Social Security Retirement Benefits
Use Total Social Security to map out your retirement benefit options.
Timing your Social Security benefit.
When should you start Social Security? How do I coordinate Social Security with Medicare? These are very common questions. I recommend you use Total Social Security to help you find the optimal time for you to take your benefit. The Total Social Security software will help organize your distribution options to better fit the retirement distribution that’s ideal for your lifestyle and retirement needs. You may need the money sooner, or you may wait to maximize your Social Security benefits. The longer you can wait, the more you receive (up to age 70). Your full retirement age depends on your birth year, which currently ranges between 65 and 67 years old. You may also be deciding when to coordinate Medicare with Social Security. We can advise you on how and when to coordinate your benefits. You may already have an idea of when you want to start Social Security, but having an organized projection will provide you more information about your decision and the details of how the distribution will look throughout retirement.
Total Social Security Planning
Would you like help analyzing early, maximum, and suggested claiming windows for your retirement benefit?
Review break-even charts with Total Social Security to confirm your benefit claiming decision, if not waiting to maximize your Social Security Retirement Benefit.
Contact me for a free Total Social Security software projection.
Weigh your optimal retirement cash flow for your anticipated lifespan with Total Social Security.
This display below is a hypothetical of the impact of taking benefits before your full retirement at age 62, at full retirement at 66, and maximizing your Social Security benefits at age 70- using $1800 as the base benefit at age 62. This is, of course, a personal decision you should make based upon what you need for your retirement. It is not always beneficial to maximize your Social Security benefits if your lifestyle requires more cash flow earlier in retirement. Cash upfront as opposed to delaying the benefit can also make sense depending on your anticipated lifespan. You should weigh all of these factors as you decide the best timing of your Social Security benefit. To help, I’ll run you a Total Social Security projection with software that can map out all your distribution options in a clear format so you can make the choice that is best for your retirement. Each person’s lifestyle and needs are different. There is no one size fits all strategy. Go with makes sense for you.
Remember, your Social Security benefits election is a separate enrollment decision from electing your Medicare start date at 65 or at a later time (leaving a group employer plan upon retirement). You may have already started your Social Security benefit, or decided to delay your Social Security benefit. Regardless, this will give us a better idea of how to approach your Medicare enrollment timing as well as help you determine how to maximize your Social Security benefits based upon your lifestyle and anticipated lifespan.
Under full retirement age and working: You may begin receiving benefits as early as 62, however, your benefits will be permanently reduced by a certain percentage for each month below your full retirement age. If you are still working and don’t need the additional income, you’re likely putting yourself at a disadvantage for future income by taking your Social Security benefits early. This is not just due to the reduction of future income from larger payments, but also because you are more likely to be taxed. Let’s run a projection with Total Social Security to paint you a clear picture of what an early distribution would look like for your retirement.
Under full retirement age and retired: You may decide to retire before your full retirement age. If you you decide to start your benefits before your full retirement age, your benefits will still be permanently reduced. You may have income, savings, or investments outside of Social Security that can cover your expenses or current lifestyle until full retirement age or later. If this is the case, then great. You will likely benefit from delaying your benefit, however, you may also elect to receive the benefit early to provide more cash flow to invest in tax -advantaged retirement accounts in order to seek future growth throughout retirement. The tax implications of each scenario may vary from person to person based upon income. There are ways to calculate optimal outcomes based upon a person’s preferences, but there is no one size fits all approach to Social Security planning.
Maximizing your retirement benefit isn't for everyone
At full retirement age or later: If you can delay taking benefits until your full retirement age, you will receive your full benefit amount. However, the longer you wait, up until age 70, the more your benefits will increase. Taking your benefit at full retirement or later (70), can make a significant impact on maintaining retirement planning needs with your investment portfolio or future retirement cash flow needs and expectations. With that said, maximizing your Social Security benefit doesn’t always make sense for everyone. Factors such as income planning, taxation, current lifestyle, and anticipated lifespan should all be factored into the decision. Contact us to discus your goals and your vision for your retirement. Would you like a maximum benefit projection? If so, contact me to start the process of inputting your data into Total Social Security to get a map of what that future retirement benefit looks like before making a decision.
Impact of taking benefits (hypothetical) before or after full retirement age & Medicare enrollment
The timing of Medicare and Social Security benefits can often overlap when deciding what is best for your retirement. Each benefit should be analyzed independently of each other. Some of you may retire early and elect to purchase individual/family health plans to fill in the gap to 65. Some of you may retire at or near 65 because of the Medicare benefit, while others may continue working with medical coverage through an employer group plan. The choice is yours. Use the IEP for Medicare enrollment surrounding your 65th birthday, or SEP if working past 65 while insured through an employer group plan. Review Forms 40B and L564 under Forms and Documents for this SEP Part B enrollment.
Medicare will coordinate with Social Security in one way or another depending whether your Social Security benefit is active or being delayed. This may be automatic if your’e already taking your retirement benefit prior to 65, or you may need to be proactive to coordinate Medicare yourself if you’re delaying the benefit to a later date. Each Medicare beneficiary is different. We will help you find your enrollment window. View Initial Enrollment & Timelines under Medicare Enrollment Planning drop down to review typical enrollment scenarios or start with the 5 Step Enrollment Guide to cover all your bases.