Social Security, combined with your 401(k) and IRA savings, can help you retire comfortably. Social Security was never meant to be your only source of retirement income. Here are 10 ways to help you get the most out of your Social Security Benefits:
1. Know How Benefits Are Calculated
Social Security calculates benefits based on your thirty-five highest-earning years (your earnings through the year you turn 59 are adjusted for inflation). If you didn’t work for 35 years, those missing years will be added as zeros to make 35 years, lowering your benefit. Working more years can improve your average income and boost your benefits by replacing any zeros or lower earnings.
2. Age Isn’t Just a Number
Your full retirement age (FRA) is when you can receive 100% of your benefits, which varies between 66 and 67 depending on the year you were born. Knowing your FRA helps you decide the best time to start collecting benefits.
3. Timing is Everything, so Get it Right
You can start collecting benefits at 62, but you’ll only get between 70 to 75% of your full benefit, depending on your FRA. If you wait until 70, you’ll receive between 124% to 132% of your full benefit, depending on your FRA.
If you regret starting early, you can stop and repay all benefits you received within the first 12 months of receiving them. If you have reached your FRA, you may stop them and start earning delayed retirement credits on your current benefit amount, but you don’t have to pay anything back.
4. Use Spousal Benefits Wisely
If you are divorced but were married for at least 10 years, you can claim your spouse’s benefits and receive a benefit equal to 50% of your ex-spouse’s benefit. A current spouse only must be married for one year. To receive the full 50%, you must wait until your FRA to claim any benefits and your spouse must be receiving their own benefit.
There are exceptions to this rule for an ex-spouse and other factors apply, so speak with a SS Advisor.
5. Check Your Social Security Statements
Once you turn 60, the Social Security Administration sends a statement with your estimated benefits and your earnings record every year, three months before your birthday. We recommend creating a My Social Security Account online at SSA.gov.
Note: If you create an online account, you will no longer receive statements in the mail.
Make sure the information is correct to avoid errors in your future benefits. If you do find a mistake, Social Security will make you submit actual W-2s to correct your record and they will only allow self-employed to go back three years!
6. Not Everyone Receives the Same Benefit Amount
The more money you earn each year, the higher your benefit will be. You may only need 10 years of earnings to qualify, but you would receive a very small benefit.
7. Work While Retired
You can work and collect Social Security, but if you haven’t reached your FRA, you may have benefits temporarily withheld if you earn over a certain dollar limit. The month you reach FRA the earnings limit ends.
8. Manage Your Taxes
Your Social Security benefits can be taxed, depending on your Modified Adjusted Gross Income and your filing status. Consider all your income sources to avoid unexpected taxes on your benefits.
9. Collect Survivor Benefits If Available
If your spouse passes away, you can start receiving survivor benefits at age 60. The benefits will be reduced if you claim early, so it may be better to wait until FRA. Other factors may affect you, so speak with a Social Security Advisor.
10. Don’t Follow the Crowd
Everyone’s situation is different, so your Social Security strategy should be tailored to your age, needs, and other retirement assets. A personalized plan can help you make the most of your benefits.
Pro Tips
- A financial advisor can help you understand Social Security strategies and plan for retirement.
- Use a retirement calculator to figure out how much you need to save to retire comfortably.
- Contact AMAC’s Social Security Advisory Service for free guidance from nationally accredited advisors. Get help understanding risks, benefits, timetables, all things Social Security (note: SS Advisors are not financial advisors). Call 888-750-2622 or email [email protected].
It was 20 years of earnings till Clinton changed it and stole 10 years of earnings from everyone giving everyone less money for retirement. He also changed the retirement age for political purposes too. Leave it to democrats to steal your money for their Socialist agenda.
Biden was the deciding vote to increase taxes on Social Security when he was still a senator
“Democrats” have “redirected” so many of our social security dollars, and other monies, that we should have those amounts tallied, per person, and return the appropriate sums back to those who lost some of the benefit of their own life’s work due to “democrat, light-fingered pilferage” of personal, social security withholding.
The “democrat” politicians who enabled this theft and other inequities such as the Dodd-Frank legislation, should be required to wear sandpaper jockey shorts, in public, for the rest of their lives. That’s right…. no more textiles for them.
I unfortunately created a SSA account years ago, then didn’t check it prior to my password expiration, & have never been able to access it since. (Online banking is too secure for me, too.) I wish I never did it. Now I might get limited info over the phone about projected benefits, my number was 1 of millions leaked in a major breach, & the SS office is too busy to answer the phone. Good thing – God willing – I’ll retire at 70 or later, but by then maybe I’ll just break even because benefits are supposed to be cut across the board due to the shortfall.
can I collect benefits on a spouse that has died even if I’m already collecting my own benefits
Spousal benefits only increase your check if your spouse has died. Until then you collect on your account.