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Next Gen Econ > Debt > Social Security’s $65,160 Limit: Why Birthdays Matter
Debt

Social Security’s $65,160 Limit: Why Birthdays Matter

NGEC By NGEC Last updated: July 1, 2026 8 Min Read
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Calendar page showing a highlighted birthday in the year of full retirement age alongside Social Security earnings test notes for the $65,160 limit. The month you turn FRA determines how long the higher limit and eventual no-limit period apply to your benefits. Robert Kneschke/Shutterstock

If you plan to keep working while collecting Social Security before full retirement age, the month and year of your birthday can mean the difference between keeping most of your benefits and seeing significant withholdings. In 2026, the $65,160 limit applies specifically in the year you reach full retirement age, offering a much higher earnings threshold than the $24,480 limit that applies in earlier years. This higher cap, combined with a gentler $1-for-$3 withholding rate, rewards careful timing around your birthday. Many people miss this opportunity because they assume earnings rules stay the same every year.

According to the Social Security Administration, “starting with the month you reach full retirement age, you can get your benefits with no limit on your earnings.” That single rule makes your birthday one of the most financially important dates of the year if you’re still working while collecting benefits. Here’s everything you need to know.

The $65,160 Limit Applies Only in the Year You Reach Full Retirement Age

The $65,160 limit is not available every year you receive benefits. It kicks in exclusively during the calendar year you attain your full retirement age. For most people born in 1960 or later, that age is 67, so if you turn 67 in 2026, this higher threshold governs your earnings test for part or all of the year. In any prior year while under full retirement age, you faced the much lower $24,480 annual limit instead. This distinction matters because exceeding the lower limit triggers steeper withholdings of $1 for every $2 over.

Your Birthday Month Determines How Many Months Fall Under the Higher Earnings Test

The exact month of your birthday in your full retirement age year directly controls how long the $65,160 limit protects your benefits. If you turn 67 in March 2026, only earnings from January through February count toward the test, giving you almost the entire year free from the earnings limit after your birthday.

For example, someone whose full retirement age birthday falls in March has only two months of earnings subject to the higher earnings test, while someone with a November birthday has ten months of earnings counted before the limit disappears.

Social Security counts only earnings up to the month before you reach full retirement age, so a later birthday exposes more of your income to possible reductions. Checking your birth month against your full retirement age year helps you forecast exactly how much you can safely earn without surprises.

Earnings in the Month You Turn Full Retirement Age and Beyond Are Not Counted

Once you reach your birthday and attain full retirement age, any wages you earn from that month forward do not count against the $65,160 limit or trigger withholdings. This rule creates a clean break mid-year for many workers. For example, if your 67th birthday falls on June 15, 2026, only earnings from January through May are tested against the $65,160 limit using the $1-for-$3 formula. Money earned in June and later months stays completely yours with no impact on that year’s benefits.

The Withholding Rate Improves to $1 for Every $3 Over the $65,160 Limit

In the year you reach full retirement age, the penalty for exceeding the $65,160 limit is milder than in previous years. Instead of losing $1 in benefits for every $2 earned over the lower limit, you lose only $1 for every $3 above $65,160, and only on earnings before your birthday month. This gentler rate, combined with the higher cap, often results in far less money withheld compared to staying under the $24,480 limit in earlier years.

Many retirees mistakenly believe these withheld benefits are permanently lost. In reality, once you reach full retirement age, the Social Security Administration recalculates your benefit to credit back the months in which payments were withheld, resulting in a higher monthly benefit going forward.

Reaching Full Retirement Age Mid-Year Means No Earnings Limit for the Rest of the Year

After your birthday in the year you turn full retirement age, the earnings test disappears entirely, no matter how much you earn afterward. This no-limit period can last six, nine, or even eleven months, depending on when you were born. A person turning 67 in February 2026 enjoys almost the whole year without any cap on earnings or benefit reductions. In contrast, someone with a December birthday has only one month of unrestricted earnings.

Timing Your Earnings Around Your Full Retirement Age Birthday Pays Off

Your full retirement age birthday is more than just another milestone. It changes how the Social Security earnings test works. Understanding when the higher $65,160 limit applies, how long your earnings remain subject to the test, and when the earnings restriction disappears altogether can help you avoid unnecessary temporary withholdings while continuing to work. Before making decisions about retirement timing or work schedules, review your earnings estimates through your my Social Security account or speak with the Social Security Administration to understand how the rules apply to your specific situation.

How does your birthday fall in the year you reach full retirement age, and are you adjusting your work or earnings plans around the $65,160 limit? Share your situation or questions in the comments below!

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Drew Blankenship headshotDrew Blankenship headshot

Drew Blankenship is a seasoned personal finance and lifestyle writer with more than a decade of professional writing experience crafting clear, actionable advice that helps savers and investors over 40 protect their wealth and make smarter everyday decisions. His bylines appear regularly on SavingAdvice.com, CleverDude.com, and other respected outlets, where he draws on deep industry knowledge to deliver practical insights on cost control, smart spending, and long-term financial security.

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