4 Ways Early Claimers Can Boost Social Security Benefits

Regret taking Social Security early? These moves can hike your lifetime benefit.

Delay, delay, delay. That's what most experts advise when it comes to claiming Social Security retirement benefits. By waiting to claim your benefit until after full retirement age -- which for older baby-boomers is 66 -- you can earn delayed retirement credits of 8% a year until you reach age 70.

Of course, many people choose to take benefits sooner rather than later -- even as early as age 62, receiving only 75% of what they would get every month by waiting until full retirement age. But sometimes circumstances that precipitated the decision change. Perhaps you took benefits early because of a layoff, but you've finally found a new job, or an opportunity arose that brought you out of retirement. Or maybe you simply regret the smaller benefit check you're potentially stuck with for the rest of your life. If you took benefits early but now wish you hadn't, you still have several options to boost your benefits. Consider these moves:

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Rachel L. Sheedy
Editor, Kiplinger's Retirement Report