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Social Security Filing Strategy
How to Maximize Social Security Benefits
Use these strategies to increase your household’s lifetime benefits
- The ideal strategy for you might not work for your neighbor—and vice versa.
- Social Security representatives may give you incorrect advice that can cost you serious money.
- There are opportunities to increase your Social Security benefits later if you decide that you started claiming too early.
- Be proactive. Social Security won’t tell you if you become eligible for specific benefits, such as those for divorced survivors and children.
1. Don’t Take the Social Security Administration’s Advice at Face Value
Going straight to the source seems like a great way to get accurate information about the best time to file for Social Security. But it’s not.
The Social Security Administration (SSA) representative you talk to might have good intentions when they offer advice about your specific circumstances. However, because this person is likely overworked and undertrained, they may give you incorrect information. And it could cost you tens of thousands of dollars throughout your retirement.
2. Withdraw Your Social Security Application
Here’s one opportunity to reverse a claiming decision you regret. If you’re within the first 12 months of claiming and you have enough cash available, you can withdraw your application and repay all the benefits you’ve received so far.
After repaying what you received, you can claim a tax refund or credit for any taxes you paid on those benefits.
3. Suspend Your Social Security Benefits
Once you reach full retirement age, you can voluntarily suspend your Social Security benefits. Doing so will boost your future benefits—and you don’t need to repay the benefits you’ve already received.
Susan started receiving Social Security benefits at age 63. Her full retirement age is 66, and her full monthly benefit is $1,000. Because she began receiving benefits 36 months early, her monthly benefit was reduced to $800.
If she waits until age 70 to resume her Social Security benefits, the strategy will increase her monthly benefit by 2/3 of 1% for 48 months, or 32%. Her former monthly benefit of $800 would increase to $1,056.
4. Maximize Your Household Benefits
If you have a spouse or minor children, you should consider how your claiming strategy affects them. This might mean using a different benefit strategy than the one you’d use to maximize your own benefit payment.
How else might you maximize your household’s Social Security benefits? The oft-heard advice is to postpone claiming until age 70 if you can afford to. But that may not be the best option if you’re in your 60s and still have minor children at home—not uncommon in blended families.
- The number of children who are in the household
- How long it will be until they turn 18 (or 19, if they’re full-time students)
- The amount of your spouse’s benefit
- The age gap between the spouses (survivor benefits are permanently reduced if you claim early)
5. Know Every Benefit You’re Entitled To
The Social Security Administration doesn’t just pay retirement benefits directly to the worker who earned them. It also pays survivor benefits, divorced survivor benefits, spousal benefits, divorced spousal benefits, child benefits, and a few other types of benefits.
“With a modest worker benefit and retirement at age 62, for example, one might take a reduced worker benefit at 62 and defer the larger widow’s benefit to full retirement age in order to get an unreduced benefit,” says Prunier.
However, Prunier also warns you should remember that for all “unusual” approaches to boosting Social Security benefits, significant restrictions or exceptions may apply. Anyone thinking about taking advantage of these approaches should always ask themselves:
- Do I understand what restrictions apply?
- Do I fulfill all the requirements to take advantage of this approach?
- Could there be unintended consequences with this approach?
6. Use a Good Social Security Calculator
A good calculator can help you crunch the numbers and find the strategy that works best for your situation. You may free calculators on-line, however the professional social security software we use is far more beneficial. We will compare three scenarios to help you determine which strategy provide the most social security over your lifetime with the least amount of money to meet your retirement income goals.
The Bottom Line
Social Security benefits are an essential part of any retirement plan. You’re entitled to them if you or your spouse have earned 40 credits by paying into the system for at least 10 years. You should absolutely try to max out your payback within the law’s parameters.
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With an “education first” approach, Jim Musgrave ensures that clients understand how their money is being invested, and we guide the development of financial plans that help them achieve their goals for personal wealth and retirement security.