If you’re one of almost 69 million Americans who receive Social Security or Supplemental Security Income benefits, you’ll notice a small change in your monthly check this year.
More than 63 million beneficiaries will receive a 1.6% cost-of-living adjustment this month. The 8 million SSI beneficiaries received their COLA on Dec. 31.
Put another way: The average monthly benefit for all retired workers will rise from $1,479 to $1,503 this month. And the average monthly benefit for couples who both receive benefits will rise from $2,491 to $2,531.
That’s one of many changes beneficiaries and would-be beneficiaries can expect in 2020.
Here are some others:
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Earnings subject to Social Security tax
The maximum amount of earnings subject to the Social Security tax will increase from $132,900 in 2019 to $137,700 in 2020. To be fair, this increase affects just 11.8 million of the 171 million workers who are covered under Social Security. But that increase, according to David Freitag, a financial planning consultant with MassMutual, could be a bit of a surprise for the 7% of workers who will have to pay about $298 more of their wages into Social Security in 2020 than in 2019.
By way of background, workers must pay 6.2% of their earnings up to the taxable maximum amount into Social Security. And they must pay 1.45% of all their earnings into Medicare. Your employer matches, up to the taxable maximum, these percentages for a total of 15.3%. Self-employed workers, meanwhile, must pay 15.3% of their earnings in federal payroll taxes, otherwise known as FICA – the Federal Insurance Contributions Act tax.
The only bit of good news about this increase? You and your employer won’t have to pay a Social Security tax on earnings above the taxable maximum amount.
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How work affects your benefits
If you’re working, receiving Social Security benefits, and you’re younger than full retirement age, your earnings may reduce your benefit amount. (Full retirement age is the age at which you first become entitled to full or unreduced retirement benefits through Social Security.)
In 2020, for instance, the Social Security Administration will deduct $1 from benefits for each $2 earned over $18,240.
The earnings limit for people turning 66 in 2020, however, will increase to $48,600 and the SSA will deduct $1 from benefits for each $3 earned over $48,600 until the month the worker turns age 66. FRA is 66 for people born between 1943 and 1954. Beginning with 1955, two months are added for every birth year until the full retirement age reaches 67 for people born in 1960 or later.