How to Maximize Your Social Security Benefits in 2026

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If you’re retired or getting close, 2026 brings changes that directly affect your monthly check. This guide helps seniors and near-retirees understand the new numbers and the timing decisions that matter most — clearly, and grounded in the Social Security Administration’s own rules.
What’s New in 2026: COLA and Benefit Maximums
Benefits rise with a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) in 2026, per the SSA’s October 2025 announcement. That lifts every check, but the bigger story is when you claim.
The SSA sets three key ages:
According to the SSA, the maximum monthly benefit in 2026 is $2,969 at age 62 versus $5,181 at age 70. Note: Full Retirement Age is now 67 for anyone born in 1960 or later. The old “age 65” assumption can cost you real money.
The Single Biggest Lever: When You Claim
The most powerful tool you have is timing. The SSA awards delayed retirement credits of about 8% per year for each year you wait past Full Retirement Age, up to age 70. Claim early, and the SSA permanently reduces your benefit instead.
How do you decide? Consider your health, family longevity, and whether you need the income now. If you expect a long retirement, waiting often pays more over your lifetime. If your health is poor or you need the cash, claiming earlier can be the right call.
📘 If you want a deeper, plain-English playbook for couples and complex situations, Get What’s Yours: The Secrets to Maxing Out Your Social Security by Laurence Kotlikoff is a well-regarded resource: Get What’s Yours by Laurence Kotlikoff.
If You’re Still Working: The Earnings Test
If you claim before Full Retirement Age and keep working, the SSA’s earnings test applies. For 2026, the SSA withholds $1 in benefits for every $2 earned above $24,480. In the year you reach FRA, the limit rises to $65,160, with $1 withheld for every $3 above it — until the month you hit FRA, when the test disappears.
✅ Important: withheld is not the same as lost. The SSA recalculates and credits that money back to you once you reach Full Retirement Age, raising your future checks.
Spousal and Survivor Strategy
Couples have an extra lever. Coordinating claims can lock in the higher benefit for life. A common approach: have the higher earner delay to age 70 to grow the benefit as much as possible.
When one spouse dies, the survivor keeps the larger of the two benefits — so delaying can be a lasting gift to your partner.
Why it matters: when one spouse dies, the survivor keeps the larger of the two benefits. By maximizing the higher earner’s benefit now, you also protect the surviving spouse later. Survivor benefits, the SSA notes, are based on what the deceased was receiving — so delaying can be a lasting gift to your partner.
Public-Sector Workers: Check Your Benefits Now
This is the biggest 2026 news. The Social Security Fairness Act repealed the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO). According to the SSA, this affects more than 3 million public-sector retirees — teachers, firefighters, police, and some government employees — who may now be owed higher monthly payments and retroactive back pay dating to January 2024.
⚠️ If you have a pension from work not covered by Social Security, contact the SSA at 1-800-772-1213 to confirm your benefit is correct and ask about back pay. Membership organizations like AARP also offer helpful benefits-navigation resources: AARP membership.
Two Housekeeping Steps Worth Doing This Week
Open a my Social Security account at SSA.gov and review your earnings record. The SSA bases your benefit on this record, and errors do happen — catching them early protects your check.
Set up tax withholding with Form W-4V. Benefits can be taxable depending on income, so the SSA lets you withhold federal tax directly. A tax-prep service can help you manage this and your retirement filing: online tax preparation service.
A Note for Higher Earners: Watch Medicare Surcharges
If you have substantial income, be aware of IRMAA — the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount that raises Medicare Part B and D premiums. Medicare bases IRMAA on your tax return from two years prior, so a one-time income spike (like a large Roth conversion) can push you into a surcharge bracket later. Check Medicare.gov for the current income thresholds before making big moves.
Sources
Figures and rules here come from the Social Security Administration (SSA) and Medicare. Always confirm your numbers at SSA.gov.
This is general information, not financial or tax advice. Consult a professional about your situation.
Grace Mitchell writes practical, well-sourced guides to help adults over 60 live healthier, more comfortable lives. Every health and money claim here is grounded in guidance from authoritative sources such as the NIH, Mayo Clinic, Social Security Administration, and Medicare.
Pick one step to do this week — open your my Social Security account or call the SSA about the Fairness Act. Small actions now can mean a bigger, more secure check for years to come.