Here's the Average Social Security Retired-Worker Benefit by Age (From 62 Through 99)

No social program is responsible for pulling more people out of poverty each year than Social Security. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the program lifted 22 million people above the federal poverty line in 2023, including 16.3 million adults aged 65 and over.

It's also a program that retired workers lean on heavily to make ends meet. Spanning 23 years of annual surveys, pollster Gallup has found that 80% to 90% of retirees, including 88% in April 2024, require their Social Security income to cover at least some portion of their expenses.

However, average Social Security checks can meaningfully differ by age. Let's take a closer look at how retired-worker benefits are calculated, examine how much the average retired worker is bringing home each month by age, and take a wide-lens look at which, if any, ages are likeliest to maximize lifetime Social Security benefit collection, based on a comprehensive study.

A seated person counting a fanned pile of one hundred dollar bills in their hands.
Image source: Getty Images.

These four factors are used to calculate your monthly retired-worker benefit

Although Social Security isn't the easiest government program to understand at times, the four variables used by the Social Security Administration (SSA) to calculate your retired-worker benefit are straightforward. In no order, these are your:

  • Earnings history

  • Work history

  • Full retirement age

  • Claiming age

Your earnings and work history are two factors that are tightly linked together. When calculating your monthly retired-worker benefit, the SSA will rely on your 35 highest-earning, inflation-adjusted years. If you've received an above-average salary or wage throughout your lifetime (investment income doesn't count), there's a reasonably good chance you'll net an above-average Social Security retired-worker check, as well.

But there's a catch to this calculation. In the event that you don't work at least 35 years, the SSA will average in a $0 for every year short of 35. Regardless of how much you've earned in the years that do qualify, you'll have no chance to maximize your monthly benefit without 35 years of work and earnings history.

The third item — full retirement age — is based solely on your birth year. It represents the age you become eligible to collect 100% of your retired-worker benefit. For anyone born in or after 1960, the full retirement age is 67.

The fourth and final factor, and the one that packs the biggest punch in terms of swinging the Social Security payout pendulum, is your claiming age. Though retired-worker benefit collection can begin as early as age 62, the SSA dangles a monetary carrot of sorts to incent patience. For every year a worker waits to collect their benefit, beginning at age 62 and continuing until age 70, their monthly payout can increase by as much as 8%.