Survivalist Pro
Photo: Lisa Fotios
If you wait until after your full retirement age to claim your Social Security retirement benefits, there is a little-known rule that could entitle you to a large chunk of cash all at once. This provision enables retirees who meet this requirement to receive up to six months of retroactive benefits in one lump sum.
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Read More »There are tax implications to consider too. As much as 50 percent of your Social Security benefits are taxable if your total annual provisional income — which includes your adjusted gross income, tax-exempt interest and one-half of your Social Security benefits — comes to $25,000 or more if you are single or $32,000 or more if you are married and filing jointly. Up to 85 percent of your Social Security benefits are taxable if your total provisional income is higher than $34,000 if you’re single or $44,000 if you’re married and filing jointly. Taking the lump-sum payment, then, might boost your provisional income enough to cost you at tax time. Settle says that for most retirees, taking the lump sum payment instead of the higher monthly payments for life simply doesn’t make sense. “In this low-interest-rate environment, getting any rate of return that would be close to the rate of return that delaying Social Security benefits would offer you is really impossible,” he says. “That assumes, of course, that you expect to live long enough to take advantage of those higher monthly benefits.”
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