The quick answer: not too much.
Maurie Backman Apr 23, 2019 at 6:28AM
Seniors are allowed to file for Social Security
as early as age 62, and many are quick to exercise this option. In fact, 62 is
actually the most popular age to file for Social
Security, even though seniors have between then and age 70 to sign up for
benefits.
Medicare eligibility, meanwhile, begins
at age 65, and as such, it's not uncommon for seniors to be on Social Security
already by the time their initial enrollment window opens. In fact, the benefit
of already collecting Social Security at that time is that enrollment in
Medicare is generally automatic. Furthermore, Social Security recipients can
pay their Medicare premiums directly out of their benefits, thereby leaving
themselves with one less task to worry about.
Clearly, signing up for Social Security prior to
Medicare is pretty convenient. But that doesn't mean you can't, or shouldn't,
do the opposite -- sign up for Medicare first, and then claim Social Security
later on.
Why waiting on Social
Security pays
Though you're allowed to start collecting Social
Security at age 62, you're not entitled to your full monthly benefit based on
your work record until you reach full retirement age. That age is a
function of your year of birth, as follows:
Year of Birth
|
Full Retirement Age
|
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
|
67
|
DATA SOURCE: SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
If you file for Social Security before your
65th birthday so that you're already getting benefits by the time Medicare
eligibility kicks in, you'll end up reducing those benefits in the process, and
most likely for the rest of your life. That's why it often pays to wait on
Social Security, and enroll in Medicare once you're able. Though your Medicare
coverage won't kick in until you turn 65, you actually get a seven-month
initial enrollment window to sign up that begins three months before the month
of your 65th birthday and ends three months after the month you turn 65.
It pays to sign up for Medicare when you're
supposed to, because if you don't, you'll risk getting hit with a surcharge on
your Part B premiums for life. Therefore, if you're not already collecting
Social Security as age 65 nears, there's no need to rush to sign up for it.
What you should do, however, is make sure to enroll in
Medicare, unless you're already covered by a group health plan through a job,
in which case the rules regarding enrollment and penalties differ. (In a
nutshell, you get a special enrollment period if you're already covered through
a group health plan at age 65.)
The only downside to not signing
up for Social Security prior to Medicare is actually having to enroll in
Medicare yourself, and make your premium payments directly, as opposed to
having them deducted from your Social Security benefits. But that's a process
you can automate by setting things up so that your Medicare premiums are paid
from your checking or savings account, just as you'd automate any other
recurring bill.
Of course, there's also the option to sign up
for Medicare and Social Security at the same time if you need both at age 65.
But if you don't need your Social Security benefits right away, waiting can
definitely pay off. Sitting tight until full retirement age will help you avoid
a reduction in benefits, while delaying Social Security past full
retirement age will boost your benefits by 8% a year, up until age 70.
Therefore, don't rush to collect Social Security just because you're gearing up
to enroll in Medicare, and don't assume you need to be on one to sign up for
the other. Though the two programs are interrelated, you can make your decision
for each independently.
https://www.fool.com/retirement/2019/04/23/what-happens-if-you-sign-up-for-medicare-before-so.aspx
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