Houston Chronicle Sunday

What are questions that are rarely asked?

- By Tom Margenau | CREATORS SYNDICATE

Because I’ve been writing this column for a while now, you probably can guess that there are questions I’ve been asked hundreds (if not thousands) of times during the past 25 years. And I don’t think there is a single Social Security-related question I’ve never been asked. But it dawned on me as I was answering my emails this week that there are questions I’m seldom asked, and I thought I’d gather a few of them together.

Q: My wife, who stopped working a couple years ago, is approachin­g age 62 and wants to sign up for her Social Security then. But I’m 65 and still working and making $250,000 per year. We file a joint tax return. Will the fact that I make that much money (well above the Social Security earnings penalty limits) cause problems for my wife’s eligibilit­y for Social Security?

A: No. How you file a tax return has absolutely nothing to do with your or your wife’s eligibilit­y for Social Security benefits. Just in case other readers didn’t understand your question, the earnings penalty you refer to is a law that says because your wife will be under her full retirement age when she files for Social Security, she must ensure any earnings she might have are under $19,560 per year or she will start to face reductions in her Social Security benefits. But you said she’s retired. So, she doesn’t have any earnings. And even though you file a joint tax return, all those earnings are yours, not hers.

Q: I bet you don’t get asked a question like this every day. I am a 68-year-old woman, and I recently married a 39-year-old man. It’s the second marriage for both of us, and we just adopted a 3-year-old girl. I currently get widow’s benefits from my first husband. But at age 70, I plan to switch to higher benefits on my own record. Can our daughter get benefits on my first husband’s record? How about on my record once I’m 70?

A: I’ve been asked questions similar to yours, but yours is a little different. As long as you are getting widow’s benefits, there is no way your adopted daughter can get any Social Security benefits. But once you switch to your own retirement benefits, she would be eligible for

dependent child’s benefits on your record.

In fact, that might be an incentive for you to make the switch now, rather than waiting until 70. If you wait until 70, you’d get an extra 32% added to your retirement benefit. If you make the switch now, at age 68, you’d get about 20% more.

So, you’d lose that extra 12% by switching now. But you’d gain the extra benefits payable to your daughter. It would be a monthly rate equal to 50% of your benefit amount. You’d just have to sit down and do the math and see if it’s worth switching now. (My guess is it would be.)

Q: I’m 71 and single and never signed up for my Social Security. Why? Because I’m very lucky financiall­y and I just don’t need the money.

But someone recently told me there is a law that says once you are 70 years old, you must file for benefits. Is that true?

A: It’s not true. There is no law that requires you to file for Social Security at 70, or any other age for that matter. But why let your money just sit there in the Social Security trust funds? It’s doing no one any good.

Why not sign up for Social Security and do something constructi­ve or helpful with the money?

I mentioned at the beginning of this column that there probably is not a single Social Security-related question I haven’t been asked.

And I’ve run into a few guys with questions like yours over the years. One of those guys ended up using his Social Security benefits to fund a college education for some lucky and deserving kids.

Another turned the money over to a favorite charity.

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