
Benefit Calculators
The best way to start planning for your future is by creating a my Social Security account online. With my Social Security, you can verify your earnings, get your Social Security Statement, and much more – all from the comfort of your home or office.
Online Benefits Calculator
These tools can be accurate but require access to your official earnings record in our database. The simplest way to do that is by creating or logging in to your my Social Security account. The other way is to answer a series of questions to prove your identity.
Additional Online Tools
Find your full retirement age and learn how your monthly benefits may be reduced if you retire before your full retirement age.
How to calculate Social Security benefits?
Your Social Security benefit is based on your average indexed monthly earnings (AIME). You can calculate this by looking at your annual income each year. Make sure you only include the portion of your income that was subject to Social Security tax.
How much does Social Security pay?
Understanding how much you'll receive each month in Social Security benefits is a big part of retirement planning. The average is around $16,000 a year, but the actual amount you'll receive depends on how much money you've put into the system. The Social Security Administration (SSA) and other groups have online calculators that can help you estimate your benefits, but to calculate them more exactly you'll have to calculate your average indexed monthly earnings (AIME) to find your primary insurance amount. This amount must then be adjusted up or down to account for the age you decide to retire.
How to find out your NRA?
Find out your NRA by looking at the table on the SSA website, available at https://www.ssa.gov/oact/ProgData/nra.html. There is also a quick calculator on the side of the page. If you enter your birth date, it will tell you exactly when you will reach full retirement.
How much does the SSA withhold?
If you make more than $45,360 in 2018 after filing a claim for Social Security benefits, SSA withholds $1 in benefits for every $3 you earn in excess of this higher limit.
How many years do you have to work to get Social Security?
Add up your income for the 35 highest years. Social Security benefits are based on your average earnings for 35 years of work. If you haven't worked for at least 35 years, Social Security will average in zeroes for as many years as you are short. If you've worked more than 35 years, choose the 35 years in which you earned the most income.
How to find the average of 35 years?
Divide your total by 420. Once you've totaled your 35 highest-earning years, get the average by dividing that total amount by the number of months in 35 years, which is 420. Because you adjusted your earnings for inflation, this average is "indexed."
What is the maximum retirement benefit?
The maximum benefit depends on the year you retire, and how old you are when you retire. If you reach full retirement in 2017, your maximum benefit would be $2,687.
How many retirement estimates does Quick Calculator give?
If you do not give a retirement date and if you have not reached your normal (or full) retirement age, the Quick Calculator will give benefit estimates for three different retirement ages.
What is the benefit estimate?
Benefit estimates depend on your date of birth and on your earnings history. For security, the "Quick Calculator" does not access your earnings record; instead, it will estimate your earnings based on information you provide. So benefit estimates made by the Quick Calculator are rough. Although the "Quick Calculator" makes an initial assumption ...
How old do you have to be to use Quick Calculator?
You must be at least age 22 to use the form at right.
What does "0" mean in retirement?
If you entered 0, we assume you are now retired. Enter the last year in which you had covered earnings and the amount of such earnings.
How Does the Social Security Administration Calculate Benefits?
The Social Security Administration takes your highest-earning 35 years of covered wages and averages them, indexing for inflation. They give you a big fat “zero” for each year you don’t have earnings, so people who worked for fewer than 35 years may see lower benefits.
How long do you have to be a Social Security employee to get full benefits?
Anyone who pays into Social Security for at least 40 calendar quarters (10 years) is eligible for retirement benefits based on their earnings record. You are eligible for your full benefits once you reach full retirement age, which is either 66 and 67, depending on when you were born.
Who Is Eligible for Social Security Benefits?
Anyone who pays into Social Security for at least 40 calendar quarters (10 years) is eligible for retirement benefits based on their earnings record. You are eligible for your full benefits once you reach full retirement age, which is either 66 and 67, depending on when you were born. But if you claim later than that - you can put it off as late as age 70 - you’ll get a credit for doing so, with larger monthly benefits. Conversely, you can claim as early as age 62, but taking benefits before your full retirement age will result in the Social Security Administration docking your monthly benefits.
What is the Social Security income test for 2021?
For 2021, the Retirement Earnings Test Exempt Amount is $18,960/year ($1,580/month). If you’re in this age group and claiming benefits, then every $2 you make above the Exempt Amount will reduce by $1 the Social Security benefits you'll receive. (Note that only income from work counts for the Earnings Test, so income from capital gains and pensions won’t count against you.)
How does Social Security affect retirement?
Social Security benefits in retirement are impacted by three main criteria: the year you were born, the age you plan on electing (begin taking) benefits and your annual income in your working years. First we take your annual income and we adjust it by the Average Wage Index (AWI), to get your indexed earnings.
What age do you have to be to claim Social Security?
If you claim Social Security benefits early and then continue working, you’ll be subject to what’s called the Retirement Earnings Test. If you’re between age 62 and your full retirement age, and you’re claiming benefits, you need to know about the Earnings Test Exempt Amount, a threshold that changes yearly.
How many states tax Social Security?
That covers federal income taxes. What about state income taxes? That depends. In 13 states, your Social Security benefits will be taxed as income, either in whole or in part; the remaining states do not tax Social Security income.
What does Social Security say about adjustments?
Social Security says that the adjustments "ensure that a worker's future benefits reflect the general rise in the standard of living that occurred during his or her working lifetime."
What percentage of a spouse's Social Security benefit is a PIA?
If you're married, the PIA will also figure in any benefit amount that your spouse would be due, generally 50 percent of your PIA if the spouse turns on the tap at full retirement age. The PIA is also the basis of a survivor's benefit and a child's benefit.
What is the effect of Social Security on lower income earners?
The effect of these calculations is that a Social Security benefit "replaces" more of the income of lower-wage earners than it does for higher-wage earners. The effect is to help level the playing field in retirement between workers of different income levels.
How much is Medicare tax?
That tax is 6.2 percent of your wages up to a ceiling ($127,200 in 2017). Plus, your employer matches the 6.2 percent payment for a total of 12.4 percent of your wages. (You also pay 1.45 percent of your wages, with an employer match, for Medicare. And if you earn more than $200,000 a year, you'll pay an additional 0.9 percent Medicare tax — as part of the Affordable Care Act.)
How many years of work do you have to work to get Social Security?
It starts with Social Security examining your earnings history — with an emphasis on the money you earned during your 35 highest-paid years. That means that if you worked 40 years, Social Security would use your highest-paid 35 years in its calculations and ignore the other five.
What is the purpose of the salary calculation?
The purpose of the calculation is to adjust your career earnings to reflect the changes in general wage levels that took place during the years of your career . The job that paid you, say, a $300 monthly income 40 years ago, would yield quite a bit more today.
How much do you need to earn to qualify for retirement?
To even be eligible for retirement benefits, you generally need 10 years (40 quarters) of gainful employment. In 2017, you need to earn at least $1,300 in a quarter for it to count as a credit.
