Retirement Planning Tool
Free Social Security Benefits Estimator (SSA 2026)
The most comprehensive free Social Security calculator in the US. Calculate your exact Primary Insurance Amount (PIA) using official 2026 SSA bend points. Compare claiming strategies from age 62 to your Full Retirement Age (FRA) and age 70. Model spousal & survivor benefits, project COLA increases, and calculate after-tax net income based on IRS thresholds. Includes advanced analysis for self-employed SECA taxes, lifetime breakeven age, and 2033 policy risk.
Your results will appear here
Enter your earnings history and click Calculate My Benefits to see your full Social Security analysis.
Covered Earnings → AIME (Average Indexed Monthly Earnings)
The SSA takes your 35 highest earning years, adjusts each year’s wages for wage inflation using National Average Wage Index (NAWI) factors, sums them, then divides by 420 (35 × 12). If you worked fewer than 35 years, the missing years count as $0, directly reducing your AIME and benefit.
AIME → PIA using 2026 Bend Points
The benefit formula is progressive: lower earners get back a higher percentage. The 2026 bend points are $1,286 and $7,749.
Example: AIME $5,000 → PIA = 90%×$1,286 + 32%×$3,714 = $1,157.40 + $1,188.48 = $2,345.80/mo at FRA.
PIA × Claiming Age Factor = Your Benefit
Claiming before FRA: benefit reduced ~5/9% per month for first 36 months early, then ~5/12% per month beyond 36 months. For FRA of 67 claiming at 62 = 30% permanent reduction. Claiming after FRA: earn 8% per year (0.667%/month) in Delayed Retirement Credits up to age 70 = 24% bonus.
COLA: Annual Inflation Adjustment
Each January, benefits increase by the Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA), tied to CPI-W. The 2026 COLA was 2.8%. Historical average ≈ 2.6%/yr. Over 20 years at 2.5% COLA, a $2,000/month benefit grows to ~$3,277/month in nominal dollars — but real purchasing power depends on actual inflation.
Federal Tax on Benefits
Up to 85% of your SS benefit may be subject to federal income tax, depending on your Combined Income = AGI + nontaxable interest + ½ SS benefits. The thresholds ($25K/$34K single; $32K/$44K joint) are not inflation-indexed, meaning more retirees become taxable every year. Some states also tax SS benefits — check your state’s rules.
2026 Key Numbers at a Glance
Max benefit at 62: $2,969/mo · At FRA (67): $4,152/mo · At 70: $5,181/mo. Average benefit Feb 2026: ~$2,076/mo. Wage base cap: $184,500. Earnings test limit (under FRA): $24,480/yr ($2,040/mo). WEP and GPO were repealed effective January 2024 under the SS Fairness Act.
2026 SSA Key Numbers: Bend Points, COLA & Wage Base Cap
These are the official SSA figures used inside this calculator. Bookmark this page — the SSA updates these every January.
| Metric | 2026 Value | What It Means for You |
|---|---|---|
| PIA Bend Point 1 | $1,286 / mo AIME | 90% replacement rate below this threshold |
| PIA Bend Point 2 | $7,749 / mo AIME | 32% replacement rate between the two bend points |
| SS Taxable Wage Base | $184,500 | SS tax (6.2%) applies to wages up to this cap |
| 2026 COLA | 2.8% | Benefits increased by this amount in January 2026 |
| FRA (Born 1960+) | Age 67 | The age at which you receive 100% of your PIA |
| Earliest Claiming Age | Age 62 | 30% permanent reduction from PIA (born 1960+) |
| Latest Claiming Age | Age 70 | 124% of PIA — no credits accumulate after 70 |
| Delayed Retirement Credits | 8% per year | Earned for each year past FRA up to age 70 |
| Earnings Test Limit (Under FRA) | $24,480 / yr | $1 withheld per $2 earned over limit before FRA |
| Maximum Benefit at 62 | $2,969 / mo | For workers who earned at or above the wage cap every year |
| Maximum Benefit at FRA (67) | $4,152 / mo | Highest possible PIA at full retirement age in 2026 |
| Maximum Benefit at 70 | $5,181 / mo | Maximum possible monthly SS benefit anyone can receive |
| Average Monthly Benefit (Feb 2026) | ~$2,076 / mo | National average — most Americans receive less than the max |
| SECA Rate (Self-Employed) | 15.3% | 12.4% SS + 2.9% Medicare on 92.35% of net profit |
| Trust Fund Depletion (Projected) | ~2033 | If Congress takes no action, scheduled benefits may drop to ~77% |
Claiming Strategies: Early (Age 62) vs. FRA (67) vs. Delayed (70)
There is no single “right” answer — but there are clear winners and losers depending on your health, finances, and marital situation. Here are the four main claiming scenarios.
You get money sooner, but 30% less per month — forever. Best if you have a serious health condition, no other retirement income, or a job you physically cannot continue. The breakeven vs. waiting until 67 is typically age 78–79.
Many people claim here because Medicare starts at 65. While that removes the health insurance pressure, you are still locking in a permanent reduction. If you can afford to wait, even two more years adds significant lifetime income for most people.
FRA for anyone born in 1960 or later. You receive your full PIA with no reduction. This is the baseline the SSA designed the formula around. If you are in average health and have moderate savings, FRA is often the safest, most balanced choice.
Every year past FRA earns 8% Delayed Retirement Credits. At 70 you receive 24% more per month than at 67 — permanently. If you live past your mid-80s, this strategy produces the most lifetime income. Especially powerful for the higher earner in a married couple to maximize survivor benefit.
How the SSA Calculates Your Retirement Benefits (2026 Guide)
This is the most detailed free Social Security calculator available for Americans in 2026. It does not just give you a number — it shows you the exact math the SSA uses, step by step, so you understand why your benefit is what it is and how every single decision you make changes it.
When you enter your information and hit calculate, this tool runs through the same six-step process the Social Security Administration uses to determine your benefit — in under a second. Here is exactly what happens inside each step.
Step 1: Converting Earnings to AIME (Average Indexed Monthly Earnings)
The SSA formula starts with your Average Indexed Monthly Earnings (AIME) — a single number that represents your lifetime earning power adjusted for wage inflation. To calculate AIME precisely, the SSA pulls your full 35-year earnings record and adjusts each year using the National Average Wage Index (NAWI).
This calculator builds a simplified AIME using your average annual income and years worked. It caps earnings at the 2026 SS wage base of $184,500, then divides by 420 (35 years × 12 months). If you worked fewer than 35 years, the shortfall years are counted as $0 — which is why working even 2–3 more years can meaningfully raise your benefit.
Step 2: Applying the 2026 Bend Points to Find Your PIA
Your AIME goes into the PIA formula — the most important calculation in all of Social Security. The formula is progressive, which means it replaces a higher percentage of income for lower earners than for higher earners. It does this using two “bend points” — dollar thresholds that change the replacement rate applied to each slice of your AIME.
For 2026, the two official SSA bend points are $1,286/mo and $7,749/mo. The formula applies three different rates across three tiers of your AIME:
90% × $1,286 = $1,157.40
32% × ($5,357 − $1,286) = 32% × $4,071 = $1,302.72
PIA = $1,157.40 + $1,302.72 = $2,460.10/mo at FRA
Step 3: Adjusting for Your Full Retirement Age (FRA)
Your PIA is the baseline — what you would receive at exactly your Full Retirement Age (FRA). Every month you claim before or after FRA shifts that number up or down — permanently. There is no “reset.” Once you start, that monthly amount is locked in for life (plus annual COLA adjustments).
Step 4: COLA: How the Cost-of-Living Adjustment Grows Your Benefit
Once you start collecting, your benefit gets a Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) every January — automatically, without any action on your part. The COLA is tied to the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners (CPI-W), measured in the third quarter of each year.
The 2026 COLA is 2.8%. Over a 20-year retirement, COLAs have a massive compounding effect. A $2,000/month benefit in 2026 grows to approximately $3,277/month in nominal dollars by 2046 at 2.5% average COLA — though purchasing power depends on actual inflation.
Step 5: IRS Federal Tax on Your Social Security Income
This surprises most people: up to 85% of your Social Security benefit can be subject to federal income tax. Whether it is taxed — and how much — depends on your Combined Income, calculated as:
Step 6: Lifetime Value & Breakeven Age Analysis
The final output combines everything above to answer the question every retiree really asks: “What is the smartest age to claim?” The calculator projects your total lifetime SS income under every claiming age from 62 to 70, compares them side by side, and calculates the exact breakeven age — the point where waiting becomes mathematically worth it.
Breakeven analysis works like this: claiming at 62 gives you more checks, but each check is smaller. Waiting until 70 means fewer checks but much larger ones. At some specific age — typically the late 70s — the cumulative total from the later claim catches up and surpasses the early claim. That crossover point is your breakeven age. Live past it: delay wins. Die before it: claiming early wins.
Most SS calculators ask for a few numbers and give you one answer. This tool has 15 inputs because Social Security is genuinely complex. Here is what each one does and why it matters.
Social Security 101: The Pay-As-You-Go System Explained
Social Security is not a savings account. It is not a retirement fund sitting somewhere with your name on it. Understanding what it actually is changes how you think about every claiming decision.
The 7.65% taken from your paycheck every two weeks (6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare) does not go into an account for you. It goes directly to fund the benefits paid to current retirees. Today’s workers fund today’s retirees. When you retire, the workers at that time fund your benefits.
This design has worked for 90+ years, but it creates the pressure that drives the 2033 funding concern: the ratio of workers to retirees is shrinking as Baby Boomers age out of the workforce.
Social Security was never meant to be your entire retirement income. For a worker earning $75,000 per year, SS at FRA might replace 35–40% of that income. For someone earning $40,000, the replacement rate might be 50–55%. For someone earning $150,000, it might be 25%.
The progressive bend-point formula is intentionally designed to protect lower earners more. This is why the first $1,286/month of AIME gets 90% replacement — it is Social Security functioning as a social insurance floor.
The 6 Most Expensive Social Security Mistakes Retirees Make
Each of these mistakes costs real money — often hundreds of thousands of dollars over a lifetime. This calculator helps you avoid all of them.
Real US Retirement Scenarios: Spousal, SECA Tax & WEP/GPO Examples
Numbers make more sense when they belong to someone. These are five realistic American workers — different careers, incomes, and family situations — with the exact Social Security math worked out for each one. Find the profile closest to yours and use it as a starting point before you run the calculator above.
Linda M., 64 — Scenario 1: W-2 Teacher with WEP/GPO Repeal (SS Fairness Act)
Linda worked 32 years as a 4th-grade teacher in the Columbus City School District. Her salary grew from $28,000 when she started to $72,000 at retirement. She has a pension through STRS Ohio — which previously triggered the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP), cutting her SS benefit. Thanks to the SS Fairness Act signed in January 2024, WEP was repealed and Linda now receives her full benefit.
Marcus T., 58 — Scenario 2: Self-Employed Contractor Navigating SECA Taxes
Marcus has run his own HVAC business for 22 years, averaging $95,000 in net profit after business expenses. He pays SECA tax every quarter — both the employee and employer portions of SS and Medicare. At 58, he is planning his exit and wants to know if he should keep working a few more years before claiming at 70 to maximize his benefit.
Robert & Carol D., Scenario 3: Married Couple Maximizing Spousal & Survivor Benefits
Robert worked 38 years as a civil engineer, averaging $110,000. Carol worked 18 years as a part-time bookkeeper, averaging $34,000 — she took time off to raise their two children. Robert is at FRA; Carol is 3 years away from FRA. They want to coordinate claims to maximize household SS income and protect Carol if Robert dies first.
Denise W., 62 — Scenario 4: Low-Income Earner & The Progressive Replacement Rate
Denise has worked in home health care since age 25, earning a modest but steady income. At $28,000 per year for 37 years, she has a solid 35-year earnings record — but her income has always been below average. She is physically exhausted at 62 and considering claiming immediately, even with the permanent reduction. This example shows how the SS bend-point formula actually protects workers like Denise more than it protects high earners.
Jonathan K., 68 — Scenario 5: High Earner Facing the 85% Federal Tax Trap
Jonathan earned above the SS wage base for most of his 40-year legal career. His income averaged $230,000 — but SS taxes only applied to the first $160,000–$184,500 each year (the cap increases annually). He delayed claiming until 68, two years past FRA, collecting Delayed Retirement Credits. His 401(k) withdrawals and pension mean most of his SS benefit is federally taxable — a reality many high earners overlook entirely.
5 Expert Strategies to Maximize Your Lifetime SSA Payout
These are not general advice. These are the same strategies financial planners charge hundreds of dollars an hour to explain — applied specifically to how Social Security works in 2026. Each tip is actionable and includes the exact dollar impact so you can decide if it applies to your situation.
Delay to 70 Only If You Can Bridge the Income Gap (e.g., Roth IRA)
Delaying to 70 is only valuable if you can actually afford to wait. The 8% Delayed Retirement Credit only matters if you are alive to collect it long enough. The real question is not “should I wait?” — it is “what do I live on between 67 and 70?”
The three most effective bridge strategies financial planners use:
The “Fill the Zeros” Strategy: Replace Non-Working Years
The SSA always uses your 35 highest-earning years to calculate your AIME. Every year below 35 is counted as $0 in the average. Those zeros are brutal — they drag your monthly benefit down for the rest of your life.
If you have worked fewer than 35 years, each additional year you work in a SS-covered job does two things simultaneously: it adds new covered earnings AND it removes a zero from your 35-year average. Even low or moderate additional earnings can produce a surprisingly large permanent benefit increase.
| Covered Years Worked | Zero Years in AIME | AIME Penalty | Approx. Monthly Benefit Lost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 years | 5 zeros | −14.3% | −$285 to −$480/mo |
| 32 years | 3 zeros | −8.6% | −$170 to −$290/mo |
| 34 years | 1 zero | −2.9% | −$58 to −$96/mo |
| 35+ years | 0 zeros | No penalty | Full benefit |
Maximize the Survivor Benefit for Your Spouse
Most Americans plan their Social Security as if they will live exactly as long as they expect. The reality is that in a married couple, one person typically outlives the other by 8–12 years — and that survivor lives on a single SS check for the rest of their life.
The survivor benefit pays 100% of the deceased spouse’s benefit — not 50%, not an average. This means the single most important SS decision a married couple makes is how large the higher earner’s benefit is when they die, because that is what the survivor collects for the rest of their life.
Control Your “Combined Income” to Shrink Federal Taxes
Up to 85% of your Social Security benefit is taxable — but only if your Combined Income crosses the IRS thresholds. Combined Income is not your total income. It is a specific IRS formula: AGI + nontaxable interest + ½ of your annual SS benefit. Understanding what counts — and what does not — lets you engineer your retirement income to stay under the thresholds.
Here are the four most effective ways to control Combined Income and reduce your SS tax burden:
Audit Your SSA Earnings Record for Missing Wages
Your Social Security benefit is calculated entirely from the earnings record the SSA has on file for you. If that record has errors — missing years, wrong amounts, uncredited earnings — your benefit will be wrong. And once you claim, correcting old errors becomes significantly harder.
The SSA’s own data shows that earnings record errors affect millions of workers, particularly those who changed jobs frequently, worked for employers who filed W-2s late or incorrectly, or had periods of self-employment that were misreported. Checking your record takes 10 minutes and could be worth thousands of dollars.
Social Security FAQs: Medicare, Spousal Rules & Earning Limits
This FAQ covers the most common questions Americans have about Social Security in 2026 — from how benefits are calculated to spousal rules, taxes, early claiming penalties, self-employment, and the 2033 funding risk.
Social Security is a federal insurance program that replaces part of your income if you retire, become disabled, or die and leave eligible survivors. While you are working, you and your employer pay Social Security taxes (12.4% total on wages up to the annual wage base; 6.2% each for employees) into the system. The money is used to pay current beneficiaries. When you claim, your benefit is based on your own lifetime earnings record and the age you start collecting.
The SSA calculates your benefit in three main steps. First, it takes your 35 highest earning years of Social Security–covered work, indexes each year for wage inflation, and averages them to create your AIME (Average Indexed Monthly Earnings). Second, it applies the progressive PIA formula with the official bend points for your eligibility year. Third, it adjusts that PIA up or down based on the age you start claiming relative to your Full Retirement Age (FRA), including any early-claim reduction or Delayed Retirement Credits for claiming after FRA.
For workers becoming eligible in 2026, the bend points are $1,286 and $7,749 of AIME. The formula pays 90% of your AIME up to $1,286, 32% of AIME between $1,286 and $7,749, and 15% of AIME above $7,749. These thresholds make the formula progressive: lower earners get a higher percentage of their income replaced than higher earners, even though higher earners still receive larger dollar benefits. Changing bend points each year ensures the formula keeps up with national wage growth.
Your Full Retirement Age is the age at which you are entitled to 100% of your Primary Insurance Amount (PIA). For people born in 1954 or earlier, FRA is 66. For those born from 1955 to 1959, FRA gradually increases from 66 and 2 months to 66 and 10 months. For anyone born in 1960 or later — which includes most current workers — FRA is 67. The FRA is critical because all early-claim reductions and delayed credits are measured relative to it.
If your FRA is 67 and you claim at 62, your monthly benefit is permanently reduced by about 30%. The reduction is roughly 5/9 of 1% for each of the first 36 months before FRA and 5/12 of 1% for any additional month up to 60 months early. That means someone with a $2,000 PIA at FRA would receive about $1,400 per month if they start at 62 — and every future COLA is applied to that reduced base amount.
Delayed Retirement Credits (DRCs) increase your benefit for each month you wait to claim after your Full Retirement Age, up to age 70. For people born in 1943 or later, DRCs add 8% per year (two-thirds of 1% per month) to your PIA. If your FRA is 67 and you wait until 70, you earn 24% in DRCs: a PIA of $2,500 becomes a benefit of about $3,100 per month at age 70 — before COLAs. No additional credits apply for claiming after 70.
Yes, but if you are younger than your Full Retirement Age, the Earnings Test may temporarily reduce your benefits if your work income exceeds the annual limit. In 2026, the limit is $24,480 for most beneficiaries; $1 in benefits is withheld for every $2 you earn above that amount. In the calendar year you reach FRA, a higher limit and a $1-for-$3 rule apply for earnings before your birthday month. After FRA, there is no earnings limit — you can work and earn any amount without a reduction in your monthly Social Security check.
Yes, the Earnings Test does not cause you to permanently lose benefits. When you reach Full Retirement Age, the Social Security Administration recalculates your benefit as if you had claimed later than you actually did, effectively crediting back months for which benefits were withheld. Your monthly check is then increased going forward. However, this recalculation is complex and the higher monthly payments only make up the withheld amount gradually over time, so the short-term cash-flow hit can still be significant.
A spouse may be eligible to receive up to 50% of the other spouse’s PIA at their own FRA if that amount is higher than the benefit based on their own earnings record. The higher-earning spouse must have filed for benefits (or be receiving them) for the spousal benefit to be paid. If the spouse claims before their own FRA, the spousal benefit is reduced, just like early claiming on a worker’s own record. Spousal benefits do not increase if the worker delays claiming past FRA — they are always based on the worker’s PIA, not the delayed amount.
Survivor benefits pay a percentage of the deceased worker’s benefit to an eligible surviving spouse, ex-spouse, or dependent child. A surviving spouse at full retirement age can receive up to 100% of the deceased spouse’s benefit, including any Delayed Retirement Credits they earned by claiming after FRA. If the survivor claims earlier than their survivor FRA (which may differ from their retirement FRA), the survivor benefit is reduced. The key point: the survivor steps up to the higher of their own benefit or the deceased spouse’s benefit — but they do not receive both in full at the same time.
The Social Security Fairness Act, signed in early 2024, repealed the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO). Before repeal, WEP reduced Social Security benefits for workers who also had pensions from non-covered employment (such as some teachers and public safety workers), and GPO reduced spousal or survivor benefits for those receiving a government pension. The repeal restores full Social Security and spousal/survivor benefits for affected public sector workers going forward, and many are receiving retroactive adjustments for benefits paid after December 2023.
Yes, depending on your total income, up to 85% of your Social Security benefits can be subject to federal income tax. The IRS uses a measure called “Combined Income,” which equals your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) plus nontaxable interest plus half of your Social Security benefits. If Combined Income exceeds certain thresholds ($25,000 and $34,000 for singles, $32,000 and $44,000 for married couples filing jointly), a portion of your benefits becomes taxable. The exact amount depends on how far above those thresholds your Combined Income falls.
Many retirees are surprised because the original intent of Social Security was to provide tax-free benefits to lower- and middle-income retirees, and the taxation rules were introduced later. The thresholds for taxing benefits were set in the 1980s and have never been indexed for inflation, so over time more retirees have been pushed over those fixed dollar amounts as wages and savings have grown. As a result, millions of retirees who never expected to pay tax on Social Security now do, especially those with significant IRA/401(k) withdrawals, pensions, or investment income.
Yes, self-employed workers are fully eligible for Social Security benefits as long as they report their net earnings and pay SECA (Self-Employment Contributions Act) tax. SECA is 15.3% on 92.35% of net self-employment income: 12.4% for Social Security (up to the annual wage base) and 2.9% for Medicare. Self-employed people pay both the employee and employer share, but they can deduct half of the SECA tax on their federal tax return. Every dollar of reported self-employment income up to the wage base counts toward their earnings record and future benefit calculation.
If you have more than 35 years of Social Security–covered earnings, the SSA still uses only your highest 35 years when calculating your AIME. Additional high-earning years can replace earlier lower-earning years in your calculation, raising your AIME and benefit. This is why working longer at a higher salary, even after you have 35 years in the system, can still increase your benefit if the new year is higher than one of the older 35 years currently being used in your record.
If you have fewer than 35 years of Social Security–covered earnings, the SSA includes zero-earning years to bring the total count up to 35 years. These zeros are part of your AIME calculation and reduce your average earnings, which lowers your benefit. Working additional years in a covered job later in life can replace those zero years with positive earnings, often significantly increasing your eventual monthly benefit and lifetime payout.
Current projections from the Social Security Trustees indicate that without changes, the combined trust fund could be depleted around 2033. That does not mean benefits go to zero. It means that ongoing payroll tax revenue would be sufficient to pay roughly 75–80% of scheduled benefits at that time. Congress has many options to close the funding gap — such as raising the wage base, adjusting payroll tax rates, or modifying benefits — and has historically acted to preserve Social Security’s solvency. The calculator on this page includes an optional “policy risk” toggle that models a 77% benefit scenario after 2033 for conservative planning.
The COLA is an automatic yearly increase in your benefit designed to keep up with inflation. It is based on the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners (CPI-W), measured in the third quarter of each year. The COLA for 2026 is 2.8%, which means all existing benefits are increased by that percentage in January 2026. Over time, even small COLAs compound; a $2,000 monthly benefit that grows at 2.5% per year for 20 years becomes roughly $3,277 per month in nominal terms, though the real purchasing power depends on actual inflation.
You have a limited ability to undo or adjust your claiming decision. Within the first 12 months after you start benefits, you can withdraw your application, repay all benefits received (including spousal benefits paid to others on your record), and restart later at a higher rate as if you had never claimed. After 12 months, you cannot withdraw, but once you reach your Full Retirement Age you can voluntarily suspend your benefit to earn Delayed Retirement Credits up to age 70. Outside of those options, your initial claiming age and reduction are generally permanent.
The “best” age depends on your health, life expectancy, marital status, work plans, other income sources, and risk tolerance. In general, early claiming maximizes your number of checks but reduces each check, while delaying does the opposite. Breakeven analysis compares cumulative lifetime benefits at different claiming ages; if you live beyond the breakeven age (often late 70s to early 80s), delaying typically yields more lifetime income. For married couples, optimizing the higher earner’s benefit and survivor benefit is often more important than maximizing the first few years of income.
Good calculators can be very close if you enter realistic information, because they apply the same core formulas the SSA uses: 35-year AIME, current-year bend points, early-claim reductions, Delayed Retirement Credits, COLA assumptions, tax rules, and earnings tests. However, they cannot access your actual earnings record unless you enter it manually, and they may simplify some tax and policy edge cases. For precise planning, you should compare calculator estimates with the official benefit estimate from your My Social Security account and use both as cross-checks rather than relying on either one alone.
Social Security and Medicare are separate programs, even though they are often mentioned together. Social Security provides monthly income benefits (retirement, disability, survivor) and is funded primarily by the 12.4% payroll tax on wages up to the annual wage base. Medicare provides health insurance for people 65 and older and some younger disabled individuals, funded by a separate 2.9% payroll tax (plus additional surtaxes for high earners) and general revenues. You can receive Social Security without Medicare, Medicare without Social Security, or both together, although many people enroll in both at 65 or later.
If you were married for at least 10 years, divorced, and are currently unmarried, you may qualify for divorced-spouse benefits based on your ex-spouse’s record, similar to a regular spousal benefit. You can also be eligible for divorced-survivor benefits if your ex-spouse dies. Remarrying generally ends eligibility for benefits based on a prior spouse’s record (with some exceptions for survivor benefits at older ages). Importantly, your claim on an ex-spouse’s record does not reduce what they or their current spouse receive.
You can view your full earnings history and personalized benefit estimates at the official Social Security website by creating or logging into your My Social Security account at ssa.gov/myaccount. Your online statement shows every year of covered earnings credited to your record, projected retirement benefits at different ages, and estimates for disability and survivor benefits. Reviewing this information regularly helps you catch errors early and compare the SSA’s official numbers with independent calculators when planning your claiming strategy.
Legal Disclaimer & Editorial Transparency
USFinanceCalculators.com is committed to accuracy, transparency, and editorial independence. This page explains exactly what this calculator does, how its estimates are produced, what they cannot account for, and where to find authoritative official information.
The Social Security Benefits Estimator provided by USFinanceCalculators.com (“the Calculator”) is made available for general informational and educational purposes only. The Calculator is not a product of the Social Security Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, or any other government agency, and it is not endorsed by or affiliated with any government body.
Estimates generated by the Calculator are approximations based on the inputs you provide and the formulas, bend points, COLA rates, and tax thresholds in effect for 2026. Your actual Social Security benefit will be determined solely by the Social Security Administration based on your official earnings record, your date of birth, your marital and work history, and applicable law at the time you claim.
USFinanceCalculators.com makes no warranties or representations — express or implied — regarding the accuracy, completeness, or fitness for any particular purpose of the results generated by this Calculator. Use of this Calculator does not create an attorney-client, financial advisor-client, or any other professional relationship between you and USFinanceCalculators.com or its operators.
Social Security law and regulations are subject to change by acts of Congress. Tax laws governing the taxability of Social Security benefits are likewise subject to amendment. The 2033 trust fund depletion scenario shown in this Calculator is a projection from the SSA Trustees’ 2025 report and does not constitute a prediction of future Congressional action or benefit cuts.
You should not make any Social Security claiming decision, investment decision, or retirement planning decision based solely on the output of this Calculator. Always verify your individual situation with the Social Security Administration directly, and seek guidance from a licensed financial or tax professional before taking action.
USFinanceCalculators.com operates editorially independent of any financial product provider, insurance company, or brokerage. We do not receive compensation to feature, recommend, or rank any financial product or service on this page. Our revenue comes from display advertising only, and advertisers have no influence over our calculator formulas, results, or educational content.
This calculator is reviewed and updated at minimum once per year in January, when the SSA publishes new bend points, wage bases, and COLA figures. Mid-year updates are issued whenever Congress passes material changes to Social Security law. The most recent update to this page was for the 2026 tax year, reflecting the 2026 bend points of $1,286 and $7,749, the 2026 COLA of 2.8%, and the 2026 SS wage base of $184,500.