Double Dipping…Legally
What if you could retire early and still get full retirement benefits??
It is not a new concept but many people do not know about it. The current Social Security system allows individuals to claim reduced, early retirement benefits beginning at age 62. Individuals who wait until their full retirement age to collect and receive about 30% more in monthly benefits. If they wait until age 70 to collect, their benefits will be about 60% larger than at age 62. So what should you suggest your clients do?
Assuming a normal life expectancy and using the interest rate on government bonds, the actuarial present value of lifetime benefits are the same for those taking early retirement as for those waiting to take benefits at a later age. Of course, if one’s life expectancy is not normal (due to illness or bad luck or particularly good genes or good luck) one retirement age will look more attractive than another.
Look at going for the best of both worlds: retire at age 62, then pay back and reapply for Social Security benefits at age 70 if you come to regret your early decision.
A couple claimed their Social Security benefits at age 62 and now they each receive reduced benefit of $13,250 annually (in 2008 dollars). If they had waited until their normal retirement age (65) to collect benefits, the couple would each receive $18,928 a year. If they waited until 70 (this year) to apply, their benefit in 2008 would have been $20,693, thanks to the delayed benefit credit. If they choose to pay back the Social Security benefits they have received over the past eight years, they will each receive the much higher benefit for the rest of their lives. If they take this option, each would repay $94,556 to Social Security. They would then each begin receiving $20,693 a year (the same as if they had waited until age 70 to begin receiving benefits); and as a result, they would have approximately 56% more in real Social Security benefits every year for the rest of their lives. “Essentially, the government has given them an interest-free loan.”
bruce said,
Wrote on December 26, 2009 @ 10:20 am
However won’t you pay federal and state income tax on your social security distributions from say age 62-70 or whenever you decide to pay back the government? Hence that cost is not factored into your equation?