Working while collecting Social Security?

How much of your benefit does
the earnings test withhold?

If you claim Social Security before your full retirement age and keep working, some benefits are temporarily withheld once your earnings pass a yearly limit. Enter your situation, your monthly benefit, and your expected earnings to see the limit that applies, the dollars withheld, the months affected, your net benefit, and your break-even earnings — all in your browser.

Try:

Benefits temporarily withheld

$5,260withheld this year

You’re $10,520 over the $24,480 limit, so about 3 monthly checks are held back. You still receive $17,540 — and the withheld amount is credited back at FRA.

$24,480 limit · $1 withheld per $2$10,520 over the limit
Withheld this year$5,260
Monthly checks affected3 of 12
Net benefit this year$17,540
Break-even earnings$70,080

Withheld ≠ lost. When you reach full retirement age, Social Security recalculates and permanently increases your monthly benefit to credit the months that were withheld — over time you get the money back. The earnings test delays benefits, it doesn’t take them.

Estimate only, computed in your browser — nothing is uploaded. Uses the 2026 limits and counts only wages + self-employment income (not pensions, investments, or IRA/401(k) withdrawals). Not financial, tax, or Social Security advice. Confirm your figures at SSA.gov. How it’s computed →

Estimate only, not financial or Social Security advice. Uses the 2026 limits; confirm your figures at SSA.gov. Remember: withheld benefits are credited back at full retirement age.

What it shows

The earnings test, made clear

How much is withheld

Your earnings over the limit, divided by 2 (under FRA) or 3 (FRA year), capped at your annual benefit — the exact dollars held back this year.

Which 2026 limit applies

$24,480 if you’re under full retirement age all year, or the higher $65,160 in the year you reach it — and nothing at all once you’re past FRA.

Months and net benefit

Social Security withholds whole checks, so we show how many monthly payments are affected and what you still receive for the year.

Your break-even earnings

The earnings level at which the whole year of benefits is withheld, so you can see exactly how much working room you have.

The part people miss

Withheld benefits aren’t lost — at FRA your monthly check is recalculated upward to credit the withheld months. We say so, clearly.

Nothing leaves your browser

100% static page, pure client-side JavaScript — no backend, no upload, no logs. Your benefit and earnings stay with you.

The rules in brief (2026)

What the earnings test actually does

Only before FRA

The earnings test applies only if you claim before full retirement age and have work earnings. At/after FRA there is no limit — earn anything and keep every dollar.

2026 limit, under FRA

$24,480/year ($2,040/month). Social Security withholds $1 for every $2 you earn above it.

2026 limit, FRA year

$65,160/year (earnings before the FRA month). Gentler $1-for-$3 withholding, then no limit from the FRA month on.

Not lost — restored

Withheld benefits are credited back at FRA through a permanently higher monthly check. The test delays, it does not confiscate.

Earned income only

Counts wages and net self-employment only. Pensions, investments, interest, and IRA/401(k) withdrawals do NOT count.

Open methodology

Exactly how the numbers are computed

No black box — every figure follows the published 2026 Social Security earnings-test rules and limits, so you can check it.

Stated plainly: ssearningstest is an informational calculator, not financial, tax, or Social Security advice, and is not affiliated with the Social Security Administration or any government agency. Your actual benefit, full retirement age, and withholding depend on your earnings record and circumstances. The first-year "grace period" monthly rule and the exact timing in your FRA year can change the result — confirm your situation at SSA.gov or with Social Security.

Frequently asked questions

What does ssearningstest do?

If you claim Social Security retirement benefits before your full retirement age (FRA) and keep working, the "earnings test" temporarily withholds some of your benefits once your wages pass a yearly limit. This tool estimates how much. You pick your situation (under FRA all year, reaching FRA this year, or already at/past FRA), enter your monthly benefit and your expected annual earnings from work, and it shows the limit that applies, how much you are over it, the dollars withheld, how many monthly checks that equals, your net benefit for the year, and your break-even earnings. Everything runs in your browser — nothing is uploaded.

What are the 2026 earnings limits?

For 2026, if you are under full retirement age for the entire year, the limit is $24,480 ($2,040/month) and Social Security withholds $1 of benefits for every $2 you earn above it. In the year you REACH full retirement age, a higher limit of $65,160 applies (counting only earnings in the months before the month you reach FRA), and the withholding is gentler: $1 for every $3 over the limit. Starting the month you reach FRA, there is no limit at all.

Do I lose the withheld money for good?

No — this is the most misunderstood part. Withheld benefits are not gone. When you reach full retirement age, Social Security recalculates your benefit and permanently raises your monthly amount to credit the months that were withheld. Over a normal retirement you effectively get the withheld money back through higher monthly checks. The earnings test delays benefits; it does not simply take them.

What counts as "earnings" for the test?

Only earned income counts: gross wages from a job and net earnings from self-employment. It does NOT count pensions, annuities, investment income, interest, dividends, capital gains, rental income, or withdrawals from IRAs and 401(k)s. So you can draw down retirement accounts or collect a pension without triggering the earnings test — only money you earn from working matters.

How is my full retirement age determined?

FRA depends on your birth year. It rises from 66 and 2 months (born 1955), 66 and 4 months (1956), 66 and 6 months (1957), 66 and 8 months (1958), 66 and 10 months (1959), to 67 for anyone born in 1960 or later. People born 1943–1954 have an FRA of 66. Pick "under FRA all year" if you will not reach your FRA in 2026, "reaching FRA this year" if you turn your FRA age during 2026, or "at/past FRA" if you have already reached it.

How does Social Security actually withhold the money?

Social Security generally withholds whole monthly checks rather than trimming a little from each payment. It estimates your annual withholding from the earnings you report, then holds back full benefit payments starting early in the year until the total is covered, and pays normally after that. If too much or too little was withheld, it is reconciled later. This tool shows both the dollar amount and the approximate number of monthly checks affected.

Is there an exception in my first year of retirement?

Yes — a special "grace year" monthly rule. In the first year you retire, you can receive a full Social Security check for any month your earnings are under the monthly limit (1/12 of the annual limit), even if your total yearly earnings are over the annual limit. This helps people who retire mid-year after earning a lot earlier. After the first year, the regular annual test applies. This calculator uses the annual test (the common case); if you are in your grace year, your withholding may be lower.

What is "break-even earnings"?

It is the earnings level at which the test withholds your entire year of benefits. It equals the limit plus your annual benefit times the ratio (×2 under FRA, ×3 in your FRA year). Earn at or above that and you would receive no Social Security for the year — though, again, those benefits are credited back later through a higher monthly amount at FRA. The tool calculates your break-even point so you can see how much room you have.

Is this financial advice? Is my data private?

No — ssearningstest is an informational calculator that applies the published 2026 Social Security earnings-test rules to the numbers you enter. It is not financial, tax, or Social Security advice and is not affiliated with the Social Security Administration or any government agency. Your actual benefit, FRA, and withholding depend on your earnings record and circumstances, so confirm everything at SSA.gov or with Social Security. On privacy: this is a static page; everything you enter is processed in your browser, never uploaded, and nothing is logged.