Thank you for asking it. I turned 63 today and still need to work fulltime. Yours was a question I've been meaning to ask.Thank you everyone for taking the time to reply to my question.

Thank you for asking it. I turned 63 today and still need to work fulltime. Yours was a question I've been meaning to ask.Thank you everyone for taking the time to reply to my question.
My current plan is to sign up at 70, but am hoping that at some point between 65 & 66 I can leave my full time job and just work enough to pay what bills I have and do some travelling. It's all dependent upon my health and the economy in the next 7 years.A driving factor in my decision to not sign up until age 70 was at that point in time 4 years ago 5 years ago it was being assumed based and predicted by Social Security administration that there would need to be about a 20% cut and the gross payout and I wanted to try to make the number high enough so if that materialized I would still have the equivalent of retiring at 66.
I believe your last 10 years of full time working can make a big difference in the end . . .My current plan is to sign up at 70, but am hoping that at some point between 65 & 66 I can leave my full time job and just work enough to pay what bills I have and do some travelling. It's all dependent upon my health and the economy in the next 7 years.
They're still dragging their feet, which just makes things worse. Now they are talking about a combination of higher taxes and reduced benefits to "save" the system. They've done it before.My current plan is to sign up at 70, but am hoping that at some point between 65 & 66 I can leave my full time job and just work enough to pay what bills I have and do some travelling. It's all dependent upon my health and the economy in the next 7 years.
Yes is the short answer. More or less say your spouse draws $3K and you draw $2K. The survivor starts receiving largest check. There's efforts to change this for the better. Subscribe to some advisors on YouTube worked well in my case. SS decisions are easy to screw up. Advice directly from SSA can vary. The older the better I have found as a general rule.Are there survivor benefits if both you and your spouse were/are collecting SS and one of you dies?
Excellent video.
This points out why financial risks for those planning to be around beyond 2030 on average will worsen. I never never realized how over-educated we are in the USA for our good.
Yes there are . . . my son is a specialized welder and makes fairly deep 6 figures.Boiler Makers here have all the field service work they could want...
Hard Physical work and Dirty... but someone with two years community college welding and machining and clean driving record can earn 200k working overtime in their 20's... same for RN's willing to be fully vaccinated!
Opportunities are out there...
My contractor friends eliminate 70 to 80% of applicants because they are not eligible to drive company vehicles...