Retirement Social Security

Here’s the Average Social Security Benefits of 70-Year-Olds (How Do You Compare?)

Estimating what a 70-year-old retiree truly collects — and how to increase your own Social Security benefit.

close up of a 70-year-old woman
Updated Nov. 5, 2025
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If you're nearing retirement or already there, you may wonder: Can you maximize your senior benefits by waiting to claim Social Security? The answer is yes.

For many, the decision of when to claim can have profound consequences on monthly income in your 70s and beyond. In this article, we'll walk through what the average 70-year-old gets, how the calculation works, and strategies to boost your benefit.

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Average SS benefit for all retired workers

As of August 2025, the average Social Security benefit for all retired workers was around $2,008 per month. That figure reflects the broad base of retirees — including those with modest earnings histories and those who have decided to claim benefits early. It is a useful benchmark to understand what the average retiree nationwide receives each month.

Average SS benefit for retired workers at age 70

According to SSA data for December 2024, retired workers at age 70 receive an average benefit of $2,148.12 per month. For men, the average at age 70 was $2,389.95, while for women, the same figure was $1,909.42. This average includes all retired worker beneficiaries in current payment status as of the end of December 2024.

At the same time, top earners who delay can qualify for the maximum allowed benefit — $5,108 in 2025 — if they consistently earn at the taxable maximum.

How to maximize your SS benefits

To aim for the highest monthly benefit possible, start with your work history: the Social Security benefit formula uses your 35 highest-earning years (indexed for inflation) to derive your Average Indexed Monthly Earnings (AIME).

The result is converted via a formula into your Primary Insurance Amount (PIA), which is what you'd receive at full retirement age (FRA). Then adjustments (reductions or increases) depend on when you actually claim. If your high-earning years are still being updated in your record, working longer can replace lower years and increase your PIA.

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1. Wait until you're 70 to collect SS benefits

Waiting until age 70 gives you the full benefit of delayed retirement credits. The SSA offers an increase of about 8% per full year delayed past your FRA, up to age 70. After age 70, there are no further increases, so there's no incentive to delay beyond that point.

Those who delay may accrue a significantly higher monthly check based on their lifetime earnings, but they also forego years of earlier benefits. Ultimately, when you decide to claim your benefits should be based on your health, expected longevity, and cash-flow needs.

2. Work for at least 35 years

Anyone who works and pays taxes for at least 10 years becomes eligible for Social Security benefits once they reach age 62. However, because the SSA uses your 35 highest years of earnings in the benefit formula, having fewer than 35 years of work (or lower-earning years) will insert zeros or low values into the computation — dragging your average down.

By working long enough (and ideally at higher pay scales), you increase the odds that your 35-year count contains significant earnings, pushing up your PIA and therefore your benefit at age 70.

3. Continue working after you begin collecting benefits

Even after you begin receiving Social Security, continued work can help in certain scenarios. If a new year of earnings replaces a lower year in your top 35, the SSA will automatically recalculate your benefit upward and issue a benefit bump.

However, earnings limits and benefit withholdings may apply if you are under your FRA when you earn above certain thresholds. In 2025, the annual earnings limit is $23,400. If you're younger than FRA during all of 2025, the SSA will deduct $1 from your benefits for each $2 you earn above $23,400. Once you've reached FRA or beyond, no withholding occurs, and your benefit can simply grow via recalculation and COLA.

4. Make sure the annual COLA is applied to your benefits

Social Security recipients receive a Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) annually to help maintain purchasing power. In 2025, recipients saw a 2.5% COLA increase. The COLA for 2026 will be 2.8%.

Even after you start benefits, this COLA boosts compounds over time and adds to your lifetime monthly benefit. While you can't control COLA, staying aware ensures you don't mistakenly assume a static benefit when inflation is factored in.

5. Find out if you're eligible for spousal benefits

If you're married (or were married for at least 10 years and divorced), you might qualify for spousal or ex-spousal benefits based on your spouse's earning record (often up to 50 percent of the spouse's benefit, depending on your own benefit).

The spousal benefit may exceed what you'd get from your own work history, especially if your earnings were lower.

Bottom line

If you delay claiming until age 70 and have had a fairly strong earnings history, your monthly Social Security benefit may exceed the average and get closer to upper-tier amounts. As of December 2024, the average monthly benefit for 70-year-olds is $2,148.12, but top earners who delay can qualify for the maximum allowed benefit — $5,108 in 2025 — if they consistently earn at the taxable maximum.

The trade-off is that you'll forgo years of earlier benefits if you delay. So the key question becomes: based on your health, expected longevity, and cash-flow needs, you'll have to determine whether to wait until age 70 or begin earlier. Thinking through these important elements before making the crucial decision of when to start collecting benefits will help you better set yourself up for retirement.

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