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- Re: Are You Savvy About Social Security?
Are You Savvy About Social Security?
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Are You Savvy About Social Security?
Is this statement True or False? "Your birth date affects when your monthly Social Security benefits are paid."
...the answer is True. If your birthday falls between the first and 10th of the month, you will be paid on the second Wednesday of the month. People with birthdays that fall between the 11th and 20th will get paid on the third Wednesday of the month, and those with birthdays between the 21st and 31st will get paid on the fourth Wednesday. This does not apply to Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefit payments.
Find out how savvy you are about Social Security by taking our quiz. Let us know how you did!
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The real answer is a little more complex. In 2010 the CPI increased by 1.5% yet there was a zero COLA.
A COLA calculation is made every year. However if the CPI (third quarter average) does not exceed the CPI calculation use for any prior year's COLA then there will be no adjustment. The COLA for 2009, 5.8% was based on a 2008 (3rd quarter) CPI that was not exceeded until 2011 (3rd quarter). Thus there were no COLAs for 2010 and 2011. So the original question was poorly worded.
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I have a question about double-dipping strategies. Is it possible for me the take benefits at 62, then switch to my husband's/spousal benefits at 66, then go back to my benefits at 70?
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Sure you can! But why would you?
The benefit you get at 70 will not be your FULL benefit. By starting your own benefit at age 62, that's it, honey, you locked in for reduced benefit amount for rest of your life. You can't come back 8 years later and say "gimmmeeee More.....changed my mind ......don't want the 25% reduced amount I took....
Sorry. That's the way the cookie crumbles.
Only way you could get more would be if you continued to work full-time at a good salary and added another 5 years of high earnings under your belt. (This would be while drawing the spousal benefit on your husband one half of his. Which would mean you likely would have to give back most of that check as you would be over the earnings limit for folks under 65) But, continuing to work that way might increase your monthly check later, as SS would be required to factor in the last 5 years of your earnings. But it would not bump you up to what you want, 100% of your PIA (primary insurance amount)
Only way you are going to get a check that is 100% of PIA is when your husband dies. Then, the one-half you were getting goes bye-bye, and you start getting the full amount of his check.
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I am a divorced widow. Can I take my ex-husbands SS at 66 and then switch over to mine at 70?
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As long as you were married to your late ex- for at least 10 years.
This is what SS says about it:
" If a person receives widow's or widower's benefits, and will qualify for a retirement benefit that's more than their survivors benefit, he or she can switch to their own retirement benefit as early as age 62 or as late as age 70. The rules are complicated and vary depending on the situation, so talk to a Social Security representative about the options available."
Social Security / Survivors Planner / Social Security Benefit Amounts For The Surviving Spouse By Year Of Birth
http://www.ssa.gov/survivorplan/survivorchartred.htm
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Thanks, drawpoker. The break even for me is 78 and although I'm healthy now at 62 (thank God), both my parents died at ages 63 and 71. So, I'm hedging my bet.
I also used the AARP calculator and here's the recommendation: both my husband and I file at 66--I for spousal and he file/suspend; then at 70, he files for benefits and I file on my own benefits. That way I'm getting 100% of PIA. Correct?
What I don't want to have happen is being penalized for earnings between 62 and 66. If I have no income and my husband does, do they still penalize me for being ovr the allotted amount?
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Yes, as you have outlined the plan. As long as your waits to file at his full retirement age, then suspends, that automatically makes you eligible for the spousal benefit (one half of his).
Then, by his suspending and waiting until he is 70, he should get an additional 8 % when he does begin collecting his checks.
The only catch to this is that a couple has enough income coming in from other sources to support themselves while waiting for the husband to start collecting not just fulll but actually increased benefit at age 70, meanwhile the wife is collecting only one half of his amount in her check.
The ideal way this file and suspend works is for hubby to continue working right up to age 70 - is that a possibility?
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This is a nice topic.
As far as India is concerned those who are in the private sector are safe. Those who are in the public sector are very safe.
But people who work in the unorganized sector are having an unfortunate social security though governmnet has unique plans. But the money is insufficient. They have a miserable life after 60's.
Some good hearts are working at it to solve this. If you have and idea please share so that we can try it in India.
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Drawpoker, my husband wants to work until 70, but as we all know, stuff happens. No one knows. What is that saying--"humans make plans and God laughs." But, I guess the advantage of file/suspend is that if my husband needs to punt before 70, he can pick up his benefits at any time between 66 and 70 without losing any money. That's what I understand anyway.
We've had a lot of financial reversals over the years, plus putting kids through college, and have very little set aside for retirement. Have equity in our home and not much else. So, we have to make the most of our benefits AND continue to work. I actually filed for benefits a few months ago (was out of work), so I'm debating whether to return the money and wait until 66, because I'll be making way over the low allotment. It's so confusing what to do and if you call Social Security, you get different answers depending on who you talk to! Appreciate your advice. How is it you know so much about the benefits?
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@northrancher wrote:
. . . . I actually filed for benefits a few months ago (was out of work), so I'm debating whether to return the money and wait until 66, because I'll be making way over the low allotment.
Make SURE that you make that decision soon, remember you have to make it within 12 months and I am not sure exactly when that 12-month counting period begins.
SS Retirement Planner - If You Change Your Mind
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I am unsure if the income limit on my early taking of SS includes my still working husbands income? Also, does my income from rental property count towards what I can make without penalty. Additionallly if they lower my early benifits due to income, do I get that money back at full retirement? Thanks for any insights as I need to figure out if I should withdraw asap as I am a month away from 63 and started taking SS at 62. I am financially sound.
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This pamphlet from Social Security should answer all your questions.
Your rental income, if considered investment income, will not be considered in the equation but if it is considered earned in some manner, I.e., it is reported to Social Security on
Form W-2, 1099 or K-1, then it would be considered earnings rather than investment income.
Social Security Administration 2014 "HOW WORK AFFECTS YOUR BENEFITS"
http://www.ssa.gov/pubs/EN-05-10069.pdf
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Northrancher, I guess you could say I started out as expert on survivor's benefits, having been widowed at a young age. Back then, the earnings limit for beneficiaries was only like $8,700 a year (LOL, can you believe what a dollar was back then! ). So I had to figure pretty closely for the next dozen years how to juggle part-time work so as not to lose any of my monthly check. Then, when the youngest turns 16, of course, the mother's check ceases, so I went back to work full-time.
To digress for just a moment, one of the motivations for me to become an expert on soc. sec. matters was because of the scornful and nasty, ill-informed things my former sister-in-law was saying. Isn't it amazing what having nasty in-laws can do for you. She had a habit of going around among the relatives and saying that I should be "banking" the soc. sec. checks as representave payee instead of spending them. She seemed to think that was the proper thing to do for someone who didn't need the child's benefits to support the family, and it could grow to make a good college fund, or go toward a nice car as a graduation present. Ha! Little did she know. Soc sec. requires an accounting from the representative payee when the beneficiary is no longer eligible to receive benefits. And, guess what, if any of the money was "saved" or banked and is unspent, you have to return the money to soc. security. I often wonder if that misconception my former S.I.L. had still exists among some families. ?
Anyhooo, back to what you asked, at the end of the '90s I was done with soc sec. , giving me a breather from their hassles and un-ending math challenges and puzzles for awhile. Until I had to decide about taking old age benefits. (I never remarried). I could draw on my late husband starting at age 60 and get around 72%. Or draw on my own and get 75% (25% penalty for drawing at age 62 as you know).
This seemed to be almost the same in terms of actual dollar amounts - except, of course, the 2 additional years of benefits I would get from age 60 to 62. I never had 35 straight years of high earnings, so I knew my PIA would not be very impressive. ( Like lots of women who had to take time to raise children, right? Not that we were lazy !
Anyway, while struggling with all the math and trying to figure if I should wait until my full retirement age (66) and then see which one would give me the most------
As you so alertly pointed out, life has a way of getting in the way and changing things. I became quite seriously ill at the beginning of 2009, and by the end of the year it was clear I would no longer have the ability to earn an income through work, plus unreimbursed medical bills were piling up at an alarming rate. So, reluctantly, I made the decision to start drawing at 60.
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I too find myself in a very similar situation. My husband passed away 7 years ago. in his wook time, he made 4 times more than I ever have. I will be 64 in July, but due to job eliminations, I'm looking into early retirement. In order to stay working at another position, I now must take a test (quite a hard one considering I graduated in 1968) and pass it with a high score. I've been it the drop for 2 years. If I fail & can't be placed, I lose my two years. I have an appointment with SS in a few days.
I don't need the Insurance, so that's a blessing, but I think I will take my own whitch is 600.00 less than waiting until 66, for my for my husbands. So stressed out!!!
Not to savvy
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@smdgf1203 wrote:I too find myself in a very similar situation. My husband passed away 7 years ago. in his wook time, he made 4 times more than I ever have. I will be 64 in July, but due to job eliminations, I'm looking into early retirement. In order to stay working at another position, I now must take a test (quite a hard one considering I graduated in 1968) and pass it with a high score. I've been it the drop for 2 years. If I fail & can't be placed, I lose my two years. I have an appointment with SS in a few days.
I don't need the Insurance, so that's a blessing, but I think I will take my own whitch is 600.00 less than waiting until 66, for my for my husbands. So stressed out!!!
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You do know that as a widow, you can draw your deceased husbands benefit based on his earnings
If you take it early, the same reduction would still apply but you would be starting at a higher beginning.
Social Security: Survivors Planner: Survivors Benefits For Your Widow Or Widower
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Aren't you forgetting the many widows who are drawing spousal benefits on their husband's accounts?
For those beneficiaries, the date of payment goes by HIS birthday, not her's. Or HER birthday, as it is Same thing for a widower drawing on late wife.
Just F.Y.I. so the millions who will be drawing benefits not on their own soc sec. earnings record are not confused about which date will be used.
Also, did you know that for low-income beneficiaries whose Part B premiums are picked up by Medicaid, that they automatically get bumped into the class who get checks on the 3rd of each month, regardless of birthday?
Also, besides anyone drawing SSI as you cited, 1) anyone drawing railroad retirement, 2) or has moved outside the U.S. or 3) has payments garnished
All these classes also get checks on the 3rd of every month, regardless of birthday
Seems like you are the one who is not too savvy here.
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My husband collected his check on the 3rd of the month and mine came on the second Wednesday. He passed two years ago. I receive the benefit of my check plus part of his to add up to what he collected. The check is deposited on the second Wednesday not on the third of the month.
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As it should be, rosie.
Even though you are now a widow - when you first filed for benefits you filed under yourself. That is the "claim number" soc. sec. used , and that is whose birthday it goes by.
Widows who are filing for the first time and filing under their husband's account, not their own, will have a claim # that is not their own SS#, but rather the husband's with the code "D" following. Then it goes by 2nd, 3rd, 4th Wed. according to his birthday.
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To tell the truth it frightens me in the lines of help for medical and medicines. I got a call about this but they wanted me to pay out of pocket $300 a month and with what I get after paying lot rent will I before to get medicine I need. Will I be able to pay my bills without harassment.
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