See Your Social Security Benefits Estimate In an Interactive Chart
Although I’m many years from being eligible for Social Security, I created a my Social Security online account with the Social Security Administration as a part of the “plant your flag” strategy to preempt identity thieves.
Social Security Administration used to send paper statements once a year to report your earnings history and your estimated benefit. The benefit estimate on the paper statement assumed that you will work until your full retirement age and you will earn the same each year as you did last year. The full retirement age is 67 for anyone born in 1960 and after. When they moved the statement online, the online account showed the same estimate using the same assumptions.
Neither assumption is necessarily true. You may plan to retire early and not work until 67. You may plan to downshift and earn less for some years before you retire. While the paper statement had to show a single static estimate, doing the same in the online account doesn’t take advantage of the interactive computing capabilities.
ssa.tools
To help address this deficiency, software developer Greg Grothaus created a Social Security calculator at ssa.tools. After you copy and paste your earnings records from the my Social Security online account into ssa.tools, you have two sliders for how many more years you will work and how much you will earn per year.

Moving the two sliders produces an interactive chart showing your estimated benefits at different claiming ages.

my Social Security
Social Security Administration apparently liked this idea. Now they built an interactive input in the my Social Security online account. This way people who didn’t know about the calculator at ssa.tools can also see how their estimated benefits will change by how much they will earn in the future.

Although the assumed future annual salary still defaults to your earnings from last year, you can change it to a different number.

The chart shows how your Social Security benefit changes by when you will claim your benefit.
Unfortunately, the chart in the my Social Security online account allows only changing the average future annual salary. They still assume you will work and earn that estimated salary each year until your full retirement age. You can’t change how long you will work. The input for “Retirement Age” is only for when you will claim your Social Security benefits. It shows the effect of claiming early for a reduced benefit or claiming late for a higher benefit. When you will stop working and when you will claim your Social Security benefits are two different concepts. They should make it clear and open a separate input for how many more years you will work.
It’s easier to use the my Social Security site because they have all your data, all the rules, and you don’t have to jump out to another tool. It’s a shame the government agency isn’t using that power to the fullest extent. While Social Security Administration also provides a detailed calculator that allows more granular inputs, that detailed calculator is harder to use and not integrated with your earnings history. You’ll have to type in each year’s earnings manually. The Social Security calculator made by Greg Grothaus at ssa.tools does a much better job in showing you how your Social Security benefits will change by how long you will work and how much you will earn.
Why did a government agency with its budget and resources do a poorer job than a side project by an enthusiast software developer and a couple of contributors? That has to be a topic for another day. Until the government agency catches up to the side project, copy your earnings history from the my Social Security online account and use ssa.tools.

You may be surprised to learn that after some years of full-time work, working additional years doesn’t add much to your Social Security benefits. See Retiring Early: Effect On Social Security Benefits.
The post See Your Social Security Benefits Estimate In an Interactive Chart appeared first on The Finance Buff.
Harry Sit's Blog
- Harry Sit's profile
- 1 follower
