A 5-step Primer on Social Security – Part III

No More Mortgage - Social Security - Retirement

We’re continuing the series of articles about five points you should know about Social Security and Retirement if you’re 50 or over.

QUESTION 4: Will I lose benefits if I work? It’s true that if you collect early and work at the same time, your payments may be reduced (once you reach full retirement age, feel free to toil away; your golf game might suffer, but there’s no effect on your Social Security). Your checks will be reduced by $1 for every $2 you earn over an annual limit, currently $14,160 (the hit is considerably less during the calendar year you hit full retirement age). But despite what you often read or hear, you don’t actually “lose” that money. At full retirement age Social Security will begin compensating you with a larger check for the benefits that were withheld. And you’ll receive that higher payment for the rest of your life. If you are reasonably long-lived, you’ll wind up collecting more -and you’ll have extra income from your additional years as a wage slave. Working in retirement can also up your payments in other ways. Your check is based on your 35 highest years of wages. If you work fewer during your career, your benefit will be adjusted to reflect any extra years of work. Even if you clocked all 35 years pre-retirement, you could still get a bump if your annual earnings during your golden years were higher than some years earlier in your career.

QUESTION 5: Will my benefits be taxed? You thought Uncle Sam would cut you a break after retirement? Fat chance. Currently, about a third of Social Security recipients pay income tax on a portion of their benefits, and the Social Security Administration projects upwards of 42% of recipients will be doing so by 2018. If you want to lessen the tax bite, there are a couple of options. One is to wait at least until full retirement age to claim Social Security, if you think that income from a post-retirement job could result in a big tax bill. Another way to avoid taxes is to pull money from a Roth IRA instead of a traditional IRA or 401(k). That’s because Roth withdrawals don’t count as income in figuring whether your benefits are taxable. So if you don’t already have money in a Roth, you may want to fund one or convert some of your traditional IRA to a Roth. After all, in retirement, you’re likely to need all the cash you can get.

Related posts:

  1. A 5-step Primer on Social Security, Part II
  2. A 5-step Primer on Social Security, Part I
  3. A Reluctance to Retire Means Fewer Openings
  4. NO MORE Mortgage looks at the new tax situation

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