The average Social Security check at age 63 is $1,435.81 per month, based on the December 2025 snapshot from the Social Security Administration's Office of the Chief Actuary. That figure pools 918,993 retired-worker beneficiaries at age 63 into a single national average, so it hides a lot of variation, but it is the single most commonly quoted number for what Social Security "actually pays" at a given age.
This page walks through what that average means at age 63 specifically, how the male and female averages compare, and how the number has moved since 2013. Every figure comes straight from the SSA source at ssa.gov/OACT, not from surveys or estimates.
Average check at age 63
$1,435.81
Total beneficiaries: 918,993
Male average
$1,580.81
444,111 men receiving benefits
Female average
$1,300.20
474,882 women receiving benefits
Gender gap
17.8%
Women's check is 17.8% smaller
Age 63 still sits inside the early-claim reduction zone
For anyone with a full retirement age of 67, claiming at 63 still takes a permanent reduction off the benefit they would have received at FRA. The reduction scales down linearly between 62 and FRA. Most people in the $1,435.81 average here are still trading monthly income for an earlier start date rather than maximizing the check.
Average Social Security check at age 63 by year
Here is the full history for age 63 going back to the first year SSA published this data in the current format. Each row is the most recent snapshot for that year (December when available, otherwise June). The change column is the difference versus the prior year's average.
| Year | Beneficiaries at age 63 | Average monthly check | Change vs prior year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 918,993 | $1,435.81 | +$71.33 (+5.2%) |
| 2024 | 893,942 | $1,364.48 | +$25.83 (+1.9%) |
| 2023 | 876,363 | $1,338.65 | -$26.82 (-2.0%) |
| 2022 | 873,487 | $1,365.47 | +$117.66 (+9.4%) |
| 2021 | 863,581 | $1,247.81 | +$82.19 (+7.1%) |
| 2020 | 907,261 | $1,165.62 | +$7.19 (+0.6%) |
| 2019 | 928,099 | $1,158.43 | -$12.70 (-1.1%) |
| 2018 | 950,328 | $1,171.13 | +$45.54 (+4.0%) |
| 2017 | 988,126 | $1,125.59 | +$51.86 (+4.8%) |
| 2016 | 1,001,979 | $1,073.73 | -$9.76 (-0.9%) |
| 2015 | 1,046,882 | $1,083.49 | +$1.06 (+0.1%) |
| 2014 | 1,081,334 | $1,082.43 | +$25.76 (+2.4%) |
| 2013 | 1,095,262 | $1,056.67 | n/a |
Source: Social Security Administration, Office of the Chief Actuary. Published at ssa.gov/OACT/ProgData/benefits.
Male vs female average Social Security check at age 63
The SSA also splits the data by gender, which lets us see how evenly (or unevenly) Social Security payments flow between men and women at age 63. In December 2025 there were 444,111 men receiving Social Security retirement at age 63 with an average check of $1,580.81, and 474,882 women with an average check of $1,300.20.
Women at age 63 receive about 17.8% less per month than men at the same age, a gap of roughly $280.61 every month. The gap is not set by Social Security's rules (the benefit formula is identical regardless of gender) but by the cumulative effect of lower lifetime earnings, more career breaks, and part-time work showing up in the 35-year earnings average that drives the benefit calculation.
Why the gender gap exists
Social Security calculates your benefit from your 35 highest-earning years, adjusted for wage inflation. Women in the cohorts receiving benefits today often spent more years out of paid work or working part-time, which reduces the 35-year average. Lower lifetime earnings mean a lower Primary Insurance Amount (PIA), which means a smaller monthly check, regardless of when they claim.
How the gap is shifting
Because younger cohorts of women tend to have more continuous and higher-earning careers, the gender gap for newer retirees is narrower than it is at the older end of the age curve. Over the next 10 to 20 years, as the cohorts currently in their 40s and 50s reach age 63, the average female check at this age will rise relative to the male average.
How your own Social Security benefit is calculated
The average at age 63 is useful as a reference point, not as a prediction. Your actual benefit depends on three things: your lifetime earnings record, your full retirement age (set by your birth year), and the age you decide to claim. Social Security applies a three-step formula:
- Average Indexed Monthly Earnings (AIME). SSA takes your 35 highest-earning years, adjusts each one for wage inflation, and averages them across 420 months. Years you did not work count as zeros if you had fewer than 35 total earning years.
- Primary Insurance Amount (PIA). Your AIME runs through a progressive formula that uses annual "bend points." In 2025 the PIA is 90% of the first $1,226 of AIME, plus 32% of the next portion up to $7,391, plus 15% of anything above that. The output is your monthly benefit at full retirement age.
- Adjustment for claim age. If you claim before full retirement age, the benefit is reduced. If you claim after, it grows by roughly 8% per year up to age 70. The full retirement age chart lists the exact figure for your birth year.
Your personal numbers are on your my Social Security account at ssa.gov, which shows the AIME, PIA, and estimated benefit at 62, at FRA, and at 70. Those three figures are far more actionable than any national average.
How age 63 compares to nearby ages
Every single-year-of-age has its own page with the full history and gender breakdown. The ages next to 63 give a useful sense of how the curve moves.
Age 62
Average check at age 62
See the latest SSA average and full year-by-year history for people receiving Social Security at age 62.
Age 64
Average check at age 64
See the latest SSA average and full year-by-year history for people receiving Social Security at age 64.
Age 65
Average check at age 65
See the latest SSA average and full year-by-year history for people receiving Social Security at age 65.
Average Social Security at age 63 FAQ
The questions people ask most about Social Security benefits at age 63.