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Maximize Your Social Security GETTING THE MOST FROM THOUSANDS OF OPTIONS

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Maximize Your Social Security. Getting the most from thousands of Options. Disclaimer. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Maximize Your  Social Security

Maximize Your Social SecurityGETTING THE MOST FROM THOUSANDS OF OPTIONS

Page 2: Maximize Your  Social Security

Maximize My Social Security and other products provided by Economic Security Planning, Inc. at www.esplanner.com and www.esplanner.com/basic are educational calculators designed to give you or your clients some input in mapping out your financial future, but should not be acted upon as a complete financial plan. Maximize My Social Security and its derivative products' creators are not certified, registered, authorized, or any other type of financial planners. Maximize My Social Security and its derivative products are simply tools for helping you think through your economic futures and those of your clients. Their "suggestions" should be viewed as informative inputs into personal financial decision-making. Maximize My Social Security and its derivative products provide neither economic, financial, nor tax advice, which can only be delivered by authorized professionals. The Social Security benefit suggestions/estimates produced by Maximize My Social Security are just that – suggestions and estimates. Only the Social Security Administration can specify precisely the benefits to which anyone will be eligible and the amounts anyone will receive. The estimates provided here may differ from the correct amounts due to mistakes in our computer code of which we are unaware or because of legislated changes in Social Security provisions of which we are unaware or because of delays in our updating our computer code for mistakes in our computer code or for changes in Social Security provisions.

Disclaimer

Page 3: Maximize Your  Social Security

Social Security may be your largest asset

Social Security is immensely complex

Making the right choices can meanTens to hundreds of thousands of $$$

Page 4: Maximize Your  Social Security

You paid your SS taxes.

Time to get what’s yours!

We can help find your best SS strategy.

Page 5: Maximize Your  Social Security

• Co-ranked #1 SS tool by The Wall Street Journal

• Developed by Boston University renown economist Laurence Kotlikoff

• MMSS considers thousands of collection strategies

• MMSS finds the strategy that maximize your lifetime benefits

• We can compare MMSS’ top strategy with any other options

We Use Maximize My Social Security (MMSS)

Page 6: Maximize Your  Social Security

Laurence Kotlikoff, PhD• William Fairfield Warren Professor of Economics, Boston

University• Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences• One of our nation’s leading experts in personal financial

planning • Social Security columnist for PBS NEWSHOUR• Writes for The NY Times, The Wall Street Journal, The

Financial Times, Forbes, PBS NEWSHOUR, Time Magazine, Bloomberg, Huffington Post, Yahoo, . . .

Page 7: Maximize Your  Social Security

Every household is different.

But each needs Social Security advice

– the best advice.

Page 8: Maximize Your  Social Security

MMSS considers all types of households.

• Married• Divorced• Widowed• Single• Partnered• With minor and/or disabled children

Page 9: Maximize Your  Social Security

MMSS consider all major SS insurance benefits

• Retirement • Spouse’s• Divorced Spouse’s• Child In-Care Spouse’s• Widow(er)’s• Divorced Widow(er)’s

• Child’s • Disabled Child’s• Surviving Child’s• Father’s and Mother’s

Page 10: Maximize Your  Social Security

MMSS considers all Social Security provisions• Recomputation of benefits• Earnings Test• Family benefit maximum• Windfall Elimination Provision• Government Pension Offset• Restricted application

• Deeming rules• Adjustment of reduction factor• RIB LIM • Alternate widow(er)’s benefit

calculation

Page 11: Maximize Your  Social Security

1. Be patient – wait to take higher benefits

2. Try to take all benefits you can

3. Time your benefit collection

Three General Rules to Maximize Your SS

Page 12: Maximize Your  Social Security

• Delay benefit collection• Collect one benefit early while letting another benefit grow• File and suspend to get lump sum option • File and suspend to activate spousal benefit for spouse• Suspend retirement benefit after FRA and restart at 70• Start/stop/start retirement benefit to activate spousal benefit for spouse• Retire early to activate child and child-in-care spousal benefits• Take widow benefit before retirement benefit• Take retirement benefit before widow(er) benefit

Strategies to Follow the Three Rules

Page 13: Maximize Your  Social Security

Delay Benefit Collection

• Retirement benefits at 70 are now 76% larger benefits than at 62

• Spousal benefit at 66 are now 43% larger than at 62

• Widow(er) benefit at 66 are now 40% larger than at 60

Page 14: Maximize Your  Social Security

Collect One Benefit While Other Benefit Grows

Examples

• Take spousal benefit at FRA and retirement benefit at 70

• Take divorcee spousal benefit at FRA and retirement benefit at 70

• Take retirement benefit before FRA and then widow(er) benefit at or before FRA

Page 15: Maximize Your  Social Security

File and Suspend Strategy• Higher earner files for retirement benefits at FRA &

immediately suspends receipt of benefits till 70 to maximize benefits• Lower earning spouse claims full spousal benefits on

higher earner’s record• Lower earner accrues potentially significant increases

to future retirement benefits• If higher earner is younger, it may be better for higher

earner to collect spousal benefits

Page 16: Maximize Your  Social Security

File and Suspend to Get Lump Sum Option

• Even never married singles should file and suspend at FRA

• Their retirement benefit will continue to grow

• But they can request all suspended benefits in a lump sum if needed

• But taking suspended benefit in lump sum forfeits Delayed Retirement Credits

Page 17: Maximize Your  Social Security

Start/Stop/Start strategy• If you already started collecting retirement benefits

before your FRA, it might be beneficial to suspend them at FRA so you can earn increases up to age 70• The longer you can suspend after FRA, the more your

benefit increases, recovering reductions due to early receipt• Early retirement at 62 = 75% of benefit at FRA• 8% increase per year of suspension after FRA, up to 32%• 132% * 75% = 99% of benefit at FRA

Page 18: Maximize Your  Social Security

Suspend Retirement Benefit at/after FRA and Restart at 70

• If you regret taking your retirement benefit early, …

• You can suspend it at/after FRA and restart at 70 at a 32% higher real value

Page 19: Maximize Your  Social Security

File for Your Retirement Benefit to Activate Children’s Child-In-Care Spousal Benefits

• You must file for retirement benefits to enable child’s benefits and child in care spousal benefits on your record• In some cases, it will be beneficial to claim early reduced

retirement benefits in order to enable these benefits• Then, once you reach FRA, you suspend receipt of

retirement benefits and begin recouping part of, and in some cases potentially nearly all, the early retirement reduction by continuing to suspend receipt up to age 70• If you are already receiving retirement benefits we tell

you if this strategy will result in increased lifetime benefits based on the data you provide

Page 20: Maximize Your  Social Security

Take Retirement Benefit Before Widow(er) Benefit

• It may be best for a widow(er) to take retirement benefit early and • Then take widow(er) benefit at or before FRA• If decease spouse took retirement benefit early, widow(er) benefit

is subject to RIBLIM and may not grow after a given age before FRA

• Widow(er)’s benefit is limited to the higher of 82.5% of deceased spouse’s full retirement benefit (PIA) or the amount deceased spouse was collecting at time of death. This is the RIBLIM formula.

• If widow(er)’s benefit is limited, it can be advantageous to take reduced widow(er)’s benefit as many as 51 months before FRA

Page 21: Maximize Your  Social Security

Take Widow(er) Benefit Before Retirement Benefit

• It may be best for a widow(er) to take widow(er) benefit early • Take retirement benefit at 70 at its largest possible

value

Page 22: Maximize Your  Social Security

1. Take two benefits at once, you get, roughly speaking, just the largest

2. Before FRA, deeming can force you to take spousal & retirement benefits at once

3. Family benefit maximum limits auxiliary benefits

4. Allowable collection dates of spouses are interdependent

5. Taking retirement benefit early reduce widow(er) benefit

6. Only one spouse (but both exs) can get full spousal benefit

Some Big Social Security’s Gotchas