Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
GOBankingRates
GOBankingRates
J. Arky

Here’s the Average Social Security Check for Someone Who Made $100K Their Whole Career

BackyardProduction / Getty Images/iStockphoto

$100,000 sounds like a lot, unless it is what you made in the course of your lifetime.

Some people only earn the minimum six figures over the course of their careers, meaning that when it comes time to cash out and retire, they might not have as much of a payout in terms of Social Security.

GOBankingRates asked some experts to do the math on what the average Social Security check looks like for someone who only made $100K in their whole career.

Average Indexed Monthly Earnings

Ben Waterman, CEO of Strabo, explained that Social Security is based on your highest earning 35 years, adjusted for inflation

“So someone who earned $100k in total over their lifetime would have likely earned $2,857 [per] year over 35 years, which is $238 [a month] in inflation adjusted earnings,” Waterman noted. “What they then do is apply a formula that replaces a high percentage of a very low income — it’s roughly 90% of the first layer of earnings. However, because the earnings base is so small, the final benefit is still pretty modest.”

Steve Case, a financial and insurance consultant with InsuranceHero, added that continuously taking a 35 year average of what you have earned each month is used to create a person’s Average Indexed Monthly Earnings.

“When you divide the $100,000 in 420 months of 35 years, then you will be making an average a month of only $238,” Case described.

Find Out: What Will the Average Social Security Check Be for Retirees in 2026?

Read More: 6 Safe Accounts Proven To Grow Your Money Up To 13x Faster

Real World Translation of Benefits

Waterman applied the formula from 2026 and highlighted that the level of lifetime earnings would translate to a monthly Social Security benefit of approximately $200 to $250 at retirement age

“The reason for this is that the system is progressive, but it can’t magically create income that wasn’t there, it’s a function of lifetime earnings,” Waterman pointed out. “If they were low, the benefit will be low.”

Case added that the Social Security “program will serve to assist the low earners but the arithmetic of the program can still come in as bitter to those whose work history or total contribution is not high.”

Final Answer

Social Security is designed as a safety net, not a full retirement plan, or a full income replacement, according to Waterman.

“This is particularly true for people with limited lifetime earnings,” Waterman continued. “Anyone who spent long periods of time economically inactive will most certainly need supplementary income from savings, family help, or the addition of a needs-based program to make retirement viable.”

More From GOBankingRates

This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: Here’s the Average Social Security Check for Someone Who Made $100K Their Whole Career

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.