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Your Retirement Benefit: How It Is Figured

SSA Publication No. 05-10070, January 2007, ICN 467100 [View .pdf] Get Accessible Adobe Acrobat Reader

 

As you make plans for your retirement, you may ask, “How much will I get from Social Security?” There are several ways you can find out. Social Security sends a yearly Social Security Statement to everyone age 25 or older who has paid Social Security taxes and has not yet received benefits. You should receive a Statement about three months before your birthday each year.

You also can request a Statement by ­calling Social Security and asking for a form SSA-7004, Request for Social Security Statement, or by downloading the form at www.socialsecurity.gov/online/ssa-7004.html on the Internet. Or, you can use the Benefits Planner at www.socialsecurity.gov/planners to estimate your benefit.

Many people wonder how their benefit is ­figured. Social Security benefits are based on your lifetime earnings. Your actual earnings are adjusted or “indexed” to account for changes in average wages since the year the earnings were received. Then Social Security calculates your average indexed monthly earnings during the 35 years in which you earned the most. We apply a formula to these earnings and arrive at your basic benefit, or “primary insurance amount” (PIA). This is how much you would receive at your full retirement age—65 or older, depending on your date of birth.

On the page below is a worksheet you can use to estimate your retirement benefit if you were born in 1945. It is only an estimate; for specific information about your situation, you should talk with a Social Security representative.

Contents

Factors that can change the amount of your retirement benefit  Skip contents links

Contacting Social Security
Estimating your Social Security retirement benefit
 

Factors that can change the amount of your retirement benefit

  • You choose to get benefits before your full retirement age.
    You can begin to receive Social Security benefits as early as age 62, but at a reduced rate. Your basic benefit will be reduced by a certain percentage if you retire before reaching full retirement age.

  • You are eligible for cost-of-living benefit increases starting with the year you become age 62.
    This is true even if you do not get benefits until your full retirement age or  even age 70. Cost-of-living increases are added to your benefit beginning with the year you reach 62 up to the year you start getting benefits.

  • You delay your retirement past your full retirement age.
    Social Security benefits are increased by a certain percentage (depending on your date of birth) if you delay receiving benefits until past your full retirement age. If you do so, your benefit amount will be increased until you reach age 70.

  • You are a government worker with a pension.
    If you also get or are eligible for a pension from work where you did not pay Social Security taxes (usually a government job), a different formula is applied to your average indexed monthly earnings. To find out how your benefit is figured, contact Social Security and ask for Windfall Elimination Provision (Publication No. 05-10045).

You may find a more detailed explanation about how your retirement benefit is calculated in the Annual Statistical Supplement, Appendix D. You can order a paper copy of the most recent version by writing to the Government Printing Office, P.O. Box 371954, Pittsburgh, PA 15250-7954.

 

Contacting Social Security

For more information and to find copies of our ­publications, visit our website at www.socialsecurity.gov or call toll-free, 1-800-772-1213 (for the deaf or hard of hearing, call our TTY number, 1-800-325-0778). We can answer specific questions from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monday through Friday. We can ­provide ­information by automated phone service 24 hours a day.

We treat all calls confidentially. We also want to make sure you receive accurate and courteous service. That is why we have a second Social Security representative monitor some telephone calls.

 

Estimating your Social Security retirement benefit

For workers born in 1945 (people born in 1945 become age 62 in 2007 and are eligible for a benefit)

This worksheet shows how to estimate the Social Security monthly retirement benefit you would be eligible for at age 62 if you were born in 1945. It also allows you to estimate what you would receive at age 66, your full retirement age, excluding any cost-of-living adjustments for which you may be eligible. If you continue working past age 62, your additional earnings could increase your benefit. People born after 1945 can use this worksheet, but their actual benefit may be higher due to additional earnings and benefit increases. If you were born before 1945, please go online at www.socialsecurity.gov or contact us for your worksheet.

Step 1:
Enter your actual earnings in Column B, but not more than the amount shown in Column A. If you have no earnings, enter "0."
 
Step 2:
Multiply the amounts in Column B by the index factors in Column C, and enter the results in Column D. This gives you your indexed earnings, or the approximate value of your earnings in current dollars.
 
Step 3:
Choose from Column D the 35 years with the highest amounts. Add these amounts.

$__________________
Step 4:
Divide the result from Step 3 by 420 (the number of months in 35 years). Round down to the next lowest dollar. This will give you your average indexed monthly earnings.

$__________________

Step 5:

  1. Multiply the first $680 in Step 4 by 90%.



$__________________

  1. Multiply the amount in Step 4 over $680 and less than or equal to $4,100 by 32%.

$__________________
  1. Multiply the amount in Step 4 over $4,100 by 15%.

$__________________
Step 6:
Add a, b and c from Step 5. Round down to the next lowest dollar. This is your estimated monthly retirement benefit at age 66, your full retirement age.

$__________________
Step 7:
Multiply the amount in Step 6 by 75%. This is your estimated monthly retirement benefit at age 62.

$__________________
 

Year

A. Maximum Earnings

B. Actual Earnings

C. Index Factor

D. Indexed Earnings

1951

$3,600

  

13.20

  
1952

3,600

  

12.43

  
1953

3,600

  

11.77

  
1954

3,600

  

11.71

  
1955

4,200

  

11.19

  
1956

4,200

  

10.46

  
1957

4,200

  

10.15

  
1958

4,200

  

10.06

  
1959

4,800

  

9.58

  
1960

4,800

  

9.22

  
1961

4,800

  

9.04

  
1962

4,800

  

8.61

  
1963

4,800

  

8.40

  
1964

4,800

  

8.07

  
1965

4,800

  

7.93

  
1966

6,600

  

7.48

  
1967

6,600

  

7.09

  
1968

7,800

  

6.63

  
1969

7,800

  

6.27

  
1970

7,800

  

5.97

  
1971

7,800

  

5.69

  
1972

9,000

  

5.18

  
1973

10,800

  

4.87

  
1974

13,200

  

4.60

  
1975

14,100

  

4.28

  
1976

15,300

  

4.01

  
1977

16,500

  

3.78

  
1978

17,700

  

3.50

  
1979

22,900

  

3.22

  
1980

25,900

  

2.95

 
1981

29,700

  

2.68

  
1982

32,400

  

2.54

  
1983

35,700

  

2.42

  
1984

37,800

  

2.29

  
1985

39,600

  

2.20

  
1986

42,000

  

2.13

  
1987

43,800

  

2.01

  
1988

45,000

  

1.91

  
1989

48,000

  

1.84

  
1990

51,300

  

1.76

  
1991

53,400

  

1.69

  
1992

55,500

  

1.61

  
1993

57,600

  

1.60

  
1994

60,600

  

1.56

  
1995

61,200

  

1.50

  
1996

62,700

  

1.43

  
1997

65,400

  

1.35

  
1998

68,400

  

1.28

  
1999

72,600

     

1.21

  
2000

76,200

 

1.15

 
2001

80,400

 

1.12

 
2002

84,900

 

1.11

 

2003

87,000

 

1.08

 
2004

87,900

 

1.04

 
2005

90,000

 

1.00

 
2006

94,200

 

1.00

 

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