
Why I'm Taking Social Security at 62 (And Why the "Wait Until 70 Crowd" Might Want to Pay Attention)
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And on to the show notes!
When should you take Social Security?
It’s one of the most debated — and most personal — financial decisions you’ll ever make.
In this episode, Tyler makes a serious, data-backed case for taking benefits at 62 — not as a blanket recommendation, but as a counterpoint to the conventional advice to always wait.
Because this decision isn’t just math.
It’s math layered on top of real life.
In this episode, Tyler covers:
- The break-even math between taking benefits at 62, 67, and 70
- Why waiting only “wins” if you live past your late 70s or early 80s
- The idea that a dollar at 62 isn’t equal to a dollar at 82
- How the “go-go, slow-go, no-go” phases of retirement change how money is experienced
- The often-overlooked healthcare gap between 62 and 65 — and what it can cost
- How the earnings test reduces (but doesn’t eliminate) benefits if you keep working
- Why Social Security decisions should factor in your spouse’s survivor benefit
Tyler also introduces a practical framework — six key questions — to help you make the decision based on your own life, not a generic rule:
Health.
Healthcare.
Work status.
Income needs.
Spousal impact.
And how you actually want to spend your time.
The core idea:
This isn’t about maximizing dollars. It’s about maximizing life.
For some people, waiting is the right call.
For others, taking it early — and using that money when it matters most — may be the better decision.
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Hope this gives you something to think about this week.


