66yrs 2months
Thomas Stuart Perriello
no
Full retirement age is the age at which a person may first become entitled to full or unreduced retirement benefits. No matter what your full retirement age (also called "normal retirement age") is, you may start receiving benefits as early as age 62 or as late as age 70.You can retire at any time between age 62 and full retirement age. However, if you start benefits early, your benefits are reduced a fraction of a percent for each month before your full retirement age. No mater how much or little you make, you don't get full benefits at 62.With that said, once you exceed a certain threshold, the benefits you can receive before full retirement age may be further reduced based on your earnings If you are under full retirement age for the entire year, they deduct $1 from you benefit payments for every $2 you earn above the annual limit; for 2016, that limit is $15,720.The year you reach full retirement age, they deduct $1 in benefits for every $3 you earn above a different limit, but they only count earnings before the month you reach your full retirement age.If you will reached full retirement age in 2016, the limit on your earnings for the months before full retirement age was $41,880.Starting with the month you reach full retirement age, you can get your benefits with no limit on your earnings.
If you were born in 1945, your full retirement age for Social Security benefits is 66 years and 2 months. You can start receiving reduced benefits as early as age 62, but waiting until your full retirement age will allow you to receive your full benefit amount.
Your full retirement age is 67. You can start collecting benefits at age 62, but you will receive only 70% of your full retirement amount. The longer you wait, the more you will receive. This holds true even if you wait until after you are 67; you will receive more than 100% of your full retirement age benefit..
Under current law, people born in 1968 will reach full retirement age at 67, in 2035.
Retirement age for someone born in 1988
If it is not a full withdrawal - 30 days Full withdrawal at retirement - 30 days Full withdrawal before retirement - 90 days
1975
Statutory retirement and receiving a state pension depends on the legislation of the country in question and varies.
According to the Social Security Administration: "If you were born January 2, 1943, through January 1, 1955, then your full retirement age for retirement insurance benefits is 66. If you work and are full retirement age or older, you may keep all of your benefits, no matter how much you earn. If you are younger than full retirement age, there is a limit to how much you can earn and still receive full Social Security benefits. If you are younger than full retirement age during all of 2009, we must deduct $1 from your benefits for each $2 you earned above $14,160. If you reach full retirement age during 2009, we must deduct $1 from your benefits for each $3 you earn above $37,680 until the month you reach full retirement age."