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Understanding FRA, Including its Implications
Your Full Retirement Age (FRA) is, in itself, a simple piece of the process for determining your Social Security benefit. While it’s simply a factor that’s determined by your date of birth, it also has significant consequences in determining what…
More Thoughts on Filing for Social Security at 62–The Downside
As we’ve noted several times, age 62 remains the most frequent starting point for Social Security benefits. While there are many reasons why that decision is made by so many folks, there are some downside aspects of not waiting to…
Delaying Retirement vs. Delaying Social Security–Two Separate Decisions
The most persistent question we field at the AMAC Foundation’s Social Security Advisory Service deals with selecting a date to begin drawing Social Security benefits. Sometimes the question is tied to leaving the workforce, sometimes it’s related to a decision…
Underscoring the Importance of Checking Your Information–Mistakes Do Happen
There are many reasons for taking the initiative to open a “my Social Security” account, and one of them can save you both money and headaches. As explained in a post today on wcfcourier.com by The Motley Fool’s Kailey Hagen,…
The Murky World of Social Security Myths and Misunderstandings
They’re everywhere…and we encounter them with amazing frequency here at the AMAC Foundation Social Security Advisory Service. “Social Security is going broke” and “Politicians Stole the Money” are probably the most frequent myths we encounter, with allegations of the program…
Filing for Social Security at 62? Here’s a Look at the Average Benefit.
Filing for Social Security retirement benefits at 62 is still the most popular choice, even though it produces a reduced monthly benefit amount. For someone with a full retirement age (FRA) of 66, it’s a 25% reduction, while an FRA…
Understanding the Rules for Divorced Individuals
There is a fair amount of confusion and misunderstanding about the rules for drawing benefits on the work record of a divorced spouse. The questions typically focus on how long the marriage lasted, how long must the claimant have been…
Another COLA Forecast–And a Discussion on the Tax Consequences
In a post today on mcknightsseniorliving.com, contributor Kathleen Steele Gaivin weighs in on the Social Security cost-of-living-adjustment projection subject, pegging the potential increase at 10.5%. That’s the upside. Her post also discuses the downside–the insidious effect of “bracket creep” facing…
GAO Weighs In on SSA’s Handling of Disability Appeals
The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), in a recent report to Congress, cited inconsistencies in the handling of disability appeal hearings, most notably related to the practice of unevenly requiring financial documentation. Stephen Silver, a technology writer for The National…
Be Careful When Protecting Your Retirement Income Needs!
Planning for retirement can be a difficult process. How’s that for an understatement? Most folks feel it’s simply a matter of making sure you have an income stream that will support you in those “golden years,” and they often tend…