AARP Hearing Center
Delayed retirement credits are the financial reward Social Security gives you for putting off claiming your retirement benefit. Credits start accumulating the month you hit your full retirement age, or FRA, which is 66 and 6 months for people born in 1957 and is rising two months per year to 67 for people born in 1960 or later.
For every month from your FRA until age 70 that you postpone filing for benefits, Social Security increases your eventual benefit by two-thirds of 1 percent — a total of 8 percent for each year you wait. For example, wage earners who reach full retirement age at 67 but delay claiming benefits until 70 will get an extra 24 percent tacked on to their monthly payment.
The credits stop accruing when you reach 70. You can file for Social Security later than that, but doing so won’t increase your monthly benefit.
Keep in mind
- If you file for Social Security after FRA but before age 70, your delayed retirement credits are added to your benefit payment starting in January of the year after you earned them. If you wait until you turn 70, you get all your credits right from the first payment.
- If you are already drawing retirements benefits but want to up your future payments (and can afford to temporarily go without your current ones), you can direct Social Security to suspend your benefits. During the suspension period you will collect the credits just as if you’d never filed. This option is available between FRA and age 70.
More on Social Security
What is the maximum Social Security benefit?
Will my Social Security payment increase if I keep working after I start receiving benefits?