If you have second thoughts within a year of
claiming, you can give the money back
by Considerable
Staff | July 22, 2019
A third of older
Americans rely on Social Security as their primary source
of income, according to the Social Security Administration. So the
extra 8% you receive per year by holding off on taking your benefit between the
ages of 62 and 70 can have a big impact.
According to The 2019 MassMutual Social
Security Pulse Check, 38% of people wish they’d filed later.
In fact, if you claim
at age 70, you can bring home as much as 76% more per
month than if you claimed at age 62.
But more than
two-thirds of people claim Social Security before age 65, which locks them into
a lower benefit.
A recent study
by United Income reports that 96% of households are taking Social Security
before the size of their monthly benefit — which increases by about 8% each
year — maxes out at age 70. Their haste costs them, on average, 9% monthly or
$111,000 per household in total.
What’s more, many
people regret missing out: According to The 2019
MassMutual Social Security Pulse Check, 38% of people wish they’d
filed later, and 30% were compelled to claim because of unforeseen
circumstances, like losing a job.
If you started taking
benefits before you really wanted to, there is a little-known way to undo the
damage — if you qualify.
Form SSA-521, or a Request
for Withdrawal of Application, is a “do-over” opportunity that allows someone
who filed for Social Security benefits in the past 12 months to erase their
withdrawal altogether.
However, there’s a
catch. Besides the one-year window, you also have to return all of the benefits
previously paid out.
That means if you’ve
collected Social Security benefits for 10 months, applied for withdrawal of
application and were approved, you owe every cent that was given to you in
those 10 months.
This could still be a
good option for some people who meet the conditions and want extra money they
stand to make for every year before age 70 they hold off on taking benefits.
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