The age at which you claim Social Security helps determine how big your monthly retirement benefit checks will be for life.
If you wait until your full retirement age — generally 66 or 67 — to claim, you will get 100% of what you earned based on your contributions to the program. And if you wait until 70, you will get a bigger check for waiting.
But there’s no benefit to holding off past 70, because your benefits will not get any bigger.
Yet just 54% of respondents to a recent MassMutual quiz were able to correctly answer a true/false question regarding whether their monthly checks will increase if they delay claiming retirement benefits past age 70.
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Not knowing the right answer can cost you.
If you wait past 70, you can only go back six months to make up for lost monthly checks, said David Freitag, a financial planning consultant and Social Security expert at MassMutual.
That answer was part of a 12-question, true-or-false quiz given to 1,500 people, ages 55 to 65, who have not yet claimed their benefits.
Other facts about the program also tripped some respondents up.
The results showed that 22% of near-retirees did not know that if a spouse passed away you cannot collect both your own and your spouse’s benefits. (Typically, you get either yours or your spouse’s, whichever is higher.)
Meanwhile, 30% of respondents did not know that they might be able to claim benefits on their ex-spouse’s work record. (You must have been married for at least 10 years, among other qualifications.)
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Each of those benefits comes with distinct rules, Freitag said, which means it’s important to understand them before claiming.
“Although survivor benefits sound like spousal benefits, they’re totally different,” he said.
The results were not all bad.
Most respondents — 94% — were able to correctly say that their retirement benefits will be reduced if they claim them before full retirement age (generally 66 or 67, depending on your year of birth).
A majority — 86% — were also able to accurately affirm that their Social Security benefits may be reduced if they collect their monthly checks before full retirement age and continue to work.
Test your knowledge
Curious to see how well you would do on the quiz? Decide whether each statement below is true or false, then check your responses against the answer key below.
If I take benefits before my full retirement age, they will be reduced for early filing.
If I am receiving benefits before my full retirement age and continue to work, my benefits might be reduced based on how much I make.
Once I start collecting Social Security, my benefit payments will never change.
If I have a spouse, he or she can receive benefits from my record even if he or she has no individual earnings history.
If I have a spouse and he or she passes away, I will receive both my full benefit and my deceased spouse’s full benefit.
The money that comes out of my paycheck for Social Security goes into a specific account for me and remains there, earning interest, until I begin to receive Social Security benefits.
Under current Social Security law, full retirement age is 65 no matter when you were born.
As a divorced person, I might be able to collect Social Security benefits based on my ex-spouse’s earnings history.
Under current law, Social Security benefits could be reduced for everyone in 2035.
If I file for retirement benefits and have dependent children age 18 or younger, they also may qualify for Social Security benefits.
If I delay taking Social Security benefits past the age of 70, I will continue to get delayed retirement credit increases each year I wait.
I must be a U.S. citizen to collect Social Security retirement benefits.
Answers:
True
True
False
True
False
False
False
True
True
True
False
False