Social Security's annual limit ($24,480 in 2026), part of your benefit may be temporarily withheld.

The withheld amount gets credited back later, but the cash flow disruption is worth factoring in if you're planning to claim and keep working at the same time.

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What if you already claimed and wish you'd waited

If you claimed within the past 12 months and regret the timing, Social Security allows you to withdraw your application entirely. You'd need to repay every dollar you've received, but once you do, your benefit resets as though you never filed. It continues growing until you claim again or reach 70.

A different option is available if you've already reached your full retirement age. Instead of repaying your benefits, you can ask Social Security to suspend them. Your monthly checks stop during the suspension, but delayed retirement credits continue to build until you restart your benefits or turn 70, increasing the amount you'll receive each month.

For some retirees who claimed early because they needed the income at the time, suspending benefits later can be a practical way to receive a larger monthly check for the rest of retirement.

Bottom line

A lifetime of work does not guarantee the same Social Security check as someone with a nearly identical career. When you claim can change your monthly benefit by hundreds of dollars, and that difference can last for the rest of your life.

If you haven't claimed yet, check the estimates in your my Social Security account at ssa.gov before making your decision. Seeing what your benefit looks like at different claiming ages can help you build a retirement plan around the income you're actually likely to receive.

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