Retiring at 65? Think Again – Full Social Security Benefits Start Much Later in 2025–2026

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Planning to quit work at 65 and live on Social Security? Stop right there. The old “retire at 65 with full benefits” rule died decades ago. In 2025–2026, full benefits start at 66 & 10 months or age 67 — not 65. Claiming at 65 now locks you into a permanent 13%–20% pay cut forever. With average checks around $2,000/month, that’s $3,000–$5,000 gone every single year. This simple 600-word guide shows exactly when you get 100% and how to avoid the biggest retirement mistake millions make.

Your Real Full Retirement Age (FRA) – 2025–2026 Chart

Birth YearFull Retirement Age (FRA)When You Get 100% Benefits
195566 & 2 monthsAlready passed
195666 & 4 monthsAlready passed
195766 & 6 monthsAlready passed
195866 & 8 monthsAlready passed
195966 & 10 monthsNovember 2025 – Sep 2026
1960 & later672027 and beyond

Born in 1959 and turning 66 in 2025? You must wait until age 66 & 10 months (next summer/fall) for full benefits. Born 1960 or later? Full checks don’t start until exactly 67.

What Happens If You Claim at 65 Anyway?

Example: Your earned benefit at FRA = $2,000/month

Claim AgeMonthly CheckYearly Loss vs FRALifetime Loss to Age 85
Age 65$1,733–$1,600$3,200–$4,800$70,000–$105,000
FRA$2,000$0$0
Age 70$2,480+$5,760 gain+$100,000+ gain

That 65 cut is permanent — even COLA increases (2.8% in 2026) apply to the smaller amount.

Why the Age Went Up (and Stops Here)

Congress raised FRA in 1983 because we live longer. The climb ends in 2026 at age 67 — no further increases are currently scheduled.

Medicare still starts at 65, but Social Security does not. Two different programs, two different ages.

Smart Moves for Anyone Near 65

  1. Keep working 1–2 more years – every month past 65 raises your check.
  2. Use savings or part-time work to bridge the gap to FRA or 70.
  3. Delay to 70 if healthy – 8% annual bonus (124% of FRA amount).
  4. Run your exact numbers – free at ssa.gov/myaccount (takes 5 minutes).

Quick Decision Table

Your SituationBest Claim Age
Health issues, need money now62–65
Average health, some savings67 (FRA)
Great health, married, savings70

Bottom Line

Retiring at 65 is fine — just don’t expect full Social Security. For everyone born 1959 and later, full benefits start at 66 & 10 months or 67. One year of waiting can add $50,000–$150,000 over your lifetime.

Check your personal FRA today at ssa.gov — it’s the easiest money you’ll ever protect

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