Are There Advantages to Filing for Social Security at 65?

Social Security benefits in retirement are earnings-based. The more you earn during your top 35 paid working years, the higher your benefits stand to be once you're eligible to claim them.

That said, the age at which you file for benefits will impact the amount you collect in Social Security each month. If you claim benefits at full retirement age, you'll get the exact amount your earnings record entitles you to. Full retirement age is either 66, 67, or 66 and a certain number of months, depending on the year you were born.

Candles in the shape of the number 65 lit in front of a black background with orange dots
Candles in the shape of the number 65 lit in front of a black background with orange dots

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Otherwise, you can file for benefits as early as age 62 and as late as age 70. Filing before full retirement age will reduce your benefits on a monthly basis, while filing after full retirement age will increase them. The maximum reduction you can face on the Social Security front is 30%, assuming you file at 62 with a full retirement age of 67. And the most you can boost your benefits is 32%, assuming you file at 70 with a full retirement age of 66.

Not surprisingly, 62 and 70 are popular alternatives outside of full retirement age to file for benefits. But here's another age you might consider: 65. Here's why you may want to go that route.

1. You can time your filing with Medicare

Though seniors get an eight-year window to file for Social Security, Medicare eligibility doesn't begin until age 65 unless you qualify for a health-related exception that lets you sign up earlier. The nice thing about filing for Social Security at 65 is that you can do so in conjunction with Medicare. From there, you can have your Medicare Part B premiums deducted directly from your Social Security payments, thereby saving yourself some legwork in the process.

2. You can get your money sooner than full retirement age without facing such extreme reductions

Many seniors claim benefits ahead of full retirement age not because they're impatient, but because a need for that money arises, whether it's spurred by health issues or the loss of a job. The nice thing about taking benefits at 65 is that you won't face the same reduction you'd be grappling with by filing at 62. If your full retirement age is 66, you'll only lose 6.67% of your monthly benefits by filing at 65. And if it's 67, you'll only lose 13.34%. That's a lot less than the 30% referenced above. At the same time, you'll also get your money a bit sooner than you would by waiting until full retirement age.

Should you claim Social Security at 65?

Though you might face just a modest reduction in benefits by claiming them at 65, that's still a reduction nonetheless. If you don't have much in the way of savings and expect Social Security to constitute the bulk of your retirement income, then slashing your benefits in any way could end up hurting you.