The ‘Official’ Story vs. The Reality of Full Retirement Age
The official story from the Social Security Administration (SSA) is straightforward. Your Full Retirement Age, or FRA, is the age at which you are entitled to receive 100% of your primary insurance amount (PIA), which is the benefit calculated from your lifetime earnings. This age used to be 65 for everyone. However, due to legislative changes designed to shore up the system’s finances, the FRA began to gradually increase.
For anyone born in 1954, the FRA is 66. It then increases by two months for each subsequent birth year until it settles at 67 for everyone born in 1960 or later. So, if you are asking, “what is my full retirement age for Social Security?” and you were born in 1960 or after, the answer is 67. Simple enough, right? This is the basic information you will find on any government pamphlet.
The reality, however, is far more nuanced and strategically significant. Experienced planners see the FRA not as a single number, but as the central pivot point in a critical ten-year window of decision-making, from age 62 to age 70.
Here is the reality the official story often glosses over: the rising FRA is a quiet but effective benefit reduction for those who claim early. When the FRA was 66, claiming at 62 resulted in a 25% permanent reduction in benefits. Now, with an FRA of 67, claiming at 62 triggers a 30% permanent reduction. The penalty for early claiming has become steeper. The government has increased the incentive to wait without explicitly framing it that way.
Conversely, the power of delaying your claim past your FRA has become even more pronounced. For every year you wait past your FRA until age 70, you earn Delayed Retirement Credits, which increase your benefit by 8% per year. When your FRA is 67, waiting until 70 gives you three years of these credits, for a total increase of 24% above your 100% benefit. This means you could receive 124% of your primary insurance amount for the rest of your life.
The gap between the smallest possible check (at 62) and the largest possible check (at 70) has widened. For someone with an FRA of 67, claiming at 70 results in a benefit that is about 77% higher than if they claimed at 62, not even including the effects of inflation adjustments. The decision of when to claim has never had a greater impact on your lifetime income.