Conventional retirement planning often treats delaying Social Security until age 70 as a default best practice, citing the value of delayed retirement credits and higher guaranteed lifetime income. For high-net-worth households, however, Social Security represents a relatively small component of overall wealth. Once taxes, opportunity cost, and realistic longevity probabilities are incorporated, delaying benefits often functions less as a superior investment decision and more as a form of longevity insurance, one that may come at a measurable cost to after-tax wealth and liquidity.
For financial advisors, the question is therefore not whether delaying Social Security is “right” or “wrong,” but how to frame the trade-offs for affluent clients whose portfolios already bear most of the longevity and income risk.
Maximum Benefits and the Economic Cost of Waiting
Using Social Security Administration (SSA) projections for a maximum‑earning worker reaching eligibility in the mid‑2020s, approximate monthly benefits are:
Claiming AgeEstimated Monthly Benefit62 (Early)$3,00067 (FRA)$4,20070$5,300
Ignoring taxes and investment returns, the cumulative breakeven age, total benefits from delaying equal those from early claiming, generally falls in the early 80s. These breakeven points occur later once taxes and investment returns are considered.
For high-net-worth individuals who continue to earn meaningful income from employment or active businesses, claiming Social Security at the earliest eligibility age is often impractical. Prior to full retirement age (FRA), Social Security applies an earnings test to wage and self-employment income (not investment income), and the threshold is relatively low. As a result, benefits may be partially or fully withheld.
In practice, many higher earning income individuals choose to delay claiming until benefits can be collected without any earned-income limitations and with the added advantage of higher lifetime benefits. For advisors, this reframes Social Security claiming as a capital-allocation decision within the retirement balance sheet, not a standalone income optimization exercise.
Early Claiming as a Capital-Allocation Decision
An alternative approach is to claim earlier, at age 62 or at full retirement age (FRA), and invest the proceeds conservatively. The asset mix would typically emphasize high-quality fixed income, such as Treasuries, municipals, or diversified low-risk strategies.
- Long-term nominal return: approximately 4–5% pre-tax.
- After-tax return for top-bracket investors on taxable assets: approximately 3%, depending on asset location and tax management.
Under these assumptions, an individual claiming at age 62 can accumulate a substantial pool of liquid capital by age 70, while the individual who delays has received no benefits during that period. Importantly, this capital remains fully liquid and available for spending, reinvestment, gifting, or estate planning.
For advisors, this reframes Social Security claiming as a capital-allocation decision within the retirement balance sheet, rather than a standalone income optimization exercise.
Longevity Risk, Quantified
The strongest argument for delaying Social Security is longevity insurance: higher guaranteed income if an individual lives well beyond average life expectancy. That benefit, however, must be weighed against the after-tax economic value of benefits received earlier and invested.
Early Claiming and a Potential $220,000 After-Tax Capital Advantage
If benefits are claimed at age 62 and invested through age 70, the early claimant can accumulate a meaningful pool of capital before the delayed claimant receives any benefits.
Using illustrative assumptions:
- Maximum benefit at age 62: $3,000 per month.
- After-tax benefit, assuming approximately 68.5% retained after federal tax (37%*0.85): about $2,055 per month.
- After-tax investment return: approximately 3.15% annually, equivalent to roughly 5% pre-tax for top-bracket taxable investors.
- Monthly compounding.
Under these assumptions, the cumulative value of invested benefits at age 70 is approximately $220,000. By contrast, the individual who delays claiming until age 70 has accumulated no Social Security benefits during this period. Importantly, the $220,000 represents liquid, investable capital, not an annuity equivalent, and therefore constitutes the initial advantage of the early-claiming strategy.
Even if the after-tax investment return is reduced to half the illustrative assumption, the cumulative value at age 70 remains approximately $210,000. At twice the assumed return, cumulative invested benefits rise to approximately $255,000. Over very long horizons, investment returns matter more, but the payoff profile is asymmetric: higher returns have a greater impact on outcomes than lower returns.
Net Advantage by Age at Death
The table below shows the estimated net after-tax advantage of claiming earlier versus delaying to age 70. Net advantage reflects:
- After-tax Social Security benefits received
- After-tax value of invested early claiming
- The higher monthly benefit received by the delayed claimant.
Positive values favor earlier claiming; negative values favor delaying to age 70.
Age at DeathMale Survival ProbabilityFemale Survival ProbabilityNet Advantage: Claim at 62 vs. Delay to 70Net Advantage: Claim at FRA (67) vs. Delay to 707070%81%$220,000$110,0008048%62%$90,000$55,0009017%28%-$90,000-$20,000955%11%-$200,000-$65,0001001%2%-$330,000-$120,000
Survival probabilities are approximate cumulative survival from age 62 (for the 62 vs. 70 comparison) and from age 67 (for the FRA vs. 70 comparison), based on SSA period life tables. Figures are rounded for clarity.
How to read the Table:
- Age 70: The early claimant’s advantage is almost entirely the accumulated benefits invested, approximately $220,000.
- Ages 75 to 85: The advantage declines as the delayed claimant’s higher monthly benefit begins to narrow the gap.
- Around age 88 to 90: The two strategies typically converge.
- Extreme longevity (95 to 100): Delaying to age 70 eventually produces higher cumulative after-tax benefits, but only in low-probability scenarios.
When outcomes are weighted by survival probabilities rather than extreme endpoints, claiming at age 62 or at full retirement age often produces higher expected after-tax wealth for high-net-worth retirees.
Bottom Line
For financial advisors working with high-net-worth clients:
- Claiming Social Security at age 62 or at full retirement age and investing conservatively can often maximize expected after-tax wealth.
- Delaying benefits until age 70 is best understood as a form of longevity insurance, rather than a universally superior financial return.
- The appropriate strategy depends on client-specific factors, including health, tax profile, portfolio structure, spousal considerations, and preferences for liquidity versus guaranteed income.
- Because no client can know ex ante which claiming strategy will prove optimal, the advisor’s role is to weigh opportunity costs against low-probability longevity outcomes rather than optimize for a single extreme scenario.
Sound retirement planning emphasizes probability-weighted outcomes over deterministic endpoints. For many affluent households, earlier claiming therefore warrants serious consideration as part of a broader wealth-management strategy.
References
- Social Security Administration, Period Life Tables (most recent available data)
- Social Security Administration, Retirement Benefit Calculations
- IRS Publication 915, Social Security and Equivalent Railroad Retirement Benefits
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute individualized tax or investment advice.
