What You Need to Know About Social Security's Full Retirement Age | When to File For Social Security

What You Need to Know About Social Security's Full Retirement Age | When to File For Social Security

The Retirement Nerds

1 год назад

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juan Estopinan
juan Estopinan - 07.10.2023 03:54

I just have one question:I plan to retire early in Jan or Feb 2024..,if I work an additional month and make more than my allowed amount..1770 for the month..is that overage paid at the end of the year at tax time ?

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Mark Infusino
Mark Infusino - 04.10.2023 16:26

So if I turn 66 in 2024 but in September and my fra is 66 and 10 months does my earning cap go up in 2024 when I turn 66 or in 2025 when I reach fra (66 and 10 months, roughly around June 2025) that of course will dictate whether or not I plan to take it or wait.

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Southern Fried Papist
Southern Fried Papist - 11.09.2023 18:27

If an actuary tried to market this unconscionable scam in the private sector, he'd be thrown in federal prison. If this program is so great, why does the government need to use the police power of the state to force us to contribute to it if we want to opt out for a private sector option?

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John Harrison
John Harrison - 05.09.2023 04:32

Unless I’m not aware of something, I don’t see anything magical about FRA. From the age of 62 on, the payment goes up 8% per year, every year until the age of 70. 70 should be called FRA, because it’s when you truly max out on the monthly payment. 67 is just one stop between 62 and 70. Is there something I’m missing here??

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bab008
bab008 - 05.08.2023 19:10

For the purposes of the increasing benefits the FRA is not really any different than any other years. It's just a year along the way if you plan to wait until after it. It's not like benefits take a big jump in your FRA year. It's nearly a flat increase from age 62 to 70. So it's really only if you continue to have earned income over the cap that it matters prior to your FRA.

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EDDIE O《EDDIE 》
EDDIE O《EDDIE 》 - 30.06.2023 02:47

Great information

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Masterlee43
Masterlee43 - 18.05.2023 18:31

The site is growing as I knew it would. That alone makes my day. So turning 65 later this year, still working, not collecting yet on social security or my IRA Accounts. In the process of moving my 3 IRA Accounts with 3 different firms to just one company. Wife has a friend she went to school with who has been with Edward Jones for a long time, and she has her stuff with her. An issue with me is all my life I worked to build up my 401k or IRA Accounts and in the future which is really not that far away in the chapters of life I find it hard to accept that eventually I will have to watch the money come down and not continue to grow. It's something I never really thought about, but it is a part of the whole concept in saving for retirement. Just me I guess. Also in this video I liked how you showed the percentages at different ages. It helps in deciding for some people depending on their situation. So if it is 10% of $2,000 which is $200 a month. Is it worth it for them to wait, especially if they do not like their job, or the $200 will not break the bank. It's a great point in showing that as some may realize they would rather have their extra retirement time instead of $200 a month. Others might think the opposite. But it helps people to decide. Great Job!

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Happy-Go- Lucky
Happy-Go- Lucky - 16.05.2023 20:38

Great Video! You covered a lot of things I’ve been researching lately.

My husband was born in 1961 so his FRA is 67 but he’s having back issues. His Neurologist told him to relieve his back pain he needs surgery but it will be a career ender. He has a very back breaking job working in the Oil Fields all across America so a lot of his back pain happens when he is just driving from one job to another.

If he retires before 65 he won’t be able to apply for Medicare until he’s 65. If he can qualify for Disability he’s looking at not being able to apply for Medicare until after he’s been certified disabled for two years. Before Obama/Biden we used to pay $300 a Month for our Medical Insurance but now we pay $300 a week out of my husband’s weekly checks. Plus he has a $2,700 Deductible and a $4,000 out of pocket every year per person. The cost of Medical insurance, deductibles and out of pockets climbed substantially for the 8 years Obama/Biden was in office and they all started climbing again with Biden/Harris. This was one reason of 100s why we walked away from being Democrats raised by Democrats and became registered Republicans.

We went online to his Social Security Account and found out that an estimated difference between him retiring at 65 verses 67 is about $330 less a month. He could make that up working odd jobs here and there. Plus at 65 he can qualify for Medicare which will reduce his medical costs. So since he can’t qualify for Medicare until 65 or two years after being certified disabled, if he has his back surgery that would mean, if his company will let him, he would have to go COBRA and therefore he would end up paying for the about $300 a week plus what his company pays which is half. So that would mean about $600 a week plus his high annual and per person deductible and out of pocket. There is no way we could pay for that even if the company allows him to go COBRA until he’s 65 and even if he qualified for disability.

I qualified for disability after 19 surgeries and now I’ve had 21 surgeries with more pending. My Medicare, supplemental and deductible cost me about $550 a month on top of what my husband pays through his job. So we know that when he is able to qualify for Medicare we will still be paying a lot for Medical but less then he is paying through his job.

Qualifying for disability is hard. I went through the red tape to qualify for disability and one of my sisters was got diagnosed with Cancer at 42 and it took her years and a lawyer to qualify for disability and she died at 47. We know that he could go years before he could even qualify for disability then if he’s not 65 he will have to wait two years to qualify for Medicare. A lot of my family died of Cancer or other causes before they reached FRA so we definitely already know he’s not going to wait any longer then 65 when he can also qualify for Medicare.

So right now we are doing everything we can to get him through until he can retire at 65. We are buying heating and massage Vests and heating and massage Car seat covers and he’s going to talk to his doctor about shots in his back and prescription pain pills. But his pain pills will also have to be safe enough for him to be able to drive and do his back breaking and dangerous job.

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Nen Inocencio
Nen Inocencio - 15.05.2023 22:06

Yes sir, all your videos are very helpful especially to us the old/senior people. Thank you so much for doing this. As always never miss watching your videos. Very informative.❤

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R Lee
R Lee - 14.05.2023 22:16

Not if you are a federal employee...that would be 57.

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Anthony Gardner
Anthony Gardner - 14.05.2023 20:09

Your videos are immensely helpful. Thanks so much for the work you put into them.

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Teams33
Teams33 - 14.05.2023 18:28

My investments are all doing well. I took at 62 based on my family’s normal life span. I took my father and mothers family history into account. Then I did the break even analysis. This is working for me. Maybe not everyone.

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