Dave Ramsey says one group of Americans should grab Social Security at 62 — despite a 30% benefit cut


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Conventional wisdom suggests you should delay filing your Social Security for the delayed retirement credits. After all, if you wait until you’re 70 years old, your monthly benefit can be 24% higher, according to the Social Security Administration (1).

But finance guru Dave Ramsey, disagrees with that conventional wisdom. According to the host, there is one specific type of American who should take their benefits as soon as possible.

That means filing a claim as early as age 62, despite the whopping 30% benefit reduction (2) for doing so.

Are you part of this elite group? Here’s a closer look.

To understand Ramsey’s insistence on an early benefit claim, it’s important to know that the financial guru dislikes the Social Security system. In an episode of the Iced Coffee Hour podcast (3) he called the social safety net a “scam” and “the worst possible investment” — one driven by faulty math.

Simply put, Ramsey sees an early claim as a ticket out of a bad system. However, in 2019 he explained that math works only for a certain group of people (4). “It usually makes sense to take it early if you’re going to … invest every bit of it,” he said.

Simply put, you could consider an early claim if you can plan and manage your money better than the U.S. government.

That’s a low bar, because the Social Security system has been underperforming for years and is currently facing a funding shortfall. The trust fund is invested exclusively in U.S. treasuries, which are considered ultra-safe, according to The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (5).

For most investors, it’s easy to outperform treasuries. A high-yield account like a Wealthfront Cash Account can be a great place to grow your uninvested cash, offering both competitive interest rates and easy access to your money when you need it.

A Wealthfront Cash Account currently offers a base APY of 3.30% through program banks and new clients can get an extra 0.75% boost during their first three months on up to $150,000 for a total variable APY of 4.05%.

That’s ten times the national deposit savings rate, according to the FDIC’s March report.



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