{"title":"How to Apply for Social Security (Step-by-Step Guide)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/adulting/how-to-apply-for-social-security","category":{"slug":"adulting","name":"Adulting"},"creator":{"name":"Video Pizzazz","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJ1jn6SaBOOs12AugJnVKBw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yim5V0x3o40"},"tldr":"Apply for Social Security retirement benefits online at ssa.gov. Set up your my Social Security account, gather your documents, and walk through every section.","totalDurationSeconds":1055,"difficulty":"easy","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Decide When to Apply (62, FRA, or 70)","text":"Before you fill out anything, decide when you want benefits to start. You can claim as early as age 62, wait until your Full Retirement Age (66 and 6 months for most people reading this, 67 for anyone born in 1960 or later), or delay all the way to age 70.Each year you wait past 62 raises your monthly check. Each year you delay past FRA adds about 8% more, capped at age 70. Claiming early shrinks every future check for the rest of your life. SSA has a Retirement Estimator at ssa.gov/benefits/retirement/estimator.html that runs the math on your own earnings record - it shows the three numbers side by side so you can compare."},{"number":2,"title":"Gather Your Documents","text":"SSA publishes a one-page checklist at ssa.gov/hlp/isba/10/isba-checklist.pdf that lists everything they may ask for. The basics: your Social Security number, your birth date and place, your most recent W-2 or self-employment tax return, and bank account info (routing and account numbers) for direct deposit.Other things they may ask for, depending on your situation: a birth certificate if you were born outside the U.S., DD-214 discharge papers if you served in the military, your current and prior marriage dates if you've been married, and the names and birth dates of any children who may qualify for benefits on your record."},{"number":3,"title":"Pick How You Want to Apply","text":"You have three ways to apply. The online application at ssa.gov/retirement is the fastest for most people and the path this guide walks through. You can save your progress and come back, and you'll get a receipt by email when you submit.If you'd rather not do it online, call SSA at 1-800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325-0778) Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. and they'll take your application by phone. You can also schedule an appointment at your local Social Security office using the office locator at secure.ssa.gov/ICON/main.jsp. In-person appointments often book several weeks out, so call early."},{"number":4,"title":"Create a my Social Security Account","text":"Go to ssa.gov/myaccount and click Create an Account. Enter your name, Social Security number, date of birth, address, cell phone number, and email, then agree to the terms.SSA verifies your identity using one of two methods. The easier option is to take a photo of the front and back of your driver's license or state ID with your phone - SSA texts you a link, you snap the photos, and they read the ID automatically. The other option is to answer credit-history questions on screen. Pick one, finish the verification, and SSA sends an activation code by text, email, or mail. Enter the code, set up your username, password, and three security questions, and your account is live."},{"number":5,"title":"Start the Retirement Application","text":"Sign into your my Social Security account and click Start Your Retirement Application. Read the Getting Ready page, click I understand and agree, then click Start a New Application.SSA shows you a re-entry number on the next screen - this is the code you use to come back if you have to stop and finish later. Print or screenshot that page before you continue. The application has five tabs across the top: Identification, General, Other Benefits, Remarks &amp; Options, and Review &amp; Sign. You'll work through them in order."},{"number":6,"title":"Fill Out the Identification Section","text":"The first tab confirms who you are. Check that your name, Social Security number, date of birth, and gender are correct (SSA pre-fills them from your account). Answer the two questions below about whether you've ever used another Social Security number or another name - say yes if you remarried and changed names, even decades ago.Next screen: contact information. Confirm your address, phone, and email. Then your birth and citizenship details - country of birth and U.S. citizen status. Read each field carefully and click Next. The blue progress bar at the top tells you which tab you're on."},{"number":7,"title":"Answer the Work History Section","text":"The General tab covers your earnings history. SSA asks whether you worked or will work for an employer this year, then walks you through employer details and self-employment details if either applies. Be ready with your most recent W-2 and your self-employment Schedule C if you're a 1099 worker.Below that are screens for Total Earnings, Other Pensions or Annuities, and Work Not Covered by Social Security. The last one matters if you spent time in some state or federal government jobs where Social Security taxes weren't withheld - it can reduce your benefit under the Windfall Elimination Provision. Answer truthfully even if the question feels obscure."},{"number":8,"title":"Fill Out the Family Information Section","text":"Still on the General tab, you'll hit Marriage Information. Enter your current marriage date and your spouse's name, date of birth, and Social Security number. Then SSA asks about prior marriages - list any that lasted 10 years or more, even if they ended in divorce decades ago. You may qualify for benefits on a former spouse's record.Last subsection: Children. Add any child who is under 18, under 19 and still in high school, or any age but disabled before age 22. They can collect dependent benefits on your record. If none of that applies, just answer no and move on."},{"number":9,"title":"Set Direct Deposit and Submit","text":"The Remarks &amp; Options tab handles the last details. Tell SSA when you want benefits to start - the month after the one you pick is when your first payment lands. Set up direct deposit by entering your bank's routing number and your account number, plus whether the account is checking or savings.Answer the questions about prior Medicare or SSI applications, add any remarks if you have something unusual to flag (an upcoming move, a name change in progress), and click through to the Review &amp; Sign tab. Read the summary carefully - this is your last chance to fix anything. Check the electronic signature agreement box, then click Submit Now."},{"number":10,"title":"Save Your Receipt and Check Status","text":"The next screen shows your confirmation. Click View and Print Your Receipt and save the PDF - you may need the receipt number later if you call SSA with a question. Within an hour you'll also get an email from benefits.application@ssa.gov confirming receipt.Processing usually takes 1 to 3 months. SSA will contact you by phone or mail if they need more information, otherwise you'll get an award letter explaining your monthly benefit amount and start date. Check the status anytime by signing into your my Social Security account - the Apply for Benefits tile shows where your claim is in the queue."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-06-09T15:11:58.498Z","published":"2026-06-09T15:11:43.677Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}