Is it a monthly benefit
increase or a lump sum?
by Phil Moeller |August 9, 2019
In this week’s
column, Phil Moeller, the author of Get What’s Yours for Medicare: Maximize Your Coverage, Minimize Your
Costs and co-author of the updated edition of How to Get What’s Yours: The Revised
Secrets to Maxing Out Your Social Security, addresses a reader’s
question about recouping Social Security benefits that have been withheld.
Got a question of
your own about Medicare or Social Security?
Send it to askphil@considerable.com.
Now that I’ve turned
66, how do I reclaim Social Security survivor benefits that were withheld?
Question: A few years ago, you
answered questions for me regarding taking Social Security survivor benefits.
My husband passed away almost five years ago, and I started taking survivor
benefits at age 61. Since I also worked full time up until this year, Social
Security withheld almost 50 percent of my benefits through the beginning of
this year.
I recently turned
full retirement age of 66. Will Social Security pay me the money they’ve
withheld for the past four years?
Do I have to get in
touch with them, or will they automatically contact me?
How are the withheld
funds paid? Is it a monthly benefit increase or a lump sum? And if it’s a
monthly increase, how do they calculate it?
I’ve tried calling
Social Security but was on hold for almost an hour and gave up. Any information
you can give me would be greatly appreciated! Thank you.
Deanna
Answer: Those reductions
have been caused by Social Security’s earnings test rules. However, once you
reached your full retirement age, any benefits withheld due to the earnings
test should begin to be repaid to you in the form of higher benefits.
“Once you reached your full retirement
age, any benefits withheld due to the earnings test should begin to be repaid
in the form of higher benefits.”
This should be an
automatic adjustment, and it should be explained to you in a letter you receive
from Social Security. It will include the amount of your higher benefit.
I do not know the
precise details of how the agency’s calculates the “payback” period for these
withheld benefits. I assume the agency would determine the average remaining
lifespan of a woman your age and calculate the higher benefits so that you were
repaid all of your withheld benefits by the time you reached that age. If you live
longer than this, you would continue to receive the higher benefit and it would
last for the rest of your life.
The restoration of
withheld benefits only applies to the type of benefit you were receiving at the
time your earnings test reductions were applied. In your case, that was a
survivor benefit. If you switched from that survivor benefit to your own
retirement benefit at a later date—which is permissible under Social Security
rules—that second benefit would not be adjusted upward due to earnings test
reductions.
Of course, you
wouldn’t be switching unless the retirement benefit already was higher than
your adjusted survivor benefit. But you shouldn’t expect a further boost in
that benefit because of earnings test adjustments.
Enjoy your increased
benefits!
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