A lot of people treat Social Security like a one-time form you file and forget, but 2026 is a reminder that small choices can echo for decades. The Social Security Administration’s 2026 cost-of-living adjustment is 2.8%, which helps, but it won’t fix a claiming decision that’s working against you. The tricky part is that most mistakes don’t feel like mistakes in the moment—they feel like “finally getting the money.” If you’re approaching retirement (or already there), this is the year to double-check your strategy before habits lock in. Here are seven common decisions that can quietly shrink what you collect over your lifetime.
1. Claiming Early Because of Fear, Not Lifetime Benefits Math
Claiming at the first eligible moment can feel like “locking something in,” but the early reduction is permanent. People often file early because they don’t trust the system, they worry about health, or they just want the cash flow to start. Those reasons can be valid, but you still want to run the numbers before you commit.
If you can cover expenses from work or savings a bit longer, delaying can boost your monthly check and improve lifetime benefits. A simple step in 2026 is pulling your benefit estimate and writing down the exact monthly difference between claiming now and later.
2. Ignoring the Earnings Test While You Still Work
If you claim before full retirement age and keep working, Social Security can withhold benefits if your earnings go over the annual limit. In 2026, the earnings limit is $24,480 if you’re under full retirement age all year, and $65,160 for the months before you reach full retirement age in 2026. Overtime, bonuses, or a “one last big year” can surprise you and cut checks you were counting on.
That can lower lifetime benefits if it forces you to tap savings or rack up debt while you wait for adjustments. The fix is tracking earnings early in the year and planning around the limit instead of discovering it in December.
3. Failing to Use the One-Time “Do-Over” Within 12 Months
Some people claim, regret it, and assume they’re stuck forever. Social Security allows a withdrawal of your application within 12 months of being entitled to benefits, but you must repay what you and your family received (including amounts withheld for Medicare premiums).
This isn’t a casual reset button, but it can be powerful if you claimed too early and your circumstances changed. It’s also limited—you can generally do it only once, so you want good guidance before you pull that lever. If you’re within the window in 2026, knowing this option exists can protect lifetime benefits from an early misstep.
4. Not Coordinating Spousal and Survivor Timing
For couples, Social Security isn’t just “your check,” it’s often “the household plan.” A spousal benefit can be as much as half of the worker’s primary insurance amount when claimed at full retirement age, and it can be reduced if claimed earlier. Survivor benefits can be based on the worker’s benefit amount, and if the worker claimed reduced benefits, that can affect what the survivor receives.
That’s why a higher earner claiming early can ripple into the surviving spouse’s long-term income. Coordinating who claims when is one of the simplest ways to avoid leaving money on the table.
5. Taking Benefits at Full Retirement Age and Never Suspending
Reaching full retirement age doesn’t mean your choice set disappears. If you’ve reached full retirement age but aren’t yet 70, Social Security lets you request a suspension so you can earn delayed retirement credits during the suspension period. People skip this because they don’t want to stop the checks once they start, even if their income or savings could cover the gap.
Suspending isn’t right for everyone, but ignoring the option can reduce the long-run payout you could have locked in. In 2026, it’s worth asking: “If I don’t need this money right now, am I trading away a bigger check later?”
6. Skipping Medicare Enrollment Windows and Paying Lifetime Penalties
This one stings because it can follow you for years. Medicare Part B has a late enrollment penalty in many cases, generally adding 10% for each full 12-month period you could have had Part B but didn’t, and you may pay that penalty as long as you have Part B. Many people have their Part B premium deducted from their Social Security benefits, which means penalties can show up as a smaller net deposit.
If you’re turning 65 or leaving employer coverage in 2026, double-check your timeline and whether your coverage counts for a Special Enrollment Period. Avoiding one enrollment mistake can protect lifetime benefits in a very real, monthly way.
7. Letting Your Earnings Record Sit Unchecked
Social Security calculates benefits based on your earnings history, so missing or incorrect earnings can lower what you receive. SSA specifically recommends reviewing your record to make sure it’s accurate because benefits are based on what you earned. People skip this because it feels tedious, but one missing year can change the benefit formula, especially if the missing year should have been a higher-earning year.
The most practical move is logging into your My Social Security account and comparing your record to your W-2s and tax returns. Catching an error early can protect lifetime benefits without changing anything else in your plan.
The 2026 Move That Keeps the Most Money in Your Pocket
You don’t have to make a perfect decision—you just need to avoid the easy mistakes that compound. Start by choosing one action this week: check your earnings record, run a claiming estimate, or confirm Medicare timing. Then talk through the household strategy if you’re married, because spousal and survivor impacts matter more than most people expect. If you’ve already claimed, learn the do-over and suspension rules so you know what options still exist. Most importantly, make decisions based on your real cash flow and longevity expectations, not panic headlines. That’s how you keep control of your Social Security plan in 2026 and beyond.
Which decision feels most tempting right now—claiming early, working while claiming, or coordinating timing with a spouse—and why?
What to Read Next…
6 Social Security Triggers That Reduce Benefits Without a Formal Notice
Why More Americans Are Claiming Social Security at 62 — Even Though They Were Told Not To
The $184,500 Social Security “Wage Wall”: Why High-Earners Just Saw Their First Paycheck Deduction Jump This Morning
Are You Accountable for Social Security Taxes You Didn’t Expect
7 Times You Should NEVER Let Someone “Help” You With Your Social Security Account
Catherine is a tech-savvy writer who has focused on the personal finance space for more than eight years. She has a Bachelor’s in Information Technology and enjoys showcasing how tech can simplify everyday personal finance tasks like budgeting, spending tracking, and planning for the future. Additionally, she’s explored the ins and outs of the world of side hustles and loves to share what she’s learned along the way. When she’s not working, you can find her relaxing at home in the Pacific Northwest with her two cats or enjoying a cup of coffee at her neighborhood cafe.




















