Advisers must
understand when individual or household income will trigger complex rules
Aug 7, 2018 @
1:00 pm
My recent column on how income from a job can temporarily
reduce or even eliminate Social Security benefits claimed before full
retirement age prompted some interesting questions from readers.
Those questions
allow me to clarify how earnings from a job or net self-employment income can
reduce current Social Security benefits while boosting future benefits. They
also give me an opportunity to explain how an individual's income is the triggering factor in
applying the earnings test, but household income is used when calculating the
taxability of Social Security benefits or the application of a Medicare
high-income premium surcharge.
As a quick recap,
the Social Security earnings cap temporarily reduces benefits if an individual
claims benefits before full retirement age while continuing to work. In 2018, someone who is
under full retirement age for the entire year would lose $1 in benefits for
every $2 earned over $17,040. The test applies to individuals' earned income
whether they're single, married, divorced or widowed.
If someone turns 66
this year, there is a more generous earnings cap. That person could earn as
much as $45,360 in the months before his or her 66th birthday without
sacrificing any benefits and would forfeit $1 in benefits for every $3 earned
over the limit. The earnings cap disappears at full retirement age, meaning
someone age 66 or older could earn any amount of money from a job or
self-employment without forfeiting any Social Security benefits.
Any benefits that
were lost to the earnings cap are restored at full retirement age in the form
of higher monthly premiums. Plus, those earnings could boost future benefits
even further if recent annual earnings replace a previous year of lower
earnings used in the benefit calculation, which is based on the top 35 years of
annual indexed earnings.
Special Payments
In my column, I
noted that some earnings, known as "special payments," don't count
against the earnings test. This includes income earned prior to retirement but
paid out after retirement, such as ongoing insurance policy sales commissions,
or lump sum payouts of unused vacation time or sick leave.
That prompted one
reader to ask if those trailing commissions, which are excluded from the
earnings test, are also excluded from the calculation used to determine what
portion of Social Security benefits is subject to federal taxes.
No. Such special payments
are included in the "combined income" formula that determines how
much of your Social Security benefits are subject to federal taxes. Combined
income is defined as adjusted gross income, plus one-half of Social Security
benefits, which are not included in the AGI calculation, plus any tax-exempt
interest.
If an individual's
combined income exceeds $25,000 or if a married couple's joint combined income
exceeds $32,000, up to 85% of household Social Security benefits can be taxed.
Combining Social Security
benefits with ordinary income, such as IRA withdrawals or capital gains, can
create a snowball effect in which the resulting tax on one
additional dollar of income can be far greater than what was expected, warns
Joe Elsasser, founder of Covisum, a training and software company that helps
advisers create retirement income plans through smart Social Security claiming
strategies and tax-efficient withdrawals.
William Meyer,
founder of Social Security Solutions, a competing software and training
company, calls this phenomenon the "tax torpedo," a reference to the
sharp spike and subsequent decline in retirees' marginal tax rate on Social
Security benefits as their income increases.
Medicare Premiums
There is a separate
income calculation that determines how much Medicare beneficiaries pay each
year. Although most people enrolled in Medicare in 2018 pay $134 per month for
Part B, which covers outpatient services and doctors fee, high-income enrollees
pay more — in some cases, much more.
If your clients'
modified adjusted gross income, or MAGI, tops $85,000 if they are single or
$170,000 if they are married, they are subject to high-income surcharges that can boost their
monthly Medicare premiums to as much as $428.60 per person in 2018. Surcharges
also apply to Medicare Part D prescription drug plan premiums.
MAGI includes AGI
plus tax-exempt interest. Unlike the combined income formula that determines
the taxability of Social Security benefits, MAGI does not add back half of
Social Security benefits.
The Medicare
surcharges, officially known as income-related monthly adjustment amounts, or
IRMAA, are based on the latest available tax returns, so 2018 Medicare
surcharges reflect income reported on 2016 tax returns.
As more and more
clients plan to keep working beyond the age when they qualify for Social
Security and Medicare benefits, it is important that financial advisers
understand which type of income — individual or household — can trigger complex
rules regarding Social Security benefits, income taxes and Medicare premiums.
http://www.investmentnews.com/article/20180807/BLOG05/180809945/wages-can-boost-social-security-taxes-medicare-premiums?itx[idio]=8812325&ito=792&itq=c2196bcf-5b2a-4728-9076-a6887bcfbad1
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