Is 62 the Best Age to Start Drawing Social Security?

You can apply for Social Security benefits as early as age 62. However, there are pros and cons associated with claiming your benefits when you're so young. Here are the advantages and disadvantages of receiving Social Security at 62 and some important things to keep in mind before making your final decision.

First, the disadvantages

Social Security is a critical source of retirement income for millions of Americans, but the amount of money that retirees collect in benefits often falls shy of their total annual expenses.

A senior man scratching his head while sitting at a desk looking at a piece of paper.
A senior man scratching his head while sitting at a desk looking at a piece of paper.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

In 2018, the average Social Security recipient is collecting $1,404 per month in benefits, which works out to $16,848 per year. That's not a lot of money when you consider that the average retiree household spends over $40,000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

One reason why retirees' haul from Social Security is so small is that claiming early remains incredibly popular. Workers can begin receiving Social Security as early as age 62, and as fellow Fool Dan Caplinger recently pointed out, over one-third of recipients begin their benefits at that point.

Claiming at age 62 can be smart for various reasons (more on that in a minute), but maximizing benefits isn't one of them. Workers only get 100% of their Social Security benefits if they wait until their full retirement age (FRA), which varies between 66 years old to 67 years old for people born after 1954.

If you apply for your benefits at age 62, then your monthly check will be much smaller than it would be if you wait until FRA. The Social Security Administration reduces your monthly benefit payment by a fixed percentage for every month you claim earlier than FRA, and those monthly penalties can add up. For example, a person born in 1960 has a full retirement age of 67; if they claim benefits at age 62, they'd get 30% less per month than they would get otherwise.

Claiming at age 62 also means forgoing a bonus to your benefit. Social Security rewards those who delay collecting their benefits until age 70 with delayed retirement credits. If you hold off, you can get an 8% increase for every year after full retirement age that you wait.

The difference between the amount you could collect in benefits at age 62 and the amount you could collect if you wait until age 70 to apply for benefits is significant. Assuming a full retirement age of 67 and a full retirement age benefit of $1,000, a person who claims at age 62 would only receive $700 per month, while a person who claims at age 70 would receive $1,240 per month. In this scenario, claiming at age 70 results in a monthly check that's a whopping 77% bigger than the check they'd receive at age 62.