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Some Social Security History on Age 65 as the “Standard” Retirement Milestone - history.com

Even though age 67 is today the full retirement age for those born in 1960 or later, many retirement analysts and news articles persistently refer to age 65 as the basis for workforce projections. In fact, age 65 seems to be the de facto point at which one is considered a senior, as evidenced by the One Big Beautiful Bill’s eligibility age for the “senior” deduction designed to mitigate the income tax on Social Security benefits. Ever wonder why this chronological milestone got so set in stone?

We have done some research to answer this question and have located a history.com article that puts the issue in perspective. According to the article, setting age 65 as the official retirement age back at the beginning has nothing to do with German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck setting the age 65 precedent. Rather, it was “(b)oth ‘Arbitrary and Empirical’ according to the article. Arbitrarily, the article notes, in that, “Age 65 was picked because 60 was too young and age 70 was too old,” leading lawmakers to split the difference.

The article, which you can access in full here, goes on to dive deeper into the early thought processes regarding retirement and benefit ages. It’s an interesting read for anyone who has ever wondered about this piece of Social Security trivia.

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