Whether you’re counting on Social Security to fund the bulk of your retirement income or just supplement it, there are some things everyone needs to know.
67 is the new 65.
There’s an excellent chance that when they increased the age at which you could collect full Social Security retirement benefits, you were too young to know about it, let alone care. But yes, the Big R is no longer 65 thanks to the changes made in 1983. You are still eligible for Medicare at 65 — although if you still have health care coverage through your or your spouse's employer, you may not want to switch. But without question, the biggest change to Social Security was pushing up the full retirement age from 65 to 67 over a 22-year period. For anyone born in 1960 or later, 67 is the new 65.
Estimate your monthly benefits using AARP’s Social Security calculator. Run the numbers today!
Missing work and the number 35
Remember that amazing gap year you took between jobs when you traveled the world on a shoestring budget and Frommer’s $5-a-day guidebooks tucked in your backpack? Good times, right?
Well, enjoy looking at those yellowed old photos because you may have unwittingly smashed your own thumb with a hammer when it comes to your retirement benefits. The reason is this: The SSA loves the number 35. And when it goes to calculate how much your monthly retirement benefits should be, it looks at your lifetime earnings. First it adjusts those earnings for inflation, then it takes your top 35 highest-earning years and uses an average indexed monthly earnings formula to come up with the benefit you will receive at your full retirement age.
So, that fun sabbatical year — or if you had periods of unemployment or entered the workforce late — will be counted as zeros in that formula and will bring down your average. If you took off a decade to raise kids and only worked 25 years, it will calculate your benefits on 25 years of earnings plus 10 years of zeros.
What this means in plain English is: If you don’t work 35 years for whatever reason, you will get less.