Social Security strategies that can boost your income

Social Security strategies that can boost your income · Yahoo Finance

When David Beermann retired earlier this year from a career as a nurse at age 66, he expected to receive his full Social Security benefits. His wife Sandra, a retired teacher, also planned to file for full benefits when she turned 66 in September.

But after a chance encounter with a local financial planner, the Beermanns have adopted a new Social Security strategy that will result in potentially $70,000 of additional income over the course of their expected lifetimes. Tony Drake, a certified financial planner in Waukesha, Wisc., said people like the Beermanns, who are or have been married, stand to gain thousands of dollars by utilizing their spousal benefits.

Often retirees are unaware of all their Social Security benefits and how to best maximize their income. They assume there’s only one way to receive benefits, and Social Security Administration employees themselves aren’t all trained to dispense financial advice on the often-complex rules. But a little planning can provide a significant boost in retirement income for benefit recipients, says Drake.

Below is a breakdown of the spousal strategies that Drake says could work for you:

#1 File and suspend: Half from your better half
This particular strategy works well if you have one spouse who’s the primary breadwinner and wants to work a bit longer, and the other lower-earning spouse is ready to retire. The higher-earning spouse would apply for benefits, but then suspend collecting them. This allows the other spouse to begin collecting one-half of the filer’s benefit immediately. The spouse who is still working won’t receive any Social Security checks at that time, but would continue to accrue delayed retirement credits – about an 8% increase a year until age 70 – the age when they would start collecting. The great thing about this strategy is that the primary earner collects a full benefit while the spouse collects half of his/her benefit.

For example, with the Beermanns, rather than collecting on her own earning record of $1,299 a month – at age 66 – she would file and suspend and utilize the spousal benefit, which would be $1,150 per month, or half of David’s benefit. This gives her a little bit of a hit in the short term because her Social Security benefits would have been $149 more per month had she started collecting benefits based on her own record instead of her husbands. But it allows her to get a substantial raise in the future by growing her benefit to $1,700 a month by age 70.

David’s benefit doesn’t change at all because he still collects his full retirement benefit. Over the course of her expected lifetime, she’ll collect $69,840 more than she would have if she simply collected her own. (Life expectancy was calculated using tables from the Social Security Administration.)