Claim Social Security at the right time and maximize your income
There are hundreds of ways to file, and the choice can swing your lifetime benefits by tens of thousands of dollars. We build a personalized claiming strategy around your age, income, marital status, and goals, then coordinate it with your Medicare timeline.
- 62
- Earliest claiming age
- 66-67
- Full retirement age
- 100s
- Of filing options
- RSSA
- Analyst guidance
What is Social Security planning?
Social Security planning is the process of deciding the best time and strategy to claim your benefits, so you draw the most income possible over your lifetime. With hundreds of filing combinations available, the choice you make is one of the biggest financial decisions of your retirement. We work through your unique situation, including age, income, marital status, and goals, to map out a strategy that fits, and to help you sidestep the costly mistakes that quietly reduce benefits for years.
What a smart claiming strategy delivers
A little planning now can mean a lot more income later. Here is what we focus on for every client.
Maximize lifetime income
Make informed decisions to draw the most from your benefits across your whole retirement, not just year one.
Personalized strategy
Every plan is tailored to your finances and retirement goals. No generic rules of thumb.
Avoid costly mistakes
Filing too early or incorrectly can reduce your benefits permanently. We help you steer clear.
Spousal optimization
For couples, we coordinate both records to lift total household income, now and for the survivor.
How your claiming age changes the check
The age you file is the single biggest lever you control. Claim early and your monthly benefit is permanently reduced. Wait, and it grows. The right answer depends on your health, your savings, whether you are still working, and your spouse's situation.
Claim early
You can start as early as 62, but your monthly benefit is reduced for life. It can still be the right call if you need the income or have health concerns.
Full retirement age
Typically between 66 and 67, depending on your birth year. File here and you receive 100 percent of your earned benefit.
Delay to 70
Wait past full retirement age and your benefit grows with delayed retirement credits, up to age 70. That higher amount lasts the rest of your life.
How it works
We analyze your full picture, then deliver a clear claiming strategy designed to give you the highest possible benefit over your lifetime while avoiding the traps that cost retirees the most.
Gather your details. Age, earnings history, marital status, and retirement goals.
Run the analysis. We compare filing options to find the strategy that maximizes lifetime income.
Walk through the plan. You leave knowing when and how to file, with no jargon.
Coordinating with Medicare
Social Security and Medicare are separate programs, but the timing of one affects the other. Because we handle both under one roof, we make sure your decisions line up.
Mind the enrollment windows
Medicare eligibility starts at 65 regardless of when you claim Social Security. Missing your enrollment window can mean lifelong penalties, so we map the dates together.
Premiums and your check
If you are receiving Social Security, your Part B premium is typically deducted from your benefit. We factor that into your net income so there are no surprises.
One coordinated plan
We line up your claiming strategy, Medicare enrollment, and supplemental coverage so the pieces work together instead of against each other.
Who should consider this
Social Security planning is ideal for anyone nearing retirement, couples weighing spousal benefits, and people who simply want confidence that they are making the soundest financial decision about their retirement income. If you are within a few years of claiming, now is the time to look.
Request a no-cost analysisCommon Social Security questions
The questions we hear most from people getting ready to claim.
When should I start taking Social Security?
You can start as early as age 62, but delaying can significantly increase your monthly income, up to age 70. The best timing depends on your health, savings, work plans, and spouse. We model the options so you can decide with confidence.
What is full retirement age?
Full retirement age is typically between 66 and 67, depending on the year you were born. Claiming at that age gives you 100 percent of your earned benefit, with reductions for filing earlier and credits for waiting longer.
Can I work while receiving benefits?
Yes. If you claim before full retirement age and keep working, your benefits may be temporarily reduced based on your earnings. After full retirement age, you can work without that reduction. We factor your work plans into the strategy.
How do spousal benefits work?
A spouse may be eligible for benefits based on their partner's work record, which can raise total household income. Coordinating who files when, and on which record, is one of the most valuable parts of a good plan.
Are Social Security benefits taxable?
They can be. Depending on your total income, a portion of your benefits may be subject to federal taxes. We help you understand how your other income sources affect that, so the timing supports your overall plan.
Can I change my decision after filing?
In some cases, yes. There are limited options to withdraw or suspend benefits, depending on timing and how recently you filed. We can explain whether one of those moves makes sense for you.
Get your Social Security analysis
Discover the strategy that maximizes your retirement income, coordinated with your Medicare plan. The review is free, the decision stays yours.