I'm claiming at 62 for sure as it maximizes my lifetime benefit according to all the calculators.
Interesting.
What calculators do you use and what assumptions are you making about taxes, spending, investments, and timing trade-offs (62 vs. 70?)?
https://opensocialsecurity.com/ Defaults.
Really?
When I used the default on your calculator (just pressed submit) I got 65 years and a month as best, attached. (When I simply changed the default date to 1956, instead of 1960, I got an even later age: 68 years, 3 months.) This seems to contradict your 62 as best.
And in this interview with Christine Benz, Michael Piper (the author of your calculator) recommends claiming at
62 only for single people in poor health or, in some cases, for the lower earning partner in a marriage, so.
https://www.morningstar.com/portfolios/when-is-right-time-file-social-security-benefitsHere’s his key message, in his own words, from the interview linked above:
”For a single person in average health even, it typically makes sense to file anywhere from age 68 to 70, and that's purely looking at it actuarially. So, we're not accounting for the fact that it's usually advantageous from a tax standpoint to delay benefits. It's also not accounting for the fact that delaying benefits is helpful from a risk-reduction standpoint because you're getting longevity risk protection when you delay benefits. So,
for a single person in better-than-average health, yes, it almost always is going to make sense for that person to wait until 70.” I personally agree with Piper.