Pea-n-Me
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2004
- Messages
- 41,376
It is good to look at these numbers.Let's take your longevity to age 85 and you come up with these numbers:
collect $1,000 at age 62 - by the time you reach age 85 you will have collected: $276,000
collect $1,500 at age 67 - by the time you reach age 85 you will have collected: $324,000
Now these are simple numbers and don't account for cost of living increases and other factors.
If you wait until full retirement age before collecting benefits than you can continue working and still get your full social security. People who start collecting their SS benefits before reaching full retirement age will have to pay a penalty on any income earned above $18.000.
If you wait until full retirement age before collecting benefits and continue to work while collecting benefits, then social security will recalculate your income and increase your benefits every year to reflect your increased earnings. I think it all maxes out at 70 years old.
But I think if we look at the bigger picture, we have to take into consideration, at what cost is someone waiting until full retirement, and will that have an impact on their actual health and longevity? I believe it can.
If someone is still working after 62 and enjoying it, maybe working from home, making decent money, at a good place in life and doesn't mind continuing to work, then great, and more power to them.
But I'm not sure that describes most people. Some are absolutely miserable in their jobs and the day to day grind is causing them a lot of stress that can very well lead to health problems like hypertension, heart attack, diabetes, unhealthy habits, etc. Waiting till full retirement could cost them that way.
I have someone close to me for which the latter was the case. (Don't we all?) It was good for him to leave his job as his stress levels were off the charts. He made it work and has a whole different type of lifestyle now (which involved not only leaving his job, but moving and downsizing and getting rid of some other headaches in his life, etc.). For him it was a good thing even though it may have involved a smaller benefit, and he is now, finally, enjoying his less-harried life.
I guess everyone just needs to look at their own situation.