Retirement planning involves making some very important decisions regarding your federal pension benefit, Thrift Savings Plan investments and Social Security. This week, I’d like to focus on the last of these, because it includes a variety of benefits, each with a specific time frame for claiming and unique rules regarding payouts.
Benefits You’ve Earned for Yourself
Employees who have paid FICA taxes on their wages can qualify for Social Security retirement and disability benefits based on their own work record. Retirement benefits are payable between ages 62 and 70. There is no reason to delay applying for benefits past 70, since there are no further delayed credits, and by this age, if you’re still working, you can get Social Security benefits without an earnings limit. The earnings limit ends after you reach your full retirement age—between 65 and 67, depending on your year of birth. (It’s 67 for those born in 1960 or later).
According to the Social Security Administration, in 2010, less than 20 percent of people delayed receiving Social Security retirement benefits past their full retirement age. But there are valid reasons to hold off:
- The benefit payable at 70 is 76% larger than the one payable at 62 and will produce a substantially larger lifetime stream of income for those who exceed their life expectancy.
- If you’re still working, the Social Security earnings limit could reduce or eliminate your benefit. In 2023, if you’re under your full retirement age, the annual earnings limit is $21,240.
- In some cases, one spouse of a married couple delays claiming to produce a larger survivor benefit for the last remaining spouse.