Here is something that will absolutely blindside most people who are planning to retire early: a man who stopped working at 40 years old — not 65, not 62, forty — is sitting on a projected $45,000 per year in Social Security benefits the moment he turns 70. His wife, with a nearly identical earnings history, stacks on another $45,000. Combined, that is $90,000 a year in guaranteed, inflation-adjusted income landing in their bank account every single year for the rest of their lives — covering nearly every non-discretionary expense they have. And neither of them has paid a dime into Social Security since the day they walked out of their offices.
If you just blinked and reread that sentence, you are not alone.
Most people planning an early retirement mentally file Social Security under “things that probably won’t apply to me.” A ghost payment from a government program for people who worked until they were 65. Something your grandparents collected. Not something relevant to someone retiring in their 40s with an investment portfolio doing the heavy lifting.
And that belief — right there — might be the single most expensive miscalculation in the society.
Here is what nobody tells you upfront: the Social Security formula is not designed the way most people think. It is not a piggy bank. It is not proportional. And the dirty little secret hiding inside the math is that high earners who retire early are accidentally one of the biggest beneficiaries of how the formula actually works.