Working after Social Security could increase your benefits.
If you're under full retirement age, you could temporarily forfeit some Social Security income.
You need to understand the work rules before you take a job while collecting retirement benefits.
If you plan to collect Social Security and keep working at the same time, you need to know that your decision could affect your benefits.
In fact, it could affect them in two different ways: It could increase your monthly checks, or cause them to temporarily decline or even disappear entirely.
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Here's what you need to know about the impact of working while getting retirement benefits at the same time.
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The first thing you must know if you're considering working while collecting benefits is that your decision could end up causing your checks to decline or disappear entirely. This can happen if you're working before your full retirement age.
FRA is 67 for anyone born in 1960 or later. Working before FRA will result in benefits being reduced once your income exceeds a certain level. Specifically in 2026:
The bad news is, you can't generate a lot of income from work and get Social Security at the same time, so if you were hoping to collect from both sources, that will be a problem.
The good news is, your future benefits will increase if you forfeit benefits now because you work too much. Your benefit is recalculated at full retirement age to account for missed checks.
A larger future benefit is a good thing, as it means you'll have to rely less on your retirement plans to produce income in the future.
On the flip side, it's also possible that working could increase your monthly checks. This can happen because your benefit equals a percentage of average wages in your highest 35 years of earnings.
If you work while collecting Social Security and you make more money than you did at some earlier points in your career, your current high-earning years could potentially replace some earlier lower-earning years in your benefits formula. This could increase the average wages that benefits are based on, resulting in larger future checks.
If you're earning a lot of money later in your career, continuing to work could pay off big time -- even if it does mean temporarily giving up some Social Security if you haven't reached full retirement age yet.
So think carefully about whether leaving the workforce is a good idea or whether continuing to bring in paychecks for a few more years is worth it to make your retirement more secure.
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