Bill Detail

S. 1504

Congress: 119

Title

Claiming Age Clarity Act

Summary

Claiming Age Clarity Act This bill changes certain terms that are used by the Social Security Administration (SSA) to describe the ages at which a worker may claim Social Security retirement benefits. First, the SSA must use minimum monthly benefit age instead of early eligibility age. This refers to the earliest age (62 under current law) at which a worker may claim benefits. (Currently, the benefit amount of a worker who claims benefits early is reduced to account for the longer period during which the worker is expected to receive benefits.) Second, the SSA must use standard monthly benefit age instead of full retirement age and normal retirement age. These terms refer to the age at which a worker may claim benefits without a reduction in the benefit amount. (Currently, this age ranges from 65 to 67, depending on the worker's year of birth.) Finally, the SSA must use the term maximum monthly benefit age for any reference to age 70 as the maximum age at which a worker may receive delayed retirement credits. The SSA may not use the term delayed retirement credit. These terms refer to the mechanism that increases the benefit amount of a worker who delays claiming benefits after reaching the full retirement age. (Currently, a worker receives a credit for each month between the full retirement age and age 70 that the worker delays claiming benefits. Each credit increases the benefit amount that the worker will receive after claiming benefits by a specified percentage.)

Sponsor

Sen. Bill Cassidy [R-LA]

Status

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.

Status as of Jun 29, 10:13 PM · synced 10m ago

Introduced

2025-04-29

Data source mode: cache

Bill Engagement

Lobbyists on the case

1 org · 17 lobbyists · 1 filing mention S. 1504 (Claiming Age Clarity Act) in LDA disclosures.
Top orgs filing
  • AARP1 filing · 17 lobs