Some people want or need to work while collecting Social Security.
To understand which work rules apply to you, you must know your full retirement age.
Benefits are eventually credited back, but you can lose whole checks.
Social Security benefits only replace around 40% of pre-retirement income, according to the Social Security Administration. Since that's not nearly enough to live on, many people want to work while collecting benefits.
Before you work, you need to know the work rules. These rules are not the same for all retirees. Here's what you need to know about how these rules could affect your ability to earn a paycheck.
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Social Security's work rules are very different for some retirees than others. Specifically:
This means your age will affect how much you're allowed to work.
To understand which work rules apply to you, you must know what your full retirement age is for Social Security. According to the Social Security Administration, this is when your FRA is, and when you can work as much as you want while collecting Social Security benefits at the same time.
So, if you're at least 67 in 2026, you can work as much as you'd like without your Social Security checks being affected.
If you work before full retirement age while collecting benefits, you start losing benefits once your income exceeds a certain level, which changes each year due to inflation. Here are the rules for working while collecting Social Security in 2026, according to the Social Security Administration:
Benefits are eventually credited back, but you can lose whole checks, which is a problem if you hoped for income from both sources.
You must know the Social Security work rules that apply to you if you decide to work while claiming benefits.
You should also aim to save and invest for retirement, and make smart investment choices, so those investments can supplement Social Security if you can't work as much as you'd like.
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