The My.SSS portal has a Simulated Retirement Calculator. I use it every few months after paying my voluntary contributions through GCash. It pulls my Credited Years of Service automatically, including the random months from a corporate job in 2012 that still show up in the ledger.
The problem is the estimate feels “cold.” It gives you a number based on your current salary credit, not the maximum you might realistically hit in 20 more years. So I started doing the manual math, the same three formulas SSS uses, on a spreadsheet. When I did it for my dad before his retirement filing, my computed number matched the SSS first check to the peso. That is when I understood what the formulas actually reward.
This article breaks them down. For broader SSS context before the numbers, see why SSS matters for every Filipino worker.
What is the SSS retirement pension?
The SSS retirement pension is a monthly cash benefit for members who have stopped working and met the contribution requirements. It is not a flat rate and it is not based on how much you paid in total. SSS computes it using two inputs: your Average Monthly Salary Credit (AMSC) and your Credited Years of Service (CYS). On top of that, tenure earns you an additional multiplier.
Two retirement ages exist. Optional retirement starts at 60, but only for members who have already separated from employment. Freelancers and self-employed members qualify at 60 without needing to “separate” from anything, since they are not in an employer-employee relationship. Mandatory retirement is at 65, regardless of employment status. In both cases, SSS uses the same formulas. Your total CYS and AMSC at filing are the only variables that change between the two options.
The three SSS pension formulas explained
SSS calculates your pension three different ways. The highest result becomes your base monthly pension.
| Formula | Calculation | When it typically wins |
|---|---|---|
| Formula A | ₱300 + (20% x AMSC) + [2% x AMSC x (CYS – 10)] | 20+ years of service |
| Formula B | 40% x AMSC | 10 to 19 years of service |
| Formula C | ₱1,200 (CYS 10-19) or ₱2,400 (CYS 20+) | Minimum guarantee only |
Formula C is the floor. Anyone contributing at even a modest bracket for 10 years will surpass it with Formula B. In practice, you can focus entirely on the battle between A and B.
Formula B is clean math: 40% of your AMSC, no adjustments. If your AMSC is ₱25,000, Formula B gives you exactly ₱10,000 per month, regardless of whether you served 12 years or 19.
Formula A is the tenure formula. It starts below Formula B and climbs past it. Specifically, the 2% multiplier kicks in after Year 10 and compounds with every additional year you stay in. For example, at ₱25,000 AMSC and CYS of 25, Formula A produces ₱12,800 while Formula B stays at ₱10,000.
Which formula wins for you? The Year 20 threshold
Formula B wins for members with 10 to 19 years of service. Formula A wins from Year 20 onward and never loses again. At exactly Year 20, Formula A equals Formula B plus ₱300. After that, it pulls further ahead with every year.
| CYS | Formula A (at ₱25,000 AMSC) | Formula B | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 years | ₱5,300 | ₱10,000 | B |
| 15 years | ₱7,800 | ₱10,000 | B |
| 20 years | ₱10,300 | ₱10,000 | A |
| 25 years | ₱12,800 | ₱10,000 | A |
| 30 years | ₱15,300 | ₱10,000 | A |
Formula A adds ₱500 per additional year at ₱25,000 AMSC. By Year 30, it delivers ₱5,300 more per month than Formula B. Over 20 years of retirement, that gap is ₱1,272,000 in extra total income. That is why stopping at 10 years is the most expensive decision a Filipino worker can make.
I did this exact table manually for my dad before his retirement filing. His 22 years of CYS put him squarely in Formula A. When my computed number matched the SSS calculation, he finally stopped second-guessing the portal estimate.
What is AMSC and how does SSS calculate yours?
AMSC is the peso value that drives both formulas. SSS calculates it two ways and gives you the higher result: the average of your last 60 monthly salary credits (your final 5 years before retirement), or the average of every salary credit you have ever posted since your first contribution.
For most freelancers who started with low minimum brackets in their 20s, the Last 60 rule is the winner. Your early years still count toward your CYS; they build your tenure. However, they do not drag down the peso value of your monthly check if your Last 60 months show a higher average.
In practice, this creates the “sprint” strategy: pay the maximum MSC bracket of ₱35,000 for at least your final 60 months before retirement. If you do that, your AMSC reaches ₱35,000 regardless of what you paid in 2015. SSS effectively sets the base rate of your pension from your peak earning years, not your average earning years.
For the mechanics behind the MSC bracket table and how your monthly contribution is split, see how SSS contribution is computed in 2026.
The Age 55 Trap: why freelancers must act now
Once a voluntary SSS member turns 55, SSS restricts how fast they can increase their contribution bracket. The limit is one salary bracket increase per year. At ₱500 per bracket, climbing from ₱10,000 MSC to ₱35,000 MSC takes 50 bracket jumps. At one per year, that is a 50-year climb from age 55, which is impossible before retirement.
The practical deadline is age 50, not 55. If you want your last 60 months at the maximum ₱35,000 MSC, you need to reach that bracket before age 55 so you can maintain it for five full years going into retirement. Working backward from 60, that means being at the ₱35,000 bracket by age 54 at the latest, which requires starting to climb well before 55.
For a freelancer currently at ₱15,000 MSC and age 38, that is still manageable: 40 brackets in 17 years at ₱500 increments, or roughly 2-3 bracket jumps per year. However, if you are 45 and still at ₱8,000 MSC, you have a real urgency problem. Additionally, irregular income makes it tempting to stay at a lower bracket “for now,” and that habit compounds against your future pension.
My personal approach: I started increasing my bracket at 35. Not the maximum yet, but higher every year. The one-bracket rule after 55 is the clock I am actively running against.
SSS retirement pension calculator 2026
Enter your monthly salary and years of service below. The calculator snaps your salary to the correct Monthly Salary Credit (MSC) bracket automatically, runs all three formulas, and shows the 2026 pension breakdown including the ₱1,000 monthly supplement and the June 2026 pension increase.
SSS Retirement Pension Calculator
Updated for 2026 rates. Enter your details to see your estimated monthly pension.
Based on RA 11199 (Social Security Act of 2018). Includes 2026 10% pension increase and ₱1,000 monthly supplement. For reference only — actual pension depends on your full posted contribution history.
Monthly pension or lump sum? The 120-month rule
If you have fewer than 120 posted monthly contributions when you retire, SSS does not pay a monthly pension. You receive a one-time lump sum instead: the total of your own contributions plus a small amount of interest. No ongoing monthly income, no ₱1,000 supplement, and no future pension increases.
The “semester of retirement” is the six-month period that contains the month you retire. If you retire in August, the semester runs from July to December. SSS counts only contributions posted before that semester starts. Contributions paid during the semester itself do not count toward the 120-month minimum.
This trips up workers who assume they can keep paying right up to retirement day and have it counted. They cannot. Furthermore, old employer contributions from companies that have since closed sometimes never posted at all.
That was my dad’s situation. Three months from a company that closed in the early 1990s never appeared in his ledger. We could not recover them. However, knowing they were missing helped him manage expectations before his first pension check arrived. The number I computed matched exactly because I counted only posted months, not assumed months.
The fix is simple: log in to My.SSS, open your contribution records, and count the posted months manually. Do not rely on your GCash payment history or your own receipt count. A payment and a posting are two different things, and the gap between them is where quiet surprises hide.
How to file your SSS retirement claim
Most retirees can file online through My.SSS. Two conditions must be met: you are registered on the SSS website, and you either have a UMID card enrolled as ATM or an approved disbursement account in the SSS Disbursement Account Enrollment Module (DAEM).
Documents to prepare before filing:
- Completed Retirement Claim Application form
- At least one valid government-issued ID
- Disbursement account details (bank account, e-wallet, or UMID-ATM)
Without a UMID card, you also need to submit a Member’s/Claimant’s Photo and Signature Card and file over the counter at an SSS branch instead of online.
Branch visits are still required for specific cases: outstanding SSS loan balance, dependent children under guardianship, portability or bilateral agreement claims, claim adjustments, and unclaimed benefits of a deceased member. If you still have an outstanding SSS salary loan at retirement, SSS deducts that balance from your first pension payment before releasing the check. If you need to set up a disbursement account before filing, the MySSS RCBC DiskarTech card is one option you can register through My.SSS.
What to do right now
The calculator above is only as accurate as the data behind it. Before you build any retirement plan around an estimated figure, do two things first.
Log in to My.SSS and open your contribution record. Count the total posted months and look for gaps. Old employer gaps from the 1990s and early 2000s are common for workers in their 40s and above. You cannot always recover missing months, but knowing about them early prevents a surprise at retirement filing time.
Second, check your current MSC bracket. If you are under 55 and a voluntary member, you still have full flexibility to increase your bracket at any pace. If you are approaching 55, the one-bracket-per-year ceiling is already tightening. In either case, the right time to start optimizing is now, not at 58.
For a complete view of everything your mandatory SSS contributions cover beyond retirement, browse our SSS investment and savings guides on WisePH. The SSS sickness benefit guide shows what other programs you are already entitled to while you are building toward retirement.
Frequently asked questions
What is the minimum monthly SSS retirement pension in 2026?
The Formula C minimum is ₱1,200 per month for 10 to 19 years of service, and ₱2,400 for 20 or more years. In practice, most members who contribute at even a modest bracket will already exceed this through Formula B. The ₱1,000 monthly supplement and the 2026 10% increase are added on top of whichever formula result wins.
What happens if I retire with fewer than 120 SSS contributions?
SSS pays a one-time lump sum instead of a monthly pension. The lump sum covers your total contributions plus interest, but there is no ongoing monthly income, no ₱1,000 supplement, and no eligibility for future pension increases. The 120 months must be posted before the semester of retirement, not on retirement day itself.
Can a freelancer or self-employed member retire at 60?
Yes. Optional retirement at 60 is available to freelancers and self-employed members without requiring separation from an employer. Since they are not in an employer-employee relationship, the “separation from employment” requirement does not apply. Mandatory retirement is at 65 for all members, regardless of employment status.
Can I increase my monthly SSS pension after I start receiving it?
Not through additional contributions. Once you are receiving a retirement pension, your benefit is based on the CYS and AMSC at the time of filing. However, SSS declares periodic pension increases by law or executive order. The 10% pension increase scheduled for June 2026 applies automatically to existing pensioners without any action required from the member.
How long does SSS take to process a retirement claim?
Processing time varies. Online claims through My.SSS with complete documents and a verified DAEM disbursement account are generally faster than over-the-counter filings. Straightforward cases are typically processed within a few weeks. Claims with outstanding loan balances, guardianship requirements, or bilateral agreement provisions require a branch visit and take longer.








