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  2. Is It Better to Collect Social Security at 62, 65, or 70? A ...

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    Depending on your birth year, collecting at age 65 would reduce your monthly benefit by 6.7% to 13.3%, which is, on paper, more palatable than a 25% to 30% permanent reduction at age 62. It's also ...

  3. Is It Better to Take Social Security at Age 62 or 67? It ...

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    The average retired worker collects around $1,298 per month at age 62 and roughly $1,884 per month at age 67, according to data released by the Social Security Administration in December 2023.

  4. The great debate: Taking Social Security at age 62 vs 70 ...

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    The earliest you can file for Social Security is 62 and you’ve reached “full retirement” — when you can collect 100% of your eligible benefit — between 66 (those born 1943-54) and 67 ...

  5. Here's the Average Social Security Benefit at Ages 62 and 67

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    Based on data from the SSA's Office of the Actuary, a little over 590,000 aged 62 retired-worker beneficiaries took home an average check of $1,298.26 in December 2023. Comparatively, the nearly 2 ...

  6. Is It Better to Collect Social Security at 62 or 70? This ...

    www.aol.com/finance/better-collect-social...

    70. $139,140. $278,280. $306,108. Calculations by author. The break-even age between 62 and 70 is just after age 80. Before then, you would receive more from Social Security by claiming at 62 ...

  7. Here Are the Average Social Security Benefits at Ages 62, 67 ...

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    Ages 62, 67, and 70 are key milestones in Social Security. Age 62 is the earliest you can claim benefits, 67 is most people's full retirement age, and 70 is when monthly benefits stop increasing ...

  8. As previously reported by GOBankingRates, a recent study from Fidelity found that if you claim Social Security at age 62 rather than waiting until your full retirement age, you can expect a 30% ...

  9. Social Security retirement age: When to take Social Security ...

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    1960 and later. 67. While the full retirement age used to be 65, changes to the program have increased that age. For example, those born in 1955 now have to wait an extra two months beyond age 66 ...