Picture a man, 63, one year into early Social Security. He filed at age 62 with a plan: take the checks and invest every dollar. A year later, the brokerage accountPicture a man, 63, one year into early Social Security. He filed at age 62 with a plan: take the checks and invest every dollar. A year later, the brokerage account

Claim at 62 and Invest It Sounds Smart. A 63-Year-Old Tried It and Spent the Checks Instead.

2026/06/22 02:02
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  • Claiming at 62 with a full retirement age of 67 cuts your monthly benefit by roughly 30%—from $2,000 to $1,400—permanently.
  • Early-claim-and-invest strategy fails because money in checking gets spent on expenses; automatic transfers to separate accounts are needed before filing to reach investments.
  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

Picture a man, 63, one year into early Social Security. He filed at age 62 with a plan: take the checks and invest every dollar. A year later, the brokerage account looks roughly the same. The deposits got absorbed by a roof repair, daughter’s wedding, nicer dinners, and car payment. He still has the permanently smaller benefit. The investment account never saw the light of day.

This is the version of the “claim early and invest it” plan that does not get featured in podcasts. The strategy, often associated with Dave Ramsey’s case for taking Social Security at 62, depends on iron discipline. The math can work. The behavior usually does not. On retirement forums, people confess they meant to invest every check and watched ordinary life consume it instead.

The number that does not bend

Claiming at 62 with a full retirement age (FRA) of 67 means a permanent reduction of about 30% from the benefit someone would have received at 67. On a $2,000 FRA benefit, that is roughly $1,400 a month for life instead of $2,000. The $600 gap never returns at 67 or 75. Cost of living adjustments (COLAs) apply to the smaller base, so the gap widens in dollar terms over time.

Every year someone delays full retirement age up to 70 adds about 8% to the monthly check. That increase is guaranteed. It does not require a bull market or discipline.

The invest-it plan has to clear two hurdles. You have to move every check into an investment account, and the after-tax return has to beat the guaranteed increase from waiting. With the national average 12-month CD yielding 1.65%, the safe path is not close. Stocks can clear the bar, but only if the money makes it into the account.

Suze Orman is a fan of waiting it out, saying on her podcast: “Most of the time it absolutely makes no sense at all taking Social Security before your full retirement age.”

Why life beats the spreadsheet

Money sitting in a checking account finds a home. A grandchild’s tuition, a furnace that quits, a vacation that feels overdue. That pull gets stronger when households already feel stretched, and lately, plenty do. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index hit a record low in May 2026, with surging gas prices and tariff concerns leaving households feeling buffeted by cost pressures. That is not the backdrop where a 63-year-old willingly redirects a Social Security check into a brokerage account month after month. Instead, it is the time when checks get absorbed into whatever is most urgent that week.

The Social Security deposit lands in the same checking account that pays the cable bill. Unless an automatic sweep moves it into a separate investment account the day it arrives, and that account is never touched, the plan fights gravity, and gravity tends to win when the broader mood is this strained.

Where it fits with the rest of the picture

For a retiree with a pension, a working spouse, or a 401(k) producing income, claiming early can work. The early check funds today’s lifestyle while other assets grow. Someone with a serious health diagnosis or a family history of short lifespans has a legitimate case.

Most other people get more value from waiting. Social Security is the one piece of retirement that grows risk-free when you delay, adjusts for inflation, and keeps paying as long as you live. Spending down savings between the ages of 62 and 67 to postpone claiming often buys a larger, inflation-protected lifetime income stream than the same dollars would generate in a brokerage account.

What to sit with before filing

  1. Be clear-eyed about the deposit account. If the check lands in checking and nothing automatic moves it out the same day, you are running the spend-it strategy with extra steps. Set up the sweep before you file, or assume the money is gone.
  2. Weigh the reduction against everything else you have coming in. A roughly 30% smaller benefit for life is among the hardest retirement decisions to undo. A claim can be withdrawn only within 12 months of filing, and only once.

The right claiming age depends on health, marriage, savings, and the work you can still do. The plan that looks best on a spreadsheet is only as good as the version of you who has to follow it for the next 30 years.

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The post Claim at 62 and Invest It Sounds Smart. A 63-Year-Old Tried It and Spent the Checks Instead. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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