Best Money Tips: Bigger Social Security Checks
Unlock proven strategies to maximize your Social Security benefits and secure larger monthly retirement checks for life.

Best Money Tips: How to Get Bigger Checks from Social Security
Social Security provides essential retirement income for millions of Americans, but many leave money on the table by not optimizing their benefits. By understanding key strategies like delaying claims, leveraging spousal benefits, and maximizing earnings history, you can significantly increase your monthly payments. This guide covers proven tips drawn from official guidelines and expert analyses to help you secure larger checks.
Work Longer to Boost Your Earnings Record
Your Social Security benefit is calculated based on your 35 highest-earning years, adjusted for inflation. If you have fewer than 35 years of earnings or low-income years, continuing to work replaces those weaker years with higher ones, directly increasing your primary insurance amount (PIA).
For instance, if you’ve worked only 30 years, five zeros drag down your average. Adding five more years of solid earnings can raise your benefit by 10-20% or more, depending on your salary. The Social Security Administration (SSA) recalculates your benefit annually if new earnings improve your record, often automatically boosting payments without extra action.
- Target careers or side gigs in your 60s that pay above your historical average.
- Self-employed individuals should ensure accurate reporting of net earnings to SSA.
- Even part-time work counts if it exceeds previous low years.
Recent data shows delaying retirement work until full retirement age (FRA) or beyond yields the highest returns, as higher lifetime earnings compound into permanently larger benefits.
Delay Claiming Until Age 70 for Maximum Benefits
Claiming Social Security before your FRA (66-67 depending on birth year) reduces benefits by up to 30%, while delaying past FRA until 70 increases them by 8% per year, equating to a 24-32% boost over FRA amounts. This delayed retirement credit (DRC) is risk-free and inflation-adjusted.
Statistics reveal that despite this incentive, more retirees claim at 62, locking in smaller checks amid financial pressures. Strategies like annuities or reverse mortgages can bridge the gap, allowing you to wait for maximized payments. For couples, the higher earner should delay to 70 for survivor benefits that replace up to 100% of their amount.
| Claim Age | FRA Benefit (100%) | Monthly Benefit | Lifetime Gain (est. to 85) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 62 | $2,000 | $1,400 (-30%) | Lower by $100K+ |
| FRA (67) | $2,000 | $2,000 | Baseline |
| 70 | $2,000 | $2,640 (+32%) | Higher by $150K+ |
Personalized planning is key; not everyone should delay, considering health and longevity.
Understand Spousal and Survivor Benefits
Spouses can claim up to 50% of their partner’s FRA benefit, even with no work history. Divorced spouses qualify if the marriage lasted 10+ years and you’re unmarried. Survivor benefits provide 100% of the deceased spouse’s benefit to widows/widowers.
Optimal strategy: The lower earner claims early spousal benefits at FRA, while the higher earner delays to 70. This ‘double dipping’ maximizes household income. SSA’s calculators help model scenarios based on marital history.
- Restricted application: Pre-1954 births could claim spousal while letting own benefits grow (now phased out).
- Switching: Start on spousal, switch to own at 70.
- Ex-spousal: Claim on ex’s record without affecting their benefits.
File and Suspend (If Eligible)
Though largely eliminated by Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 for new claimants, those reaching FRA before 1959 may still file and suspend. You file at FRA to trigger spousal benefits for your spouse, suspend your own to earn DRCs up to 70.
This tactic added 8% annual growth while providing family income. Check eligibility via SSA; timing is critical.
Coordinate Benefits Between Spouses
Couples should stagger claims: one early for immediate cash flow, the other delayed for longevity protection. Survivor benefits ensure the surviving spouse receives the higher amount, making delay for the breadwinner optimal.
Example: Husband delays to 70 ($3,000/mo), wife claims at 62 on her record ($1,200). Upon his passing, she gets $3,000 survivor benefit, far exceeding her own. Use SSA tools for projections.
Avoid Earnings Test Penalties
Before FRA, earning over $22,320 (2024 limit, adjusts yearly) reduces benefits $1 for every $2 excess. At FRA, it’s $1 per $3 over $59,520. Reductions are temporary; SSA recalculates higher payments later.
Plan part-time work carefully or use Roth withdrawals (no earned income) to avoid penalties. Post-FRA, no limits apply.
Maximize by Correcting Earnings Record
Errors in SSA records from employer misreporting can lower benefits. Request a statement at ssa.gov/myaccount, correct via Form SSA-7008. Military service, self-employment, or W-2 issues are common fixes boosting PIA.
Consider Government Pension Offset and Windfall Elimination
Non-covered pensions (e.g., some teachers, firefighters) reduce spousal/survivor benefits by 2/3 of pension amount. Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) affects those with <30 years substantial covered earnings. Plan around these by choosing covered employment.
Use SS as Bridge to Roth Conversions
Before claiming, convert traditional IRAs to Roth in low-tax years, paying taxes from other savings. This fills lower brackets, reduces future RMDs, and minimizes Social Security taxation (up to 85% taxable). Catch-up contributions ($31,000 401(k)/$8,000 IRA for 50+) build this bridge.
Relocate to a Low-Tax State
Only 13 states tax Social Security; others don’t. No-tax states like Florida, Texas preserve more income. Factor cost-of-living; Sun Belt moves often yield net gains.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Should I always delay Social Security to 70?
No, it depends on health, savings, and spouse’s situation. Objective planning across finances is essential.
Can I work and collect benefits before FRA?
Yes, but earnings above limits trigger temporary reductions until FRA.
How do spousal benefits work for divorced people?
If married 10+ years and unmarried, claim up to 50% of ex’s FRA benefit.
Will Social Security run out?
Trustees project solvency to 2034; thereafter 75-80% benefits payable without reform.
What’s the average benefit?
$1,907 monthly (2024); max at 70 exceeds $4,800 for high earners.
Implementing these strategies requires personalized advice. Use SSA.gov tools and consult professionals for your situation.
References
- 3 ways to avoid dipping into Social Security early — CBS News. 2024. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/how-to-avoid-dipping-into-social-security-early/
- Responding to Your Social Security Questions — YouTube (Financial Planning Video). 2023. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KGxKPu9j6kk
- 10 things you need to know about Social Security — Wise Bread (SSA-informed). 2023. https://www.wisebread.com/node/1519120
- The 102 best money websites — United Policyholders (AARP/SSA Tools). 2024. https://uphelp.org/the-102-best-money-websites/?print=print
- Social Security Administration Official Guidelines (via secondary analyses) — SSA.gov (Primary). 2025. https://www.ssa.gov/
Read full bio of Sneha Tete















