Learn How To Take Full Advantage Of The Social Security Spousal Benefit

Can your spouse collect on your social security if she reaches retirement age before you do? No. In order for a wife to collect Social Security benefits on her husband's income several requirements need to be met:

1. The spouse applying for the spousal benefit is required to be at least age 62

2. The husband must be eligible to receive benefits, therefore he should also be at least age 62. What's more, the husband needs to actually sign up for Social Security retirement benefits in order for his wife to receive benefits based on his income. The husband can then decide to delay receiving benefits. This course of action is known as "file and suspend".

To provide an example, if the wife is 62 and the husband is 61, the wife can begin collecting benefits calculated on her own income, but she is unable to receive benefits based on her husband's income until he turns 62 and starts receiving his own benefits.

However, if the wife is age 66 and the husband is only 62, then the wife can start receiving based on her husband's income (remember, the husband must submit an application for his benefits before his spouse will be able to collect based upon his earnings).

In the instances above, the wife can begin receiving benefits calculated on her own income as soon as she turns 62 (assuming she's got at least forty quarters of earnings and qualifies for benefits on her own), then she can switch to 1 / 2 of her husband's benefit once her husband qualifies for Social Security.

Some points you should consider before applying for benefits:

If a wife applies for her Social Security spousal benefit calculated on her husband's earnings when she becomes full retirement age (age 66 for folks retiring now), then she'll collect 50% of her husband's primary insurance amount (PIA). On the other hand, if she applies for her spousal benefit at age 62, her benefit will be reduced to just 35% of her husband's PIA.

It does not help the spouse to wait until after reaching full retirement age to apply for benefits, as spousal benefits will not include delayed credits. On top of that, it doesn't benefit the wife if the husband waits to apply for benefits because she will not get any rise in benefits that he will get by waiting to receive benefits.

Where a spouse gets to full retirement age and is qualified to receive the spousal benefit or her own benefit, she may claim the spousal benefit now and hold off collecting her own benefit in order to accumulate delayed credits on her own benefit.

An individual can collect Social Security spousal benefits calculated on an ex-spouse's earnings if you were married for not less than 10 years and you are also presently unmarried. For people with more than one ex-spouse which you meet the requirements pertaining to spousal benefits, you will get the largest benefit you qualify for. One benefit that divorced spouses have over married spouses is that a divorced spouse does not need to wait around for a former husband to start collecting benefits as long as the pair has been divorced for not less than 2 yrs when she applies.

Finally, the Social Security retirement program is gender neutral, so even though this article has assumed that the wife is generally the one applying for spousal benefits, if the wife makes more money than her husband, the husband can sign up for Social Security benefits based on his wife's earnings.

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