James, nice video! I had to figure this out 10 years ago at age 58 when my wife and I both retired. She is 6 years older, and her SS earnings were a lot less than mine. I made several pages of Excel spreadsheets: her SSA earnings, my SSA earnings, and our combined SSA earnings. That information helped us decide when each of us should file. She was just short of her FRA so had a slight reduction. I wasn’t eligible for benefits for a couple of more years - and filed at age 62. The wife’s benefits immediately bumped up to half of my FRA benefit (with a slight reduction since she had filed a couple of months prior to her own FRA. You explained the process precisely as it worked for us. I loved my work - but retirement has allowed us to travel together while we are both physically able. We are truly blessed. By filing at 62, it may eventually cost us a couple of hundred thousand if we live to Age 95 - but missing the opportunity to see the world would have been a tragic loss.
At 80, you’ll be using a walker and at 85, in a wheelchair. My FIL died at 79 due to diabetes complications, and my MIL has been in a wheelchair since 86 (she’s 90). If they haven’t done the things they did in their 60’s, they would just see the world via TV. Given the diets, foods, toxic chemicals from everything manufactured, and obesity of Americans, life after 70 is pretty dismal due to poor health even if they are living past 85. Watching 🇺🇸 American cruise ship passengers, I told my wife we cant wait to travel if it means our health will become like those people.
I'm curious how anyone taking SS benefits at 62 in order to travel etc and have more dispoable income while younger and active, deal with medical insurance costs! If one is not on medicare at age 65, then presumably most of us have to use the ACA plans (Obamacare) and that is HORRENDOUSLY expensive if one takes > $76k a year in total household income as then you don;t qualify for the ACA subsidies, which can be and extra $20k-$30k a year in premiums!!!!
I'm in pretty much the same situation. I've earned a lot more than my wife -- she is 7 years older than me. The takeaway for me is that she shouldn't start taking an Benefits until SHE hits 67, or she'll take a penalty for the rest of her life. So she start taking her own benefits at 67, and switch to my spousal benefits sometime after she's 69 (and I will have finally hit 62)
You explained this more clearly than anyone. Thanks for being willing to share this info. It’s surprising how difficult it is to find answers to these seemingly common situations.
This was VERY helpful. I am 10 months older than my husband (of 34 years), so I will be able to collect my SS for 10 months before my husband begins collecting. Then, after he collects, I will begin to receive that additional amount of the spousal amount. YAY!
Am 58 retiring next year but the thought of retirement gives me weakness. My apologies to everyone who have retired and filing social security during this time after putting in all those years of work just to lose everything to a problem you never imagined to happen. It’s so difficult for people who are retired and have no savings or loved ones to fall back on.
Just talked about this earlier this week w/ our financial advisoer: the spouse w/ the lower SS benefit is eligible for up to half of the higher benefit. * NOT up to half of anything over full retirement age (say if higher spouse works until 70, lower spouse can still only claim 1/2 of 67) * Lower spouse can start drawing their benefit early, but cannot file for the adjustment until the higher spouse files because the the actual benefit of the higher spouse is not known until they retire due to the percentage increase based on passage of time after becomng eligible at 62. * THE answer to the question we originally had: if lower spouse starts collecting early and then files for the increase after higher spouse retires, that actual benefit will NOT be a full 50% of what higher spouse draws. It is adjusted via a formula *surprise* to account for all the benefits the lower spouse has already collected between that time and when they themselves first filed. So maybe mid/high 40 percentages range but not the full 50%. You're welcome.😊
Do you know the formula of reduction? Is it different from the deduction for early retirement? My dad started collecting at 62 and now he’s 70, and my mom is turning 62 and trying make a decision on retirement. I’m not sure what deduction on spousal benefit my dad will get
@@yeahxukeeyou can call, email, or make an appt at the soc sec office and they will tell you the amounts.. they might nit be exact, but should be pretty close..
Thanks for covering this topic, James! I also look forward to learning about spousal survivor benefit in a future segment as my wife is somewhat younger than I, and has not been a high income earner.
I think you did a great job in describing several different options for collecting spousal benefit and the restrictions within those options. I am 68, my wife is 69. I've paid in my whole working life, my wife has not. She gets $18 per month after Medicare. I started drawing at 62. We are immediately going to SSA to get the spousal benefit for her. What a difference that will make for us! Thanks!!
A shame that SS doesn't make it retroactively correct for your wife. You paid into it all those years, she should be entitled to it. Glad you at least got it fixed for the future.
Thank you for the great question and very clear, thorough answer. Having just started to collect Social Security early at 63, it's comforting to know that my younger wife's spousal benefit will not reduced by my decision to collect early. And, that it will be her decision when to retire that determines whether she collects 50% of the full benefit.
James, this is a very helpful information. Since you spend so much time making this clip, using a whiteboard or digital text to go along with your content would be nice. It will be much clearer by reading the number and listening to your explanation. Just a friendly suggestion!!!!
This is incredibly well presented with truly extremely important and useful facts. About the very best I've seen. Thank you so much for the work and effort in putting this together!
There are many public employees out there that do not contribute to social security and are affected by WEP. It would be good to know how their situations affect spousal benefits. Your vidoes are great James. Thanks.
Very helpful!!! I think it would be much more effective if whiteboard is used to illustrate the figures as you discuss the calculations and options. I find it much more effective taking notes as you talk instead of just directly watching you.
You got it right! Good job James. Can't tell you how many Financial Planners think the spousal benefits are reduced if the primary wage earner files early. (prior to FRA) I'm a retired Social Security Claims Specialist now working as a Benefit Advisor.
Hi. Maybe you will see this. Better yet respond. I am 66 3 mis old. Just got 1st SS check on survivors benes. ( mine is higher) so my projected SS. Went down quite a bit from estimates I recd prior to taking his SS. I feel this has to be a mistake. I took screen shot of my est. Ss. She quoted me 900 less if I took mine at FRA? I know its an estimate this lkes no sense. Last years earnings havent posted yet.
Thanks SO much for using the question as an example for multiple scenarios, it was EXTREMELY helpful in understanding the intricacies of the process. You mentioned several things that are great to be aware of for planning.
YES!!! I am divorced and remarried. I was a stay at home mom in my first marriage for 20 years so very little contributed to SS in my working years. My current hubby has been on disabilty our entire relationship. First hubby was a big earner in IT.
Awesome video, Mr. Conole! Very informative and well presented. Thank you. I "think" now, I know the answer, but my situation is similar to one of your examples used. My wife and I are both 66 this year (she will be in September, so 65-6mo now). Her own benefit now is about $1100. I don't plan to collect until probably 70, when my benefit will be $4700. (My full retirement @66-8 yr is $3650). Is there any downside to her collecting now? If she can collect her own 1100 now until I collect at 70, it sounds like she will then get raised up to half my benefit then.
Another great job of making a complex topic easier to understand! Thank you. James, if you have not covered this topic, please do a show on what the folks at the SS office can actually tell me when I walk in the door to sign up for benefits.
I am so glad that I run into your channel. Your explanation is easy to understand and those specific examples and illustrations really help! More scenarios please...and thank you!
Thank you for the very simplified explanation. I’ve heard of spousal benefit and now I know I do qualify. I have 0 SS contributions because what we have here in our workplace is pension. Nice to know I will still get some money due to husband’s contributions. Thank you!
The answer to the original question comes at about the 14 min. mark. Fast answer: spouse collects 50% of the workers age 67 amount (NOT 50% of the age 62 amount he actually took). **But if the non worker collects early they have a reduced benefit also...all based on the age 67 amount of the primary worker. That reduction formula is on the SS website but basically if the non worker collects at age 62, the benefit is roughly 30% of the primary's age 67 amount.
The case that nobody seems to cover is the one folks are asking about: What happens if the Spouse files on their own record BEFORE the Worker files on theirs? My understanding is that the Spouses OWN benefit will be reduced, but the Spousal portion will NOT, as long as the Spouse is at FRA when the Spousal portion is added. Example: Spouse PIA is 600 and Worker PIA is 2000. Full Spousal benefit would be 400. If Spouse files for both at FRA (67), Spouse's TOTAL benefit would be 1000 (600 + 400) If Spouse files for own at 62 and Spousal at FRA, Spouse's TOTAL benefit would be 850 (450 + 400) if Spouse files for both at 62, Spouse's TOTAL benefit would be 750 (450 + 300) (Would love for James to confirm this!) My question is around Deemed Filing rules. If Spouse files early, but Worker then files before Spouse's FRA, is Spouse immediately Deemed Filing, so they would receive a reduced Spousal benefit? Or could they continue on their own record until FRA, and then add the full Spousal portion?
Yep, your example is exactly the scenario that I'm trying to figure out. Specifically the middle line Total calculation. It would depend on how the spousal benefit is calculated at the spouses FRA. Is it still $400, or is it calculated to achieve the full $1000?
Exxxaaactly. We are in that situation and I have yet to be able to calculate what my wife will receive. I think I got it close using numbers similar to what you described. My wife started collecting at age 62 as she was no longer working. She is 3 years older than me and I am still working. Her monthly payment is only $485 because she didn't work all that much. My benefit will be considerably more even at age 62 but I plan on going to age 65 which will put my benefit around $2800. I understand that is below my full retirement amount. As near as I can tell her benefit will be reduced 34% below half of my benefit. Does this sound correct to you? I have looked everywhere and even ordered a book on Amazon and still don't have the number figured out. Good post!
I just watched 6 videos all basically explaining the benefit, your the first one to say you get your benefit OR the spousal benefit, watching these other videos leads you to believe you get both
Actually, you do get both. If the main earner has a benefit of $3000 at full retirement age, and the lower esrners is $500, the lower earner would get their $500, and in addition, would get another $1000 of spousal benefits. He actually explained this. He actually explained that you could also collect the $500at FRA, and delay collecting the spousal benefit at a later date.
For some you do get both, but it's one check. If the lower earning spouse has her own benefits, but it's not half of the higher wage earning, she must take hers, then the difference of the 50% comes from the higher wage earner.
Thanks! Very helpful. I believe there’s another scenario which was not covered in this video. Assume the spouse (with a marginal SS PIA) starts drawing her own (reduced) benefit at 62. Say …$300/month. Can she then, at her FRA age (after the primary earner has filed for his FRA benefit ) file for spousal benefits to supplement the reduced benefit she’s been receiving since age 62, up to the 50% of primary earner’s FRA? Thank you!
I’m so glad that I stayed in the military for 25 years. My pension is was about $55K last year-and the annual COLA is tied to the social security increase. I also receive, non-taxable, 100% disability from the veterans administration -which is almost as much as my military pension. In a few years, my wife will retire from her federal govt career with close to 30 years of service. Her pension will be more than what I receive from my military retirement….plus, by that time, she’ll have a half million dollars in her 401K-like government investment account. Then, down the road, we can start drawing social security-
Another really good video. Truly appreciate your time and effort to put this content together. and boy, he "right answer" on SS gets pretty sticky, pretty darn fast... Add'l videos on specific, real-life SS cases would be great.
I’m understanding you can take spouse anytime but need to wait til the worker takes theirs. Upon worker death you get their exact that they were getting. Do you lose spouse $ if they die?
After being married for 29 years, I was told he would have to be dead for me to collect, then another person said that mine is higher then his, which makes no sense as I went on disability, many years before. I think that people who work for SS do not always know the laws, I had another situation also, they prorated my comp settlement into my payments, I had to turn in a form, I was even to,do not to lose that paper, because I was suppose to get that difference back when I went onto SS, nothing on that either. I think SS is cutting corners and screwing people over
True - as with all benefits, after the age 61/62black hole, the COLA applies. But the underlying PIA upon which the benefit is based stops getting delayed benefit credits at age 70.
Hi James, great information but the one scenario I did not hear was, can my spouse who is waiting to collect Social Security benefits at 70, collect on my Social Security earnings record since I have begun to collect at 64? I think the answer is no, but please provide the answer in a scenario for us. I know this was not the original question, but seems like you covered just about everything else! Thanks so much for all the great information!! Thanks so
Thanks James all the great information which is the most informative around. Quick question in survival spousal SSN benefits, my husband passed away two years ago while he was on SSN; I am 61.5 and still working with good salary. my SSN would be higher than my husband’s if I apply 67. Can I apply for survival benefits if I am still working? Much appreciated if you could advise. Thanks 🙏
My wife is 5 years 4 months younger than I am. Our FRA is 67. Her own benefit is small. Right now I'm planning to file at age 70 (she would soon be 65). I think it makes sense for her to file for her own benefit at 62 and start receiving 70% of hers (30% off) when I am 67. Then when I file at 70, she could get (1/2 mine - (0.3 X hers)). Then when one of us dies, the other continues with my max benefit. Assuming I understand everything correctly... Not that they make it easy.
Good video, but make sure everyone caught that it is 50% ONLY up to the spouse's full retirement age. I wisely waited until age 70 to collect, but if I ever remarried, my future spouse would ONLY receive 50% of my full retirement age amount at age 66. Unfortunately, she would not benefit from the 32% bonus gain by waiting.
Hmmm, if you married a 20 year old I don't think they are eligible to receive spousal benefits until age 62. Similarly, I don't think they are eligible to receive survivor benefits until age 60.🤔
FINALLY! 🙂 I found the answers I was looking for. James, thank you for all you do for the community - it really makes a difference! My only question: around 10:00 in the video you talk about a spouse who has earned a small(er) amount as compared to the "worker), and can then collect (just as an example) their $600 per month at age 67 then 50% at age 70 (once the "worker" begins their social security). I assume then, that the same could happen starting at age 62 (again, just as an example): if the spouse had a small amount they could claim, could they draw this from age 62 to let's say, 67, then the "worker" starts claiming at age 67...at this point, the spouse's benefit increases from the amount they had been claiming from 62-67 to the full 50%...is that correct? Thanks again!
The spouse w/ the higher SS has to be claiming in order for the lesser earning spouse to draw off of them. If the lower earning spouse wants to take their SS (like at 62) they can do so but then when they start spousal benefits their will be reduced their spousal benefits will be reduced.
I don't think this case was answered in the video, but it may have been. I'm the worker and at the moment plan to begin to collect at 62. Wife, is able to get spousal benefits. She's also older. Can she begin to claim on her own benefit earlier than FRA and then switch to the spousal later? Believe that's a yes based on the video and other info I've seen. Yet, there is conflicting info out there on that point. Secondly, will the spouse be subject to a reduced spousal benefit based on the time they began collecting their own benefit or is the amount of spousal benefit going to be based only on when they begin collecting the spousal benefit. Would the spouse be able to claim the spousal benefit whenever they choose after the worker begins theirs, or would it be required to be added at the time the worker claims theirs benefit?
What I can’t find an answer to is this: I’m the higher earner and also 3 years older than my wife. I started collecting 3 years ago at age 62. At that point, my PIA was a little over 3000 and my benefit, because I filed early, is around 2500. My wife will start collecting this year when she turns age 62. She has her own, smaller benefit that she qualifies for. I know her own benefit will be reduced because she is filing early but is her spousal benefit (which will also be reduced) based on my PIA from 3 years ago or is it based on my PIA from 3 years ago with the COLA increases included (which would make it around 3600).
If you are divorced, you can file as an “independently divorced spouse”. The worker in this case does NOT have to be receiving benefits for you to file.
They're not being discontinued, but the justification for them does seem a bit obsolete. Even if you make the choice for your spouse to be a dependent, other taxpayers shouldn't be on the hook for it.
Great video. I have a question. Say a worker and spouse decided to start social security at the same time. You stated that the worker would have to be drawing Social Security in order for the spouse to receive spousal benefits. In this example, would the spouse receive the spousal benefit for the start month, or would it start on the second month?
What happens if you spouse's Social Security has been reduced by the Windfall Elimination Provision since she didn't have SS deducted while teaching, but then earned enough credits to qualify for her own benefit.
You can't collect half your spouse's benefit unless half of his/hers is still greater than your own. If spouse gets 3000 and half is 1500, but your own benefit is valued at 2000....you have to take your own. Once your spouse dies you can switch to the spouse's benefit if it is higher.
The formula for this is on the SS website. If the spouse collects at 62 their benefit is also reduced. Instead of 50% they recv. around 30% of the primary's age 67 amount.
Thanks for covering this topic, I definitely learned some things. It would have been nice if you had made a few comments on how collecting a spousal benefit would have any impact (if any) on the survivor benefit especially in the case where the spouse was a housewife with no SS history of her own.
It may seem like the distinction between a lower earning spouse getting 1/2 of the higher earner's PIA entirely as an auxiliary benefit vs. as a combination of their own worker benefit plus the difference in auxiliary benefit is meaningless, but there are some cases where it is important. If you have a family member that has a disability and is receiving auxiliary benefits from the higher earner's worker benefits, then you will probably run into the family limit. That limit is based on the primary worker's PIA + the auxiliary benefits for everyone receiving them, so the higher the lower earning spouse's own worker's benefit, the less the total family benefit will be reduced by the limit.
I will be 66 this year on December. My question is if I collect Social Security now and I still have two minor children will I get extra benefit from them?
In another video, a Soc Sec benefit specialist said there is no longer an option to collect 1 Soc Soc and not the other; suspend their own or spouses benefit. Unless, they are a certain age. This might be something you look into.
James, nice video!
I had to figure this out 10 years ago at age 58 when my wife and I both retired. She is 6 years older, and her SS earnings were a lot less than mine.
I made several pages of Excel spreadsheets: her SSA earnings, my SSA earnings, and our combined SSA earnings.
That information helped us decide when each of us should file. She was just short of her FRA so had a slight reduction. I wasn’t eligible for benefits for a couple of more years - and filed at age 62. The wife’s benefits immediately bumped up to half of my FRA benefit (with a slight reduction since she had filed a couple of months prior to her own FRA.
You explained the process precisely as it worked for us.
I loved my work - but retirement has allowed us to travel together while we are both physically able. We are truly blessed.
By filing at 62, it may eventually cost us a couple of hundred thousand if we live to Age 95 - but missing the opportunity to see the world would have been a tragic loss.
Thanks for your example.
Yep! Better live life before we die!
At 80, you’ll be using a walker and at 85, in a wheelchair. My FIL died at 79 due to diabetes complications, and my MIL has been in a wheelchair since 86 (she’s 90). If they haven’t done the things they did in their 60’s, they would just see the world via TV. Given the diets, foods, toxic chemicals from everything manufactured, and obesity of Americans, life after 70 is pretty dismal due to poor health even if they are living past 85. Watching 🇺🇸 American cruise ship passengers, I told my wife we cant wait to travel if it means our health will become like those people.
I'm curious how anyone taking SS benefits at 62 in order to travel etc and have more dispoable income while younger and active, deal with medical insurance costs! If one is not on medicare at age 65, then presumably most of us have to use the ACA plans (Obamacare) and that is HORRENDOUSLY expensive if one takes > $76k a year in total household income as then you don;t qualify for the ACA subsidies, which can be and extra $20k-$30k a year in premiums!!!!
I'm in pretty much the same situation. I've earned a lot more than my wife -- she is 7 years older than me. The takeaway for me is that she shouldn't start taking an Benefits until SHE hits 67, or she'll take a penalty for the rest of her life. So she start taking her own benefits at 67, and switch to my spousal benefits sometime after she's 69 (and I will have finally hit 62)
You should make an addition to this question and address how taking it early affects survivor benefits . Good video.
You get only 70 to 71% if taken early. I was qualified when I turned 60. But a detailed video would be nice.😊
I googled this and cannot believe how confusing the articles were. This was outstanding!
I've listened to numerous SS spousal benefits discussions and this was by far the best most concise explanation I have heard well done.
You explained this more clearly than anyone. Thanks for being willing to share this info. It’s surprising how difficult it is to find answers to these seemingly common situations.
ruclips.net/video/MIrSBcrjQtE/видео.htmlsi=mPIHhZhy88285ypx
This was VERY helpful. I am 10 months older than my husband (of 34 years), so I will be able to collect my SS for 10 months before my husband begins collecting. Then, after he collects, I will begin to receive that additional amount of the spousal amount. YAY!
Am 58 retiring next year but the thought of retirement gives me weakness. My apologies to everyone who have retired and filing social security during this time after putting in all those years of work just to lose everything to a problem you never imagined to happen. It’s so difficult for people who are retired and have no savings or loved ones to fall back on.
Just talked about this earlier this week w/ our financial advisoer: the spouse w/ the lower SS benefit is eligible for up to half of the higher benefit.
* NOT up to half of anything over full retirement age (say if higher spouse works until 70, lower spouse can still only claim 1/2 of 67)
* Lower spouse can start drawing their benefit early, but cannot file for the adjustment until the higher spouse files because the the actual benefit of the higher spouse is not known until they retire due to the percentage increase based on passage of time after becomng eligible at 62.
* THE answer to the question we originally had: if lower spouse starts collecting early and then files for the increase after higher spouse retires, that actual benefit will NOT be a full 50% of what higher spouse draws. It is adjusted via a formula *surprise* to account for all the benefits the lower spouse has already collected between that time and when they themselves first filed. So maybe mid/high 40 percentages range but not the full 50%.
You're welcome.😊
Do you know the formula of reduction? Is it different from the deduction for early retirement? My dad started collecting at 62 and now he’s 70, and my mom is turning 62 and trying make a decision on retirement. I’m not sure what deduction on spousal benefit my dad will get
@@yeahxukeeyou can call, email, or make an appt at the soc sec office and they will tell you the amounts.. they might nit be exact, but should be pretty close..
@@yeahxukeeShe can call local SS they will tell her. She just needs his social, DOB
Thanks for covering this topic, James! I also look forward to learning about spousal survivor benefit in a future segment as my wife is somewhat younger than I, and has not been a high income earner.
I think you did a great job in describing several different options for collecting spousal benefit and the restrictions within those options. I am 68, my wife is 69. I've paid in my whole working life, my wife has not. She gets $18 per month after Medicare. I started drawing at 62. We are immediately going to SSA to get the spousal benefit for her. What a difference that will make for us! Thanks!!
Sorry you lost out on at least 2 years of spousal benefit. Hope you are all set now
Why didn't the SS people advice you? Glad you're going now!
A shame that SS doesn't make it retroactively correct for your wife. You paid into it all those years, she should be entitled to it. Glad you at least got it fixed for the future.
Thank you for the great question and very clear, thorough answer. Having just started to collect Social Security early at 63, it's comforting to know that my younger wife's spousal benefit will not reduced by my decision to collect early. And, that it will be her decision when to retire that determines whether she collects 50% of the full benefit.
James, this is a very helpful information. Since you spend so much time making this clip, using a whiteboard or digital text to go along with your content would be nice. It will be much clearer by reading the number and listening to your explanation. Just a friendly suggestion!!!!
Best explanation of social security I have heard
This is incredibly well presented with truly extremely important and useful facts. About the very best I've seen. Thank you so much for the work and effort in putting this together!
Thanks. A very comprehensive explanation of how spousal benefits can be affected.
There are many public employees out there that do not contribute to social security and are affected by WEP. It would be good to know how their situations affect spousal benefits. Your vidoes are great James. Thanks.
Agree !!!
Yes I am trying to find this out too
Great question. My husband makes more than me, but I will have a bigger SS check. Can he choose to receive a spousal benefit off me?
Yes my question too
Thanks for making this clear regarding spousal benefits. My local Social Security office did not know the answer to this spousal benefit question.
I appreciate you explaining this subject very much, but when it comes to numbers, I wish you showed it with visuals. Thanks.
Social Security Administration needs to have you create educational videos for them… well done sir!
Had to run this back.....I was too mesmerized on how much you favor Ryan Gosling...only better. Thanks for the info.
Thank you very much. But I wish you have a visual to show us those numbers to help me understand it better.
It would be helpful if you had some graphs and numbers in spreadsheet to show the tradeoffs
took my benefits starting at 62, my wife who was 30 and never worked started collecting also
Very helpful! Thx for informing us about the 1/2 of DEAD SPOUSE FULL RETIREMENT BENEFIT. A graphic example would help us visual people! Thx!
Very helpful!!! I think it would be much more effective if whiteboard is used to illustrate the figures as you discuss the calculations and options. I find it much more effective taking notes as you talk instead of just directly watching you.
You got it right! Good job James. Can't tell you how many Financial Planners think the spousal benefits are reduced if the primary wage earner files early. (prior to FRA) I'm a retired Social Security Claims Specialist now working as a Benefit Advisor.
That’s what I thought, too, based on reading articles and watching videos. Thank you for confirming James’s information.
Hi. Maybe you will see this. Better yet respond. I am 66 3 mis old. Just got 1st SS check on survivors benes. ( mine is higher) so my projected SS. Went down quite a bit from estimates I recd prior to taking his SS. I feel this has to be a mistake. I took screen shot of my est. Ss. She quoted me 900 less if I took mine at FRA? I know its an estimate this lkes no sense. Last years earnings havent posted yet.
Thanks SO much for using the question as an example for multiple scenarios, it was EXTREMELY helpful in understanding the intricacies of the process. You mentioned several things that are great to be aware of for planning.
Good explanation! Want to try to tackle spousal benefits with dependents? That is even more confusing.
Would be wonderful to see a video only on divorce and social security. Thanks.
YES!!! I am divorced and remarried. I was a stay at home mom in my first marriage for 20 years so very little contributed to SS in my working years. My current hubby has been on disabilty our entire relationship. First hubby was a big earner in IT.
Awesome video, Mr. Conole! Very informative and well presented. Thank you. I "think" now, I know the answer, but my situation is similar to one of your examples used. My wife and I are both 66 this year (she will be in September, so 65-6mo now). Her own benefit now is about $1100. I don't plan to collect until probably 70, when my benefit will be $4700. (My full retirement @66-8 yr is $3650). Is there any downside to her collecting now? If she can collect her own 1100 now until I collect at 70, it sounds like she will then get raised up to half my benefit then.
Thank you for your concise explanation on all the different scenarios. It was much appreciated
Thanks so much for the information. My situation is exactly like Rob's and his wife. I feel better now that it's all doable and good news!
Another great job of making a complex topic easier to understand! Thank you. James, if you have not covered this topic, please do a show on what the folks at the SS office can actually tell me when I walk in the door to sign up for benefits.
I am so glad that I run into your channel. Your explanation is easy to understand and those specific examples and illustrations really help! More scenarios please...and thank you!
Thank you for the very simplified explanation. I’ve heard of spousal benefit and now I know I do qualify. I have 0 SS contributions because what we have here in our workplace is pension. Nice to know I will still get some money due to husband’s contributions. Thank you!
Better ask social security about this might be more complicated
Very clearly addressed. I will tune in for more. Good job!
The answer to the original question comes at about the 14 min. mark. Fast answer: spouse collects 50% of the workers age 67 amount (NOT 50% of the age 62 amount he actually took).
**But if the non worker collects early they have a reduced benefit also...all based on the age 67 amount of the primary worker. That reduction formula is on the SS website but basically if the non worker collects at age 62, the benefit is roughly 30% of the primary's age 67 amount.
Well done! Very clear for those getting ready to retire.
As usual, cleanly presented content.
I didn't expect to learn anything new, but I did! Thank you!
James, you are such a good teacher - always crystal clear with this complex stuff. Thank you!
This video benefited everybody and was explained very well. Thank You
Great Job explaining what can be a difficult subject
The case that nobody seems to cover is the one folks are asking about: What happens if the Spouse files on their own record BEFORE the Worker files on theirs?
My understanding is that the Spouses OWN benefit will be reduced, but the Spousal portion will NOT, as long as the Spouse is at FRA when the Spousal portion is added.
Example:
Spouse PIA is 600 and Worker PIA is 2000. Full Spousal benefit would be 400.
If Spouse files for both at FRA (67), Spouse's TOTAL benefit would be 1000 (600 + 400)
If Spouse files for own at 62 and Spousal at FRA, Spouse's TOTAL benefit would be 850 (450 + 400)
if Spouse files for both at 62, Spouse's TOTAL benefit would be 750 (450 + 300)
(Would love for James to confirm this!)
My question is around Deemed Filing rules. If Spouse files early, but Worker then files before Spouse's FRA, is Spouse immediately Deemed Filing, so they would receive a reduced Spousal benefit? Or could they continue on their own record until FRA, and then add the full Spousal portion?
Yep, your example is exactly the scenario that I'm trying to figure out. Specifically the middle line Total calculation. It would depend on how the spousal benefit is calculated at the spouses FRA. Is it still $400, or is it calculated to achieve the full $1000?
Exxxaaactly. We are in that situation and I have yet to be able to calculate what my wife will receive. I think I got it close using numbers similar to what you described. My wife started collecting at age 62 as she was no longer working. She is 3 years older than me and I am still working. Her monthly payment is only $485 because she didn't work all that much. My benefit will be considerably more even at age 62 but I plan on going to age 65 which will put my benefit around $2800. I understand that is below my full retirement amount. As near as I can tell her benefit will be reduced 34% below half of my benefit. Does this sound correct to you? I have looked everywhere and even ordered a book on Amazon and still don't have the number figured out. Good post!
This was really well done and explained.
I just watched 6 videos all basically explaining the benefit, your the first one to say you get your benefit OR the spousal benefit, watching these other videos leads you to believe you get both
Actually, you do get both. If the main earner has a benefit of $3000 at full retirement age, and the lower esrners is $500, the lower earner would get their $500, and in addition, would get another $1000 of spousal benefits. He actually explained this. He actually explained that you could also collect the $500at FRA, and delay collecting the spousal benefit at a later date.
You get both if you file for spousal and are eligible. You file on your own record if you can and then file for spousal to get you to 50%
For some you do get both, but it's one check. If the lower earning spouse has her own benefits, but it's not half of the higher wage earning, she must take hers, then the difference of the 50% comes from the higher wage earner.
ruclips.net/video/MIrSBcrjQtE/видео.htmlsi=mPIHhZhy88285ypx
Very nice explanation.
Very thorough explanation, thank you.
Great Information video. Can you do a video on survivor benefits which were mentioned in the video.
Thanks! Very helpful.
I believe there’s another scenario which was not covered in this video.
Assume the spouse (with a marginal SS PIA) starts drawing her own (reduced) benefit at 62. Say …$300/month.
Can she then, at her FRA age (after the primary earner has filed for his FRA benefit ) file for spousal benefits to supplement the reduced benefit she’s been receiving since age 62, up to the 50% of primary earner’s FRA?
Thank you!
I’m a first time learner and I’m very happy to have found your channel 😊 Greatly appreciated
Great video!! Thank you for explaining all of this. Now i understand =)
great information, presented very well. Thanks
Thank you very much! You really cleared up the questions I had.
I’m so glad that I stayed in the military for 25 years. My pension is was about $55K last year-and the annual COLA is tied to the social security increase. I also receive, non-taxable, 100% disability from the veterans administration -which is almost as much as my military pension. In a few years, my wife will retire from her federal govt career with close to 30 years of service. Her pension will be more than what I receive from my military retirement….plus, by that time, she’ll have a half million dollars in her 401K-like government investment account. Then, down the road, we can start drawing social security-
Thank you for your service🙏
so glad President Trump made it that Veterans can go to any medical facility they chose. ❤️🇺🇸
Thank you. Very easy to understand. God blesses you and your family.🙏🏼
clear as mud, is any of this on a simple chart?
Nope
No, but is IS on a bunch of different pages on the SSA website, which all give partial, conflicting, confusing, and misleading answers.
@@jebhorton1830in other words, a typical government response…😮
Another really good video. Truly appreciate your time and effort to put this content together. and boy, he "right answer" on SS gets pretty sticky, pretty darn fast... Add'l videos on specific, real-life SS cases would be great.
Very helpful! Thanks!
Very informative but I wish you would have answered the specific question first then explain the entire spousal benefit issue.
What about taking my Spousal benefits before my full retirement age, and how does that affect widow survivor benefits in the future
I’m understanding you can take spouse anytime but need to wait til the worker takes theirs. Upon worker death you get their exact that they were getting. Do you lose spouse $ if they die?
If you don't find spousal benefits confusing, it's probably because you've never heard of them.
After being married for 29 years, I was told he would have to be dead for me to collect, then another person said that mine is higher then his, which makes no sense as I went on disability, many years before. I think that people who work for SS do not always know the laws, I had another situation also, they prorated my comp settlement into my payments, I had to turn in a form, I was even to,do not to lose that paper, because I was suppose to get that difference back when I went onto SS, nothing on that either. I think SS is cutting corners and screwing people over
@@MarilynShealywhen u go on disability you get the amount you would at your full retirement age.
It is my understanding, that the spousal benefit does increase due to COLAs on the higher earner's PIA between Full Retirement Age and age 70.
True - as with all benefits, after the age 61/62black hole, the COLA applies. But the underlying PIA upon which the benefit is based stops getting delayed benefit credits at age 70.
All benefits have the same COLA.
you answered so many questions! Thank you!! Love your videos!
Hi James, great information but the one scenario I did not hear was, can my spouse who is waiting to collect Social Security benefits at 70, collect on my Social Security earnings record since I have begun to collect at 64? I think the answer is no, but please provide the answer in a scenario for us. I know this was not the original question, but seems like you covered just about everything else!
Thanks so much for all the great information!!
Thanks so
Thank you, very well explained 👍
Thanks James all the great information which is the most informative around. Quick question in survival spousal SSN benefits, my husband passed away two years ago while he was on SSN; I am 61.5 and still working with good salary. my SSN would be higher than my husband’s if I apply 67. Can I apply for survival benefits if I am still working? Much appreciated if you could advise. Thanks 🙏
We are both of 65. I receive a small amount from my husband’s benefits. I was told I could never get any more money. He has received several raises.
My wife is 5 years 4 months younger than I am. Our FRA is 67. Her own benefit is small. Right now I'm planning to file at age 70 (she would soon be 65). I think it makes sense for her to file for her own benefit at 62 and start receiving 70% of hers (30% off) when I am 67. Then when I file at 70, she could get (1/2 mine - (0.3 X hers)). Then when one of us dies, the other continues with my max benefit. Assuming I understand everything correctly... Not that they make it easy.
If your spouse collects at 62, she can never get 50% of yours. She has to be FRA to collect 50% of yours.
Good video, but make sure everyone caught that it is 50% ONLY up to the spouse's full retirement age. I wisely waited until age 70 to collect, but if I ever remarried, my future spouse would ONLY receive 50% of my full retirement age amount at age 66. Unfortunately, she would not benefit from the 32% bonus gain by waiting.
Hmmm, if you married a 20 year old I don't think they are eligible to receive spousal benefits until age 62.
Similarly, I don't think they are eligible to receive survivor benefits until age 60.🤔
@@wuddayameen Stupid comment. You completely missed the point.
FINALLY! 🙂 I found the answers I was looking for. James, thank you for all you do for the community - it really makes a difference!
My only question: around 10:00 in the video you talk about a spouse who has earned a small(er) amount as compared to the "worker), and can then collect (just as an example) their $600 per month at age 67 then 50% at age 70 (once the "worker" begins their social security). I assume then, that the same could happen starting at age 62 (again, just as an example): if the spouse had a small amount they could claim, could they draw this from age 62 to let's say, 67, then the "worker" starts claiming at age 67...at this point, the spouse's benefit increases from the amount they had been claiming from 62-67 to the full 50%...is that correct?
Thanks again!
The spouse w/ the higher SS has to be claiming in order for the lesser earning spouse to draw off of them. If the lower earning spouse wants to take their SS (like at 62) they can do so but then when they start spousal benefits their will be reduced their spousal benefits will be reduced.
Excellent video! Thank you!
It would be good if you show some math examples as you go through different scenarios.
Boy did I need to hear that discussion... Thank you for your clear explanation of this important topic. You just put more $ in our pockets!
I don't think this case was answered in the video, but it may have been.
I'm the worker and at the moment plan to begin to collect at 62. Wife, is able to get spousal benefits. She's also older. Can she begin to claim on her own benefit earlier than FRA and then switch to the spousal later? Believe that's a yes based on the video and other info I've seen. Yet, there is conflicting info out there on that point. Secondly, will the spouse be subject to a reduced spousal benefit based on the time they began collecting their own benefit or is the amount of spousal benefit going to be based only on when they begin collecting the spousal benefit. Would the spouse be able to claim the spousal benefit whenever they choose after the worker begins theirs, or would it be required to be added at the time the worker claims theirs benefit?
Thank you for making this video.
can you show table of comparison
Thank you ; great info!
I had the same question. Thanks a lot!
Very thorough. Thx
Thank you for explanation
I have a good question, I married and divorced the same woman twice, one lasted 7 years and one lasted 3 years. Is she eligible for spousal support ?
You didn't talk about spousal survivor benefits. Kinda important when deciding when the primary benefit spouse should take social security.
Thank you, once again for another excellent video👍🏼
What I can’t find an answer to is this: I’m the higher earner and also 3 years older than my wife. I started collecting 3 years ago at age 62. At that point, my PIA was a little over 3000 and my benefit, because I filed early, is around 2500. My wife will start collecting this year when she turns age 62. She has her own, smaller benefit that she qualifies for. I know her own benefit will be reduced because she is filing early but is her spousal benefit (which will also be reduced) based on my PIA from 3 years ago or is it based on my PIA from 3 years ago with the COLA increases included (which would make it around 3600).
If you are divorced, you can file as an “independently divorced spouse”. The worker in this case does NOT have to be receiving benefits for you to file.
Huge help!
I just saw an article saying they're stopping the spousal benefits
They're not being discontinued, but the justification for them does seem a bit obsolete. Even if you make the choice for your spouse to be a dependent, other taxpayers shouldn't be on the hook for it.
Great video.
I have a question. Say a worker and spouse decided to start social security at the same time. You stated that the worker would have to be drawing Social Security in order for the spouse to receive spousal benefits. In this example, would the spouse receive the spousal benefit for the start month, or would it start on the second month?
What happens if you spouse's Social Security has been reduced by the Windfall Elimination Provision since she didn't have SS deducted while teaching, but then earned enough credits to qualify for her own benefit.
You can't collect half your spouse's benefit unless half of his/hers is still greater than your own. If spouse gets 3000 and half is 1500, but your own benefit is valued at 2000....you have to take your own. Once your spouse dies you can switch to the spouse's benefit if it is higher.
You did not cover the scenario where the spouse collects early at 62 on the husband who also collected early at 62 and had already reached his FRA.
The formula for this is on the SS website. If the spouse collects at 62 their benefit is also reduced. Instead of 50% they recv. around 30% of the primary's age 67 amount.
Thanks for covering this topic, I definitely learned some things. It would have been nice if you had made a few comments on how collecting a spousal benefit would have any impact (if any) on the survivor benefit especially in the case where the spouse was a housewife with no SS history of her own.
It may seem like the distinction between a lower earning spouse getting 1/2 of the higher earner's PIA entirely as an auxiliary benefit vs. as a combination of their own worker benefit plus the difference in auxiliary benefit is meaningless, but there are some cases where it is important. If you have a family member that has a disability and is receiving auxiliary benefits from the higher earner's worker benefits, then you will probably run into the family limit. That limit is based on the primary worker's PIA + the auxiliary benefits for everyone receiving them, so the higher the lower earning spouse's own worker's benefit, the less the total family benefit will be reduced by the limit.
I will be 66 this year on December. My question is if I collect Social Security now and I still have two minor children will I get extra benefit from them?
Excellent explanation
Wow. Great breakdown
In another video, a Soc Sec benefit specialist said there is no longer an option to collect 1 Soc Soc and not the other; suspend their own or spouses benefit. Unless, they are a certain age. This might be something you look into.
Great video!
i need a chart a table something. this is so confusing!