Maximum Social Security at 62 in 2026: What You Can Receive
- Author: Muriel Robel
- Posted: 2026-01-30
Many Americans consider claiming Social Security as soon as they turn 62, but early benefits come with permanent reductions.
In 2026, the maximum monthly payment at age 62 is $2,969 for workers who earned the maximum taxable amount for at least 35 years.
This includes the 2026 cost-of-living adjustment.
How Early Claiming Reduces Benefits
Claiming at 62 cuts your monthly benefit by roughly 30% compared to waiting until full retirement age.
For reference:
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Full retirement age: Maximum $4,152/month
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Age 70: Maximum $5,181/month
What Affects Your Personal Benefit
Your Social Security benefit depends on:
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Your highest 35 years of earnings
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Adjustments for wage inflation
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Earnings at or above the annual maximum taxable amount ($184,500 in 2026)
Working after 62 can replace lower-earning years and slightly increase benefits, but early-claiming reductions are permanent.
Key Takeaway
While $2,969 is the highest you can get at 62 in 2026, carefully consider whether early claiming fits your long-term retirement strategy.
Waiting could result in significantly higher monthly income.
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