For many older Americans, retirement doesn’t look like hanging out on the golf course or gardening all day. Many people plan to work either out of necessity or desire, and that means it becomes important to understand how earning a paycheck will impact Social Security checks.
If you work while collecting Social Security, you may affect your benefits. And the rules for exactly what that will look like changed very recently, so you need to be aware of the updates. Here’s what you need to know.
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How the 2026 rules changed for working while collecting Social Security
The big rule change involves the amount that you’re allowed to earn while receiving benefits. Specifically, if you have already reached your full retirement age, there are no limits in place. You can work as much or as little as you’d like without issue, and your full Social Security checks will keep arriving uninterrupted.
However, if you aren’t yet at your full retirement age, things look very different. Specifically, if you try to work while collecting benefits, you could run into the annual earnings limit. Once you hit that limit, Social Security checks are reduced — and sometimes disappear entirely — based on how much you earn. This limit is what changed in 2026, and anyone who has a job or is thinking of getting one while also collecting retirement checks needs to be aware of the update.
Starting in 2026, the earnings limit is:
- $24,480 for those who won’t reach their full retirement age for the entire year, up from $23,400 in 2025.
- $65,160 for anyone who will reach FRA sometime during the year but who hasn’t yet. This is up from $62,160 in 2025.
Once you reach these limits, Social Security withholds $1 for every $2 above the $24,480 limit or $1 for every $3 above the $65,160 limit. Entire checks are withheld to account for the excess income you’re earning. Then, at full retirement age, the Social Security Administration readjusts your benefit to account for the income you didn’t collect, so your checks go up slightly.
Ensure you don’t plan to double-dip when the Social Security Administration limits you
Temporarily losing access to Social Security benefits isn’t necessarily a bad thing if you don’t really need the money, especially since you’re credited for the months of income you missed, so you get higher checks later on in life. Still, the fact is that many people do really need the money. If you were counting on receiving Social Security and getting a paycheck as you got older — say, because you can work less but not at full steam — these earning rules could be a problem.
The good news is that the 2026 rule change allows you to earn a little more. But the bad news is, it may still not be enough. After all, $24,480 isn’t a fortune.
You need to be aware of these rules during the retirement planning process so you don’t base your financial security on a plan that won’t work. Ensure you have enough money in your 401(k) or other retirement plans by investing as wisely as you can throughout your life, so you don’t count on getting both Social Security and a big paycheck from age 62 until your likely full retirement age at 67.

