Social Security's Best Strategy Has Just 7 Months Left

Few programs get as much support from Americans than Social Security, and that's because most people end up taking advantage of its benefits eventually. By being smart about how the program works, you can do lots of things to ensure that you get every penny of Social Security money you're entitled to receive.

One of the hardest things to understand about Social Security is how various types of benefits work together with each other, and a host of strategies for claiming Social Security have hinged on using little-known provisions to maximize the total amount you and your family can receive from the program. Yet some of those strategies got so lucrative that lawmakers took them away. One strategy known as filing as a spouse first is still available for a select few -- but once the ball drops in 2020, those who haven't yet reached full retirement age will find themselves out of luck.

Blue Social Security card embedded in a pile of coins.
Blue Social Security card embedded in a pile of coins.

Image source: Getty Images.

The basics of FAASF

The file as a spouse first strategy -- sometimes called FAASF for short -- involves those spouses who've reached full retirement age and are entitled both to retirement benefits on their own work record and spousal benefits based on their spouse's work history. Under old Social Security law, spouses had a right once they hit full retirement age to restrict their applications only to spousal benefits, allowing their own retirement benefit to earn delayed retirement credits and therefore continue to grow. At a later date, spouses could claim their own retirement benefit, which would then give them higher monthly payments.

Here's how it worked. Say that you and your spouse both worked but that you had a lower-paying job. As a result, your full retirement benefits would be $1,200 per month, while your spouse would receive $2,400 in monthly benefits. Because spousal benefits taken at full retirement age amount to half what the worker receives, you would be entitled to a spousal benefit of half of $2,400, or $1,200. If you claim both benefits at the same time, then you don't get the total but rather get the larger of the two. In this case, they're equal, so you'd get $1,200 as a monthly payment from Social Security.

However, if you qualify to file as a spouse first, then you can choose only to receive the spousal benefit. You'd still get $1,200, but your own retirement benefit would grow at a rate of 8% per year. Full retirement age is 66 for those who are set to turn 66 this year, and so if you waited until age 70 to claim your retirement benefits, you'd be entitled to get $384 in delayed retirement credits, making your subsequent monthly payments $1,584 rather than $1,200. That adds up to more than $4,600 extra per year starting at age 70 and continuing for the rest of your life.