Will Social Security be available when I retire? What the agency says

What may happen in the worst-case scenario

Why Social Security won't run out

Social Security’s actuaries are responsible for estimating the future costs of benefits that must be paid and comparing that with the amount of revenue projected to come in, according to Goss.

When there is an imbalance, as with the current projected shortfall, it is up to Congress to make changes.

Some lawmakers have started to propose potential ways of approaching the problem. Both Republicans and Democrats will have to approve any changes for them to become law.

Yet even with looming benefit cuts, most experts say it’s generally best to wait to claim retirement benefits.

The decision to wait is really buying longevity insurance from Social Security.

Laurence Kotlikoff

Boston University economics professor and creator of Maximize My Social Security

By waiting to age 70, retirees stand to get the biggest monthly benefit checks, according to research from experts including Laurence Kotlikoff, a Boston University economics professor and creator of Maximize My Social Security, a claiming software tool.

Retirement benefits taken at age 70 are 76% higher, adjusted for inflation, than retirement benefits taken at 62, Kotlikoff’s research found. This holds true even as the retirement age gradually climbs higher, to 67.

“The decision to wait is really buying longevity insurance from Social Security,” Kotlikoff recently told CNBC.com.

How to check your benefit eligibility

Even if you’re many years away from retirement, you may be able to get an estimate now of how much your Social Security benefits may be in retirement.

By signing up for a My Social Security account online, you may access your record that shows your personal earnings history beginning with your first job, according to Goss.

With that information, the Social Security Administration provides estimates of how much in benefits you may receive if you become disabled, retire or die, thus leaving benefits to eligible survivors.

“The benefits that are indicated here are the benefits that are expected to be provided under current law with sufficient financing to pay for them,” Goss said.

“These give a very, very good indication to individuals of what they might get in the future,” he said.

Importantly, those estimates are expressed in today’s dollars, such as the current value of your earnings today or the cost of shopping at the grocery store. So if you’re 35, with another 30 years to your anticipated retirement, the estimate you see will change.

“The amount that you would actually get 30 years from now will, of course, be much higher as the cost of living in general will be rising,” Goss said.

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