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Johnson Gasink & Baxter, LLP Legal Blog

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Couples Can Boost Their Social Security Checks

 

Useful information about Social Security filing options by Andrea Coombes of MarketWatch as follows:
 
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch)—You’d think claiming Social Security would be a simple retirement decision—you retire and you start your benefits. But there are certain complex strategies that can help pad a married couple’s retirement savings with tens of thousands of dollars of additional income.
 
Don’t make your claiming decision lightly, said Joe Elsasser, an Omaha, Neb., certified financial planner and creator of Social Security Timing, a software program for pre-retirees and advisers to run scenarios to assess strategies.
 
“It’s a decision that’s going to impact you for your entire life, and it’s a decision that’s going to make up a substantial portion of your income,” he said.
 
Specific strategies can help maximize savings, but couples also need to avoid a common mistake. “Almost everyone thinks of it as their own earnings record, their own benefit, as opposed to integrating what they receive,” Elsasser said.
 
Instead, make the decision as a couple. Consider a hypothetical situation. The husband, the higher earner, believes he’s going to die relatively early and the wife thinks she’ll live a long time. So the husband claims his benefits as early as possible and the wife delays.
 
“That’s exactly opposite of the scenario that should happen,” Elsasser said.
Each year you delay claiming your benefits past your normal retirement age, your benefit ticks about 8% higher, up to age 70, thanks to what the Social Security Administration calls “delayed retirement credits.” And in the event of a spouse’s death, the surviving spouse can take the higher of her own benefit or that of the dead spouse.
 
If the husband claims early and then dies first, “effectively he’s shortchanged his wife’s survivor benefit,” Elsasser said. Instead, that husband should delay his claim, so if need be the wife can claim the highest possible benefit for the rest of her life. If the wife dies first, the husband simply keeps his own benefit.
“You’re trying to maximize benefits over both spouses’ lives. That’s the key that most people miss,” said Brett Horowitz, wealth manager at Evensky & Katz Wealth Management in Miami.
The ‘file and suspend’ strategy
 
A claiming strategy called “file and suspend” can help get the most money. Say a husband plans to delay his benefit until age 70. He is allowed to claim his benefit at his normal retirement age—say it’s 66—and then immediately suspend it.
 
That way, his benefit amount keeps growing—thanks to those delayed retirement credits—but since he did make that initial claim, his wife, at her full retirement age, can file a “restricted” application to claim spousal benefits based on her husband’s record, but not her earned benefit.
 
Generally, spousal benefits are up to 50% of the other spouse’s monthly benefit at full retirement age (some age restrictions apply). In this scenario, her own benefit now can grow until she hits 70, too.
In one hypothetical “file and suspend” scenario, a couple, both 66, could collect an additional $60,000 by delaying their benefits and the wife taking spousal payouts while they wait, according to Lisa Colletti, New York-based director of wealth management at Aspiriant.
 
 
Say a husband and wife, both 66, are entitled to monthly benefits of $2,500 and $1,500, respectively. The husband decides to file and suspend—he wants to delay until age 70, when his monthly benefit will be $3,300.
 
But, meanwhile, the wife can collect a 50% spousal benefit based on her husband’s benefit at his full retirement age—that’s one-half of $2,500, or $1,250 a month—from her age 66 to 70. Then, at 70 she switches to her benefit, which has grown to almost $2,000 a month.
 
End result: $60,000 more in benefits than had the couple simply delayed their benefits. This scenario assumes that delaying benefits until age 70 makes sense for the couple.
 
For the full article, click here
- Dan

 

 


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