How Much Are Your Social Security Benefits Worth?

Hundred dollar bills and a measuring tape.
Photo: BartSadowski/E+/GettyImages

Those Social Security retirement benefits you've been paying into for years and years are out there on your horizon somewhere, or maybe they're looming in the relatively near future. You know exactly how much your benefits are worth, right? 

Your estimate may be wrong. You'd be surprised at how many families and singles routinely underestimate their Social Security benefits. Start by thinking of them in terms of what you would have to have in the bank at retirement to deliver the same amount of monthly income you're living on now.

Key Takeaways

  • A $1,500 monthly benefit is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars in the bank, even before the value of spousal or survivor benefits.
  • Spousal benefits can be worth more than $1 million if they are claimed strategically.
  • Retirees tend to overestimate the value of their investments and savings while underestimating the value of pensions and Social Security.

How to Value Your Benefits

Suppose you'll receive $1,500 per month from Social Security beginning at age 66. Each year, that $1,500 a month can be expected to go up a little if the cost of living measured by the consumer price index increases.

Now, suppose you'll live another 20 years. How much would that income stream be worth?

You can answer that question by taking the present value of that stream of cash flow. To pay yourself $1,500 per month increasing by 2% per year for 20 years, you'd need $263,977 in the bank earning a 5% annual rate of return. You'd need $348,535 if you are going to live for 30 years. 

If you assume that you're using safe investments, earning 2% instead of a portfolio earning 5%—the same rate of assumed inflation at which your income increases each year—you would then need $352,941 in the bank for the income to last for 20 years. You'd need $529,411 for it to last 30 years.

A $1,500 per month, your Social Security benefit is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars at a minimum, and that doesn't factor in ancillary benefits like spousal benefits or survivor benefits.

The Value Is Even Higher for Married Couples

You might be shocked to learn that it's not uncommon for benefits to be worth more than a million bucks for a married couple.

Take a couple who were both born in 1950. They each worked and earned decent wages. His benefit at full retirement age will be $2,668 per month. Hers will be $1,659 per month at full retirement age.

If they each claim their own benefit at their full retirement age, and he lives to age 85, and she lives to age 90, the present value of their lifetime benefits works out to about $941,000.

It used to be that he could file and suspend his benefit at age 66, thus allowing her to claim a spousal benefit. She would be able to claim a spousal benefit for four years, then switch to her own benefit when she reached age 70. He would begin his benefit at age 70. In this way, they could both get the delayed retirement credits that would allow them to collect the maximum monthly benefit amount.

But the Social Security Administration changed the rules for this file-and-suspend strategy, effective 2015. Now, when one individual suspends benefits, their spouse's benefits are also suspended. This claiming strategy would have boosted the present value of their lifetime benefits to $1,057,000.

Valuing Other Benefits

Those who are coming up on retirement routinely underestimate what a guaranteed income stream is worth. This tendency to underestimate applies to pension benefits as well as Social Security.

Retirees also tend to overestimate the value of their savings and investments. They often assume that their investments can produce more income or earn a higher rate of return than what is realistic. This can lead people to choose a lump-sum option for their pension instead of an annuity option, simply because they're not aware of the true value of that annuity income stream.

Don’t dismiss the value of your Social Security benefits or other sources of guaranteed income. This monthly income is likely to be worth far more than you think.

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The Balance uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. AARP. "Can Couples Still Use The 'File and Suspend' Strategy?"

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