The Morning Call

Jumping the gun on retirement

Study finds many claim Social Security benefits at suboptimal time

- By Eileen Ambrose Eileen Ambrose is a senior editor at Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine. Send your questions and comments to moneypower@kiplinger.com.

One of the biggest financial decisions you make on the road to retirement is when to claim Social Security benefits.

You can take benefits as early as age 62, but that means your checks will be up to 30% less than if you wait until full retirement age (which is 66 1/2 for today’s 62-year-olds). For every year you delay Social Security beyond your full retirement age, your benefit grows by 8% until age 70.

That’s a lot of leeway, and a lot of room to make a decision that can trim benefits over a lifetime. In fact, according to a new study, today’s retirees have rarely made the right call, with only 4% taking Social Security at the financiall­y optimal time.

Collective­ly, these retirees stand to lose out on $3.4 trillion in income throughout their retirement, or about $111,000 per household. Almost all of that income is being forfeited because retirees are claiming benefits too early, concluded a study by United Income, an online investment management company.

There is no single optimal time to claim benefits for everyone. If you are in poor health and unlikely to have, say, two or three decades in retirement, claiming early may be best. Or perhaps you were forced into early retirement by a layoff and had no other choice but to claim early. But “for the vast majority of people, delaying until 70 is best,” says Jason Fichtner, an author of the study and former chief economist at the Social Security Administra­tion.

Given the dollars at stake, why do most retirees claim Social Security by age 63? “They hear the words ‘early eligibilit­y age of 62,’ and they think that’s the first day they’re eligible without understand­ing that it’s a reduced monthly benefit for life,” says Fichtner.

He wants to change that mindset. One way to do that, he says, is to revise how the SSA describes claiming. Instead of labeling 62 the “early eligibilit­y age,” the agency should name it the “minimum benefit age,” while calling 70 the “maximum benefit age,” he says.

“What I want people to start thinking about is how they can minimize the risk of running out of money in retirement, especially given that longevity is increasing for so many people.”

James Bayard, a certified financial planner in Baton Rouge, La., says some clients want to take benefits early, but then are persuaded to delay claiming after he runs the numbers for them.

Bayard tells them how their benefit can grow each year they delay, and that future cost-ofliving adjustment­s will be based on that bigger benefit. Once some spouses learn they will have only one Social Security check — the larger of the two — when one of them dies, they delay claiming.

And when confronted with longevity statistics showing they may live longer than anticipate­d, Bayard says, “the vast majority of clients will say, ‘OK, let’s play it safe.’”

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