Planning
to collect Social Security before your full retirement age? Read this first.
Christy
Bieber Oct 24, 2019 at 9:23AM
Social Security retirement benefits provide
a lifelong source of income that goes up along with inflation. Half of married
seniors and around 70% of unmarried elderly persons rely on Social Security to
provide at least half their retirement income. Yet millions of preretirees don't know much
about how their monthly Social Security income will be determined or what
impact their actions will have on their benefits.
Filing early is one action that affects your
monthly check.
One definition of filing early is to claim
benefits prior to an age designated by law as your full retirement age (FRA). Depending on when
your designated FRA is and the age when you first begin receiving benefits, you
could cut your monthly check by as much as 30%. This reduction means you get
less income every year. But because you may get more total checks than if you
waited until later in life to start receiving them, your total benefits from
Social Security are not necessarily reduced.
And regardless of when your FRA is, if you file
before you've worked for 35 years, or if you file when you're earning the most
you've ever earned and have the option to work longer and claim benefits later,
you could also reduce the monthly benefits you receive over your lifetime. This
is also considered a type of early filing, and in this case, you could reduce
the lifetime total of benefits you get.
It's important to understand how different kinds
of early filing can affect total benefits as well as the size of your monthly
checks. This guide will explain what it means to file early as well as how your
decisions can affect Social Security income.
What does it mean to
file early?
As mentioned above, filing early could mean
filing for benefits prior to your full retirement age. Previously, full
retirement age was 65 for everyone. However, in 1983, amendments to the Social
Security system were passed and gradually made FRA later in recognition of the
fact that people were living longer.
Thanks to these amendments, FRA is now between
the ages of 65 and 67, depending on your birth year. The table below shows FRAs
for each birth year. Filing early can be defined as claiming your Social Security
benefits even one month prior to the full retirement age designated for your
year of birth.
|
Birth Year
|
Full Retirement Age
|
|
1937 or earlier
|
65
|
|
1938
|
65 and 2 months
|
|
1939
|
65 and 4 months
|
|
1940
|
65 and 6 months
|
|
1941
|
65 and 8 months
|
|
1942
|
65 and 10 months
|
|
1943-1954
|
66
|
|
1955
|
66 and 2 months
|
|
1956
|
66 and 4 months
|
|
1957
|
66 and 6 months
|
|
1958
|
66 and 8 months
|
|
1959
|
66 and 10 months
|
|
1960 or later
|
67
|
DATA
SOURCE: SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
What does it mean for
your benefit to shrink?
Social Security provides you with a standard
benefit, called your primary insurance amount, if you retire at
FRA. You can learn the details of this formula in our guide to how much the Social Security Administration will pay you.
For now, what you need to know is that when you
claim benefits prior to FRA, your primary insurance amount is reduced by a
specific percentage depending on just how early you file.
This is how much your
monthly benefit will shrink if you file early
The specific impact of early filing depends on
just when you file, as benefits are reduced for each month you claim them prior
to FRA.
The first age at which you become eligible for
Social Security benefits is 62, and the oldest FRA is 67. This means you could
file as much as five years (60 months) prior to your FRA. The table below shows
how your monthly benefit would be affected by early filing.
|
If you file this many months before FRA...
|
Your standard benefit will be reduced by:
|
If you file this many months before FRA...
|
Your standard benefit will be reduced by:
|
If you file this many months before FRA...
|
Your standard benefit will be reduced by:
|
|
60
|
30.000%
|
40
|
21.667%
|
20
|
11.111%
|
|
59
|
29.583%
|
39
|
21.250%
|
19
|
10.556%
|
|
58
|
29.167%
|
38
|
20.833%
|
18
|
10.000%
|
|
57
|
28.750%
|
37
|
20.417%
|
17
|
9.444%
|
|
56
|
28.333%
|
36
|
20.000%
|
16
|
8.889%
|
|
55
|
27.917%
|
35
|
19.444%
|
15
|
8.333%
|
|
54
|
27.500%
|
34
|
18.889%
|
14
|
7.778%
|
|
53
|
27.083%
|
33
|
18.333%
|
13
|
7.222%
|
|
52
|
26.667%
|
32
|
17.778%
|
12
|
6.667%
|
|
51
|
26.250%
|
31
|
17.222%
|
11
|
6.111%
|
|
50
|
25.833%
|
30
|
16.667%
|
10
|
5.556%
|
|
49
|
25.417%
|
29
|
16.111%
|
9
|
5.000%
|
|
48
|
25.000%
|
28
|
15.556%
|
8
|
4.444%
|
|
47
|
24.583%
|
27
|
15.000%
|
7
|
3.889%
|
|
46
|
24.167%
|
26
|
14.444%
|
6
|
3.333%
|
|
45
|
23.750%
|
25
|
13.889%
|
5
|
2.778%
|
|
44
|
23.333%
|
24
|
13.333%
|
4
|
2.222%
|
|
43
|
22.917%
|
23
|
12.778%
|
3
|
1.667%
|
|
42
|
22.500%
|
22
|
12.222%
|
2
|
1.111%
|
|
41
|
22.083%
|
21
|
11.667%
|
1
|
0.556%
|
CALCULATIONS BY
AUTHOR.
This means:
·
If your full retirement
age is 67 and you file for benefits to begin at 66 and 11 months, you would
multiply your primary insurance amount by 0.556% to see how much your benefits
would be reduced. If your standard benefit was $1,400, you'd be looking at a $7.78
reduction in your monthly benefit, and you'd receive a monthly Social Security
benefit of $1,392.22.
·
If your FRA was 67 and
you began receiving benefits at 62, you'd multiply your primary insurance
amount ($1,400 in this example) by 30% (the reduction for filing 60 months
early) to see a reduction of $420 per month.
How is this reduction
in monthly benefits determined?
So where did all those percentages in the table
above come from? The Social Security Administration reduces your monthly
benefit by 5/9 of 1% per month for each of the first 36 months you file for
benefits before full retirement age. To figure out how much your monthly
benefit is reduced if you retire three years or fewer before FRA, you'd
multiply:
·
((5/9) x .01) x # of
months early
If you were retiring 23 months early, you'd
multiply ((5/9) x .01) x 23 = 0.12778, or about 12.78%.
If you start collecting benefits more than 36
months early, benefits are reduced by an additional 5/12 of 1% per month for
each prior month. So if you retire more than three years prior to FRA, it's a
two-step calculation:
·
Multiply ((5/9) x .01) x
36 = 0.20 or 20% (That's the same formula from above.)
·
Add the additional
benefits reduction, which is determined by multiplying ((5/12) x .01) x number
of additional months early
Retiring 44 months early would thus result in a
reduction equal to:
·
20% total for the first
36 months +
·
((5/12) x .01) x 8
additional months (44 months total - 36 months) = 0.033 or 3.3%.
So you'd experience around a 23.33% benefits
reduction: 20% + 3.33%.
But will your lifetime
benefits be lower?
As you've seen above, your standard Social
Security benefit shrinks if you claim before FRA. But this doesn't necessarily
mean the total lifetime benefits you get from Social Security will be lower,
because two things play into your lifetime benefits: the size
of your checks and how many checks you get.
If you claim benefits earlier than FRA, you get
smaller checks, but you should get them for a longer period of time. For
example, if you claim benefits at 62 instead of 67, you get five additional
years of income from the SSA -- or a total of 60 more monthly checks than if you
had waited to claim at 67.
The Social Security system aims to equalize
benefits regardless of the age at which you file if you live the
expected lifespan that is in the calculations.
If you live longer than the SSA projects a
typical beneficiary will, you will get more total lifetime benefits if you wait
to claim than if you claim as soon as you become eligible. If you live less
time than the SSA projects and claim later than the first age you become
eligible, you'll get less total benefits than you'd have received had you filed
as soon as you could.
Of course, you can't predict how long you'll
live -- but you can calculate how long you'd have to stay
alive to make up for benefits lost if you don't claim them as early as
possible. Doing this is called calculating your break-even point.
Calculating your
break-even point if you don't file early
When deciding between claiming at two different
ages, you'll need to figure out how much your benefit would be at each of those
ages. Then you do some comparing.
To help you see the process, here's an example
in which you're trying to decide between starting benefits at 62 and 66 when
your FRA is 67 and the standard benefit you'd receive at 67 is $1,400.
·
Your
standard benefit amount at FRA is $1,400.
·
You're
comparing retiring at 62 vs. 66. If you retired at 62, your standard $1,400 benefit would be
reduced by 30%, or $420, so you'd begin receiving $980 per month at 62. If you
retired at 66, your standard $1,400 would be reduced by 6.67%, or $93.38. You'd
begin receiving $1,306.62 at 66.
·
You'd
forgo four years of $980-per-month income by waiting four years to claim. So the total forgone income if you wait from 62
to 66 to claim benefits is 48 months x $980 per month or $47,040.
·
Your
monthly benefit at the later age would be $326.62 higher.
·
Divide
the $47,040 in missed income by the $326.62 extra per month you receive if you
wait. This shows you'd
need to receive the extra $326.62 for about 144 months (12 years) to break even
for delaying.
It would take you a total of 12 years of
receiving a higher monthly benefit to make up for waiting from 62 to 66 to
start getting monthly Social Security benefits. Since your benefits would be
starting at 66, you would have to live until 78 to break even in this example.
Living longer than 78 would result in higher
total lifetime benefits, since you'd continue receiving an extra $326.62 per
month for the rest of your life. But if you passed away prior to 78, your
lifetime benefits would be lower due to waiting, because you'd never make up
for the $47,040 in income you gave up.
Waiting until after
FRA could boost your benefit further
There's one more important thing to know about
how the age at which you file for Social Security benefits affects monthly
income.
If you delay filing until after full
retirement age, you can earn delayed retirement credits that boost your
standard benefit and result in larger benefit checks. These credits can be
earned until the age of 70 and could result in about an 8% increase per year in
monthly benefits compared to the primary insurance amount you'd get at FRA.
You can learn more about how this works in
our guide to delayed retirement credits. If you're
considering delaying your benefits claim beyond FRA to earn these credits,
remember, you need to analyze how long it will take you to break even for
missing years of income.
To do this, you'll need to calculate your
break-even point in a similar way as described above -- but you have to account
for the increase that comes from delayed retirement credits. This increase is
2/3 of 1% per month you wait to claim after FRA up until the age of 70. So if
you were retiring 12 months after FRA:
·
Multiply 12 x (2/3 x
.01) to calculate the increase in benefits due to waiting for one year after
FRA. In this case, it's a 0.08 or 8% increase.
·
Use the steps described
above in the section on calculating your break-even formula to see how long
you'd have to receive the higher benefit to make up for waiting.
Remember, if you're waiting until age 68, 69, or
70 to claim benefits, you're forgoing even more years of
potential Social Security checks, so you will need to live long enough to make
up for that missed money.
There's another way
your benefits could shrink if you file ASAP
In the above example, filing before age 70 can
shrink monthly benefit checks compared to the maximum you could receive. But it
won't necessarily reduce lifetime benefits, because total benefits will depend
on how long you live.
However, your benefits could also shrink for
another reason if you file earlier than you could. And this time the reduction
in benefits could be a permanent one that affects the total income received
from the SSA.
In this case, your benefits could be smaller if
you file earlier in life and your decision to claim benefits at a young age
results in your primary insurance amount being lower than it would be if you
waited.
Remember, your PIA is based on an average of
your highest 35 years of earnings, after adjusting wages for inflation. If you
file early in life, you may not get a full 35 years of work in. If you don't,
some years when you earned nothing are counted, and you have some $0s factored
in. Adding in $0s drags your entire average down, lowering your primary
insurance amount.
Many people also hit their peak earnings later
in life but don't make very much early on. Say you did work exactly 35 years,
but the first three of those years were at a low-paid internship, and you
earned the inflation-adjusted equivalent of $3,000 per year. Now, however,
you've got a great job and are making $90,000 per year. If you quit work and
file for Social Security benefits now, those first three years of low wages
would be part of your average. But if you keep working another three years, you
could replace the low-earning years with high-earning ones, bringing your
average wage -- and standard benefit -- higher.
If you opt to forgo the opportunity to boost
average wages used to determine benefits, the resulting reduction in your PIA
makes your lifetime Social Security income lower -- not just
your monthly benefit.
Technically, you could file for Social Security
benefits and keep working. But if you work prior to full retirement age,
benefits could be reduced or eliminated if you earn too much money. You can
learn more about this reduction in benefits in our guide to working while collecting Social Security.
You do eventually get back the money withheld
because you earned too much money -- provided you live long enough. But there's
little point in claiming benefits ASAP if you won't actually receive them
because you're earning too much income.
Now you understand how
much your Social Security shrinks if you file early
As you can see, filing for benefits early has a
measurable impact on monthly Social Security income. Only you can decide if
you'd rather start getting money early or wait to get a larger check and take
the chance you won't live long enough to break even.
Just be sure to do the math on how much benefits
shrink when you claim them before full retirement age so you can make a fully
informed choice about what's right for your situation.
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