mathjak107
Well-known Member
- Location
- bayside ,queens , ny
the filing in january is something very different , which you did not understand and quite frankly i did not either when i first learned about this .
here is the deal ... if i file in july under the " special first year rules " which i posted from their site , i can earn as much as i like prior to filing in july .... i would be capped at 1450 x the next 6 months or 8700 before giving money back ......
that is a given ..
now here is were the january comes in .
if you file and catch january as your first check they don't count the prior years earnings at all since it is a new year and as such you don't fall under "first years special rules " you go right to the 2nd year rules which just allow you a max of 17,640 with no monthly cap , just yearly . in the end not a big deal . it really only matters if your first year is the year you will be fra ..
why ? because if you file in january you get the full 45k allowed in the year you will be fra right up until your birthday with no prorating . so if you are born in march you can earn 45k for january , feb and march and give nothing back . once you are fra there is no limit . if you filed after january you get prorated up to your birthday at 3750 a month .
bottom line is earnings prior to filing ARE NEVER COUNTED
That is why there is a special one-year rule that applies to earnings during the first year of retirement. Under this rule, an individual can get a full Social Security check for any whole month he or she is retired, regardless of yearly earnings prior to claiming benefits.
here is the deal ... if i file in july under the " special first year rules " which i posted from their site , i can earn as much as i like prior to filing in july .... i would be capped at 1450 x the next 6 months or 8700 before giving money back ......
that is a given ..
now here is were the january comes in .
if you file and catch january as your first check they don't count the prior years earnings at all since it is a new year and as such you don't fall under "first years special rules " you go right to the 2nd year rules which just allow you a max of 17,640 with no monthly cap , just yearly . in the end not a big deal . it really only matters if your first year is the year you will be fra ..
why ? because if you file in january you get the full 45k allowed in the year you will be fra right up until your birthday with no prorating . so if you are born in march you can earn 45k for january , feb and march and give nothing back . once you are fra there is no limit . if you filed after january you get prorated up to your birthday at 3750 a month .
bottom line is earnings prior to filing ARE NEVER COUNTED
That is why there is a special one-year rule that applies to earnings during the first year of retirement. Under this rule, an individual can get a full Social Security check for any whole month he or she is retired, regardless of yearly earnings prior to claiming benefits.