The Palm Beach Post

The numbers to know for your Social Security

- By Janet Kidd Stewart Tribune News Service

The 2 percent cost-of-living hike in Social Security benefits this year isn’t the only number affecting workers and retirees.

Workers will pay more into the system — the taxable maximum rises to $128,400, an 8 percent increase from two years ago.

Earnings thresholds for withholdin­g benefits of recipients under full retirement age also are increasing, meaning they can earn more before their Social Security checks are temporaril­y reduced. For people born in 1943 through 1954, benefits are reduced by $1 for every $2 earned above $17,040. The limit for people turning 66 this year is $45,360. Above that amount, $1 in benefits is deducted for each $3 earned.

Beyond decoding how these inflation-linked numbers affect your situation, now is a good time to think about the other numbers involved with Social Security planning.

Consider a sixtysomet­hing couple. They don’t know the most important number of all in terms of knowing when to claim benefits — their dates of death — so they’ll need to ponder a host of other factors:

Speed kills. Grabbing benefits the moment they are available, even if they aren’t absolutely needed, can be a big mistake.

“So many people just never learned delayed gratificat­ion,” said William Reichenste­in, research director for Social Security Solutions Inc. and a Baylor University finance professor.

I asked Reichenste­in and Marcia Mantell, founder of Mantell Retirement Consulting Inc., to walk through the claiming strategies for a hypothetic­al couple. One member of the couple is a high earner, still working and on pace for maximum monthly benefits of around $2,700 at full retirement age. The spouse is due to receive about $1,000 at full retirement age. For simplicity’s sake, they didn’t consider inflation or the impact on benefits of working before full retirement age.

If these spouses both claim as soon as possible, at age 62, and live at least until age 85, they’ll earn almost $100,000 less in benefits than they would have if the low earner had claimed at 62 and the high earner waited for delayed retirement credits by filing at 70, according to an analysis by Reichenste­in.

Waiting too long is also bad. Taking the opposite approach, delaying as long as possible for both spouses, isn’t the best strategy, either, said Mantell. People born before 1954 still have the option to file a so-called restricted applicatio­n at full retirement age, giving them the right to claim either their own benefit or half of a spouse’s. In these situations, a couple would be better off claiming when the higher earner reaches full retirement age, with the lower earner (a little younger) filing at the same time for a slightly reduced benefit. In that case, the higher earner could file for just a spousal benefit, equal to half of the lower earner’s full benefit, and then switch to the higher earner’s benefit at age 70, qualifying for delayed retirement credits.

Striking a balance. Filing at or near full retirement age could be the ultimate sweet spot, Reichenste­in said, particular­ly now that the restricted applicatio­n option has closed for people born after Jan. 2, 1954.

Under this scenario, the low earner would file at age 62 for reduced benefits of $750 per month. The higher earner claims at full retirement age, giving the lower earner a bump up due to spousal benefits to $1,100. If they both live to at least age 77, this strategy will have generated more lifetime benefits than both spouses claiming early. Going forward, the strategy will mean higher total benefits, compared with the other strategies, through age 83, Reichenste­in said.

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