The earliest you can apply for Social Security retirement is age 62; the latest practical age to apply is 70, because that's the cut-off point when your monthly benefit stops increasing due to deferred retirement.
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When you apply for social security at the age of 62, you are not going to be able to get your full retirement amount. You are also not eligible for Medicare at this age.
Are you asking if there is an age when SS will no longer apply FICA to earned income? If so NO!!
First you will have to apply with the social security administration to begin receiving your SSB at the age of 62 and then you will find out when you will receive your first benefit check. You can apply online by going to the SSA.gov website SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS ONLINE AND CHOOSE Retirement/Medicare you will go to the Social Security Benefit Application form
A newborn baby can have a Social Security number issued, if someone makes application for him.
No you must wait till age 62 at a min. unless you become disabled sooner then you have to apply for disablility and be approved by social security.
Apply to receive social security once you meet the age requirements or get a lawyer if you think you deserve it now.
You can get social security at that age if you are disabled, a disabled widow, the widow of a spouse who was already collecting social security and you are not a worker. You can get social security if you are a child of a deceased parent or your grandparents are on social security and they are your sole source of care.
It isn't the contribution to Social Security that determines when (or if) you qualify for unemployment. It is your work history, the amount of your wages and reason you left your job, etc. You get Social Security after a required number of quarters worked, your age, Social Security entitlements, etc. regardless of your job situation.
If you are asking about retiring at 62 and collect Social Security benefits and continue working while receiving the benefits, yes. But you will be limited to how much income you may earn and not be penalized. Check with your local SS office for more detailed info.
You can apply in person, at your local Social Security office, or you can apply online. Here is a link from the Social Security Administrations website explaining to you how to apply:http://ssa-custhelp.ssa.gov/cgi-bin/ssa.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=270
No, the earliest you can collect Social Security retirement benefits is age 62. While you may be able to retire at age 55, you will need to have other resources to draw from until you are eligible for Social Security. Retiring at age 55 is difficult for most people. Not only are not you not eligible for Social Security for many more years, but in general, you can't access your retirement accounts until you reach age 59 1/2. Also, you don't qualify for Medicare until age 65. All of these combined make it very difficult for the average person to retire at 55. If you are retiring because of disability and qualify for Social Security disability benefits, you can collect those before age 62.
Social Security Retirement Age is sixty two years of age