By Rachel L. Sheedy, Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine
For many Americans, Social Security benefits are the bedrock of retirement income. Yet future retirees could find themselves on shaky ground. The Social Security Board of Trustees, in its latest annual report, estimated that the retirement program would be able to pay out only 75 percent of scheduled benefits starting in 2033, three years earlier than projected last year.
You can’t control how the government might fix that problem. But you can educate yourself about Social Security to ensure that you claim the maximum amount of benefits to which you are entitled. Here are 10 essentials you need to know.
It’s an age thing
The age that you begin collecting Social Security has a big impact on the amount of money you ultimately receive from the program. The key age to know is your full retirement age. For people born between 1943 and 1954, full retirement age is 66. It gradually climbs toward 67 if your birthday falls between 1955 and 1959. For those born in 1960 or later, full retirement age is 67. You can collect Social Security as soon as you turn 62, but taking benefits before full retirement age results in a permanent reduction of as much as 25 percent of your benefit.
Besides avoiding a haircut, waiting until full retirement age to take benefits can open up a variety of claiming strategies for married couples. (More on those strategies later.) Age also comes into play with kids: minor children of Social Security beneficiaries can be eligible for a benefit. Children up to age 18, or up to age 19 if they are full-time students who haven’t graduated from high school, and disabled children older than 18 may be able to receive up to half of a parent’s Social Security benefit.
How benefits are factored
To be eligible for Social Security benefits, you must earn at least 40 “credits.” You can earn up to four credits a year, so it takes 10 years of work to qualify for Social Security. In 2012, you must earn $1,130 to get one Social Security work credit and $4,520 to get the maximum four credits for the year.
Your benefit is based on the 35 years in which you earned the most money. If you have fewer than 35 years of earnings, each year with no earnings will be factored in at zero. You can increase your benefit by replacing those zero years, say, by working longer, even if it’s just part time. But don’t worry — no low-earning year will replace a higher-earning year. The benefit isn’t based on 35 consecutive years of work, but on the highest-earning 35 years. So if you decide to phase into retirement by going part time, you won’t affect your benefit at all if you have 35 years of higher earnings. But if you make more money, your benefit will be adjusted upward even if you are still working while taking your benefit.
There is a maximum benefit amount you can receive, though it depends on the age you retire. For someone at full retirement age in 2012, the maximum monthly benefit is $2,513. You can estimate your own benefit by using Social Security’s online retirement estimator.
COLA isn’t just a soft drink
One of the most attractive features of Social Security benefits is that every year the government adjusts the benefit for inflation. Known as a cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, this inflation protection can help you keep up with rising living expenses during retirement. The COLA, which is automatic, is quite valuable; buying inflation protection on a private annuity can cost a pretty penny.
Because the COLA is calculated based on changes in a federal consumer price index, the adjustment depends largely on broad inflation levels determined by the government. For example, in 2009, beneficiaries received a generous COLA of 5.8 percent. But retirees learned a hard lesson in 2010 and 2011, when prices stagnated as a result of the recession. There was no COLA in either of those years. For 2012, the COLA came back at 3.6 percent. For 2013, it will be 1.7 percent.
The extra benefit of being a spouse
Marriage brings couples an advantage when it comes to Social Security. Namely, one spouse can take what’s called a spousal benefit, worth up to 50 percent of the other spouse’s benefit. Put simply, if your monthly benefit is worth $2,000 but your spouse’s is worth only $500, your spouse can switch to a spousal benefit worth $1,000 — bringing in $500 more in income per month.
The calculation changes, however, if benefits are claimed before full retirement age. If you claim your spousal benefit before your full retirement age, you won’t get the full 50 percent. If you take your own benefit early and then later switch to a spousal benefit, your spousal benefit will still be reduced.
Note that you cannot apply for a spousal benefit until your spouse has applied for his or her own benefit.
Income for survivors
If your spouse dies before you do, you can take a so-called survivor benefit. If you are at full retirement age, that benefit is worth 100 percent of what your spouse was receiving at the time of his or her death (or 100 percent of what your spouse would have been eligible to receive if he or she hadn’t yet taken benefits). A widow or widower can start taking a survivor benefit at age 60, but the benefit will be reduced because it’s taken before full retirement age.
If you remarry before age 60, you are not eligible for a survivor benefit. But if you remarry after age 60, you may be eligible for a survivor benefit based on your former spouse’s earnings record. Eligible children can also receive a survivor benefit worth up to 75 percent of the deceased’s benefit.
Divorce a spouse, not the benefit
What if you were married, but your spouse is now an ex-spouse? A divorce doesn’t take away your right to a benefit based on your former spouse’s earnings record. You can still qualify to receive a benefit based on his or her record if you were married at least 10 years and you are 62 or older.
As with a regular spousal benefit, you can get up to 50 percent of an ex-spouse’s benefit — less if you claim before full retirement age. And the beauty of it is that your ex never needs to know because you apply for the benefit directly through the Social Security Administration. Taking a benefit on your ex’s record has no effect on his or her benefit or that of your ex’s new spouse. And, unlike a regular spousal benefit, if your ex qualifies for benefits but has yet to apply, you can still take a benefit on the ex’s record if you have been divorced for at least two years.
Note: Ex-spouses can also take a survivor benefit if their ex has died, and, like any spousal survivor benefit, it will be worth 100 percent of what the ex-spouse received. If you remarry after age 60, you will still be eligible for the survivor benefit.
It can pay to delay
Once you hit full retirement age, you can choose to wait to take your benefit. There’s a big incentive for delaying your claim — your benefit will grow by 8 percent a year up until age 70. Any cost-of-living adjustments will be included too, so you don’t forgo those by waiting.
While a spousal benefit doesn’t include delayed retirement credits, the survivor benefit does. By waiting to take his benefit, a high-earning husband, for example, can ensure that his lower-earning wife will receive a much higher benefit in the event he dies before she does. That additional 32 percent of income could make a big difference for a widow who has lost her husband’s stream of Social Security income.
One option for a spouse, who is delaying his benefit but still wants to bring some Social Security income into the household, is to restrict his application to a spousal benefit only. To use this strategy, the spouse restricting his or her application must be at full retirement age. So the lower-earning spouse — say, the wife — applies for benefits on her own record. The husband then applies for a spousal benefit only, and he receives half of his wife’s benefit while his own benefit continues to grow. When he’s 70, he can switch to his own, higher benefit. Exes at full retirement age can use the same strategy — they can apply to restrict their application to a spousal benefit and let their own benefit grow.
File and suspend
Here’s a Social Security claiming strategy that’s perfectly legal and potentially lucrative. Let’s say a husband decides he wants to delay taking his benefit until age 70 to maximize the amount of his monthly check. However, he wants his wife to be able to take a spousal benefit, because it would be higher than her own benefit.
To make that happen, the husband, who must be at full retirement age, can file for his benefits and then immediately suspend them. Because he has applied for benefits, his wife can now take a spousal benefit based on his record. And, because he suspended his own benefit, his benefit will earn delayed retirement credits for each year he waits until age 70.
Uncle Sam wants his cut
Most people know that you pay tax into the Social Security Trust Fund, but did you know that you may also have to pay tax on your Social Security benefits? Benefits lost their tax-free status in 1984, and the income thresholds for triggering the tax on benefits haven’t been increased since then.
As a result, it doesn’t take a lot of income for your benefits to be pinched by Uncle Sam. For example, a married couple with a combined income of more than $32,000 may have to pay income tax on up to 50 percent of their benefits. Higher earners may have to pay income tax on up to 85 percent of their benefits.
The earnings test
Bringing in too much money can cost you if you take Social Security benefits while you are still working. With what is commonly known as the earnings test, you will forfeit $1 in benefits for every $2 you make over the earnings limit, which in 2012 is $14,640. (That rises to $15,120 in 2013.) Once you are past full retirement age, the earnings test disappears and you can make as much money as you want with no reduction in benefits.
The good news is that any benefits forfeited because earnings exceed the limits are not lost forever. At full retirement age, the Social Security Administration will refigure your benefits going forward to take into account benefits lost to the test. For example, if you claim benefits at 62 and over the next four years lose one full year of benefits to the earnings test, at age 66 your benefits will be recomputed — and increased — as if you had taken benefits three years early instead of four. That basically means the lifetime reduction in benefits will be 20 percent rather than 25 percent.
Sheedy, R. (2012, November 5). 10 Things To Know About Social Security. Retrieved from http://money.msn.com/retirement-plan/10-things-to-know-about-social-security#