vulcancowboy
Gold Member
I just applied online, pretty simple, actually. I turn 62 2/27/17, first check, according to website, 3/1/17. Time will tell.
I just applied online, pretty simple, actually. I turn 62 2/27/17, first check, according to website, 3/1/17. Time will tell.
My wife's birthday is the last day of the year; December 31. When she applied, the first payment came on February 22 (not quite 2 months later) and it stayed on about the 22nd of each month for that year, at least. But some years ago, they changed to the 3rd of each month instead of the 22nd.
There may be no rhyme nor reason. Example: my wife started collecting SS. Some years later SS decided that they had been overpaying her and required thousands of dollars to be repaid. Did that and her reduced payment began. About a year or so later SS decided that she had been underpaid, made up the underpayment and increased her monthly to an amount greater than the original. Its now about the same elapsed time so we are kind of waiting for another "upon review" letter. Go figure.![]()
The Treasury Department debits the bank the amount of the check, and you'd best believe
the bank is going to get its' money.
Just for fun,, the wife and I calculated how much we (and our employers) paid in,,,
then,, subtracted what we received.
We were money ahead over 12 months ago,,, so, I hope they are getting good interest on the $$$,, :thumbsup:
Thx for the insider view, FISH.
Same here. I was mentioned in a few posts already but never as clear as Fish did.
Best not to start drawing on SS early unless you have to. The OP's sister will get only 75% of full benefits each month for the rest of her life. That can make for a skinny check if she's been looking at the monthly benefits estimate they send out each year. And another ~$120 will be deducted if she takes Medicare Part B at age 65.
Pretty much what I did by making a spreadsheet to calculate the differences and I took it at 62.When my wife turned 62 I calculated how much she would get at that age and how much she would get between 62 and 66. Then I calculated how many years it would take at the 66 rate to recover that amount. It came out to 18 years to receive the amount she would not get if she didn't take it at 62. If she waited to take it at 66 she would be 84 when she broke even. I didn't account for COLA but I advised her to take it early since she was already retired from her state job. I am retiring at 65 and will take mine a year early. According to SS you will get approximately the same amount of money over a lifetime no matter what age you start.
Best not to start drawing on SS early unless you have to. The OP's sister will get only 75% of full benefits each month for the rest of her life. That can make for a skinny check if she's been looking at the monthly benefits estimate they send out each year. And another ~$120 will be deducted if she takes Medicare Part B at age 65.
I am 58 y.o. and not yet collecting any SS benefits. However, each year I get a statement from the Social Security Administration (it used to come via U.S. Mail but now I have to go online to get it). The statement shows my lifetime earnings record and an estimate of my future benefits for different benefit start dates - such as 62 years old, 70 years old and for what they consider my full retirement age (66 years 8 months).
My question for those that have also received these statements - how accurate have you found their estimates to be?
Best not to start drawing on SS early unless you have to. The OP's sister will get only 75% of full benefits each month for the rest of her life. That can make for a skinny check if she's been looking at the monthly benefits estimate they send out each year. And another ~$120 will be deducted if she takes Medicare Part B at age 65.
I took mine at 62 rather than 66 because no one would guarantee that I would live to be 66 to get the full amount.
I am 58 y.o. and not yet collecting any SS benefits. However, each year I get a statement from the Social Security Administration (it used to come via U.S. Mail but now I have to go online to get it). The statement shows my lifetime earnings record and an estimate of my future benefits for different benefit start dates - such as 62 years old, 70 years old and for what they consider my full retirement age (66 years 8 months).
My question for those that have also received these statements - how accurate have you found their estimates to be?
A question for those in the know; I have been on SS for a 3 years already and get a comfortable amount. My wife plans on starting of SS because her 62nd was last month. Hers will be considerably less because she was a homemaker/housewife for half of her working years.
If she starts collecting for a lesser amount at 62, and then I bite the big one, will she be entitled to any of my larger amount. We have been married for all our adult life if that matters. I heard they can collect half or some other reduced amount.