AARP Hearing Center
The most an individual who files a claim for Social Security retirement benefits in 2025 can receive per month is:
- $2,831 for someone who starts benefits when they turn 62.
- $4,018 for someone who files at full retirement age (66 and 8 months for people born in 1958 and 66 and 10 months for people born in 1959).
- $5,108 for someone who files at age 70.
(For context, the average Social Security retirement benefit in November 2024 was $1,925 a month. The average disability benefit was $1,542.)
Who is eligible for the maximum benefit? People whose earnings equaled or exceeded Social Security’s maximum taxable income — the amount of your earnings on which you pay Social Security taxes — for at least 35 years of their working lives. The maximum taxable income in 2025 is $176,100. The figure is adjusted annually based on changes in national wage levels, and thus the maximum benefit changes each year.
Keep in mind
The maximum benefit is not to be confused with the maximum family benefit. That’s the most a family can collectively receive from Social Security (including retirement, spousal, children’s, disability or survivor benefits) on one family member’s earnings record.
More on Social Security
How much Social Security will I get?
When should I file to get the maximum Social Security benefit?
Can I stop Social Security benefits and restart them later to get a bigger payment?