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Harrison Ford’s Social Security Check Is More Than Double the Average American’s: What You’re Missing

Most Americans don’t know their projected Social Security benefit. Here’s how timing and planning can change your number significantly.
Most Americans don’t know their projected Social Security benefit. Here’s how timing and planning can change your number significantly. Getty Images

Harrison Ford’s estimated Social Security check is more than double what the average American receives, and the gap reveals how much most people leave on the table.

Ford’s monthly benefit is roughly $4,640, based on the 2012 maximum benefit adjusted forward with annual COLA increases. The average Social Security retirement benefit in 2026 is just $2,071 per month. That spread isn’t just about Hollywood money. It reflects timing and planning decisions most Americans never actively make.

The Numbers Most People Don’t Know

The SSA reports maximum monthly benefits of $2,969 at 62, $4,152 at full retirement age (67) and $5,181 at 70. The difference between claiming at 62 and waiting until 70 is more than $2,200 per month. Fewer than 6% of workers ever earn at the taxable wage cap of $184,500 in 2026 needed to approach those maximums.

Why Timing Is Everything

Every year you delay past full retirement age adds 8% permanently to your benefit. Waiting from 67 to 70 locks in a 24% permanent increase baked into every check for the rest of your life.

For a worker with a $2,200 monthly benefit at full retirement age, living to 85 and delaying from 62 to 70 produces roughly $66,240 more in total lifetime benefits. Living to 90 pushes that gap to approximately $137,280, according to RetirePro. Your numbers will differ, but the math works in the same direction for almost every worker.

The COLA Increase Isn’t What It Seems

Rising Medicare Part B premiums will eat up more than a quarter of that gain for most enrollees, according to the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. The net real gain for the average retiree works out to roughly $38 per month. That’s worth factoring into your planning before you assume the raise is meaningful.

What’s Quietly Working Against You

Social Security’s primary trust fund is projected to face depletion by 2032 without legislative action, though depletion doesn’t mean elimination. It means the system would rely solely on incoming payroll taxes, covering a reduced portion of scheduled benefits, not zero.

The SSA calculates benefits using your highest 35 earning years. Gaps in work history, whether from caregiving, freelancing or career changes, mean zeros get averaged in, pulling your benefit down in ways most people don’t catch until it’s too late.

Ford, 83, recently hinted at retirement from acting. Because the SSA only uses a worker’s top 35 earning years, his pre-Star Wars income is largely irrelevant to his benefit calculation. His check is essentially maxed out by design.

What to Do Before You Need to Decide

Delaying isn’t the right move for everyone. Health, life expectancy and existing savings all play a role. But checking your estimated benefit at ssa.gov through a free mySocialSecurity account is one of the most valuable things you can do today. Model different claiming ages using the SSA’s online calculators and factor in Medicare Part B premiums when projecting your real monthly income.

Ford’s $4,640 check isn’t the point. Your number is, and the decisions you make in the next few years could change it by tens of thousands of dollars over your lifetime.

This article was created by content specialists using various tools, including AI.

This story was originally published April 15, 2026 at 1:33 PM.

Allison Palmer
McClatchy Commerce
Allison Palmer is a content specialist working with McClatchy Media’s Trend Hunter and national content specialists team.
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