Early Social Security Benefits
with Working a lot Doesn’t Make
Sense
By Shane Flait © 2012
If you think you’ll take your
Social Security benefits early
but still continue working a
lot, you may want to consider if
it makes good financial sense to
do so. The Social Security
Administration creates
disincentives for taking Social
Security before your full
retirement age. Here’s how they
work it.
The Social Security
Administration has slowly been
increasing its full retirement
age (FRA) where you receive your
‘full’ retirement benefits based
on your best 35 years of
earnings (weighted by their wage
index). FRA now ranges from 66
to 67 depending on your birth
date.
If you can
begin collecting earlier than
your FRA your Social Security
benefits will be reduced
accordingly – and permanently!
At the earliest starting age of
62 you get only about 70% of
your FRA benefits. That’s the
first bad part of collecting
early.
But if you’re
still working while collecting
before your FRA, Social Security
(refer to table) reduces its
benefits you get by $1 for every
$2 of your working income above
$14,160 per year. During the
year that you turn your FRA, up
until the month you turn your
FRA, Social Security reduces its
benefits to you $1 for every $3
of working income above $37,680
per year.
This means
that if you’re making a good
deal more than $14,160 you’re
having some of your earned
Social Security benefits held
back. So why take it early, get
a permanent reduction in your
benefits, and then not even get
it all? That’s the second reason
for not filing for early
benefits.
Incidentally,
you’ll not lose those withheld
benefits for excess working
income since they’re added to
your FRA benefits for later
receipt. That’s a plus anyway.
The last
disincentive is that the
normally tax-free Social
Security benefits become subject
to taxes as your income
increases. Specifically, when
your working income plus tax
free bond income plus 50% of
your Social Security income
exceeds $25,000 (if you’re
single) or $32,000 (if you’re
married), then 50% of the amount
exceeding that threshold or 50%
of your Social Security income –
whichever is less – is taxed.
At $34,000 (single) and $44,000
(married) threshold, up to 85%
of your Social Security is
taxed.
So creating
sufficient working income to
trigger taxation of whatever
Social Security benefits again
defeats most of whatever benefit
you think you get for taking
early Social Security benefits.
With these
three disincentives to
collecting early Social Security
benefits, you can see that
collecting and working a lot
just doesn’t make sense. If you
need to collect early but are
not going to earn that much – so
you’ll not trigger benefits
reduction or Social Security
taxation - then you’ll be OK.
|
2011 Social Security
Benefit Reduction Due to
Working Income beyond
Threshold Versus Age |
|
Age Range |
Threshold
to trigger |
Social Security benefit
withheld |
|
62 to year turn FRA (not
inclusive): |
$14,160 |
$1 for every $2 of
current social security
benefit |
|
Year of FRA to month
turn FRA
(not inclusive): |
$37680 |
$1 for every $3 of
current social security
benefit |
|
Month turn FRA and
thereafter: |
No threshold |
No social security
benefit withheld |
Shane Flait is a writer and
educator. See more at
www.EasyRetirementKnowHow.com