Interesting personal question here for anyone approaching retirement (or perhaps you have a client at som point whom this might impact.) I reach age 66 early next year and just recently applied for Social Security benefits. After completing all the paperwork I began looking at the alternatives. The following ignores tax adjustments, because I think the tax liabilities will be roughly the same at the margins under any possible scenario. Some elements are simplified in order to avoid too many permutations of the basic scheme.
Since my wife is already retired, I can do a two-step process to suspend my application and then apply for a "Free Spousal Benefit", which is half my wife's benefit. In exchange, my SocSec benefit continues to increase in exactly the same way as if I had not applied, which most financial calculators regard as an 8% return on the foregone benefit. But in this case, it's the 8% return PLUS the money I actually receive during the deferral period. Looks like the "Free Spousal Benefit" really is free. Social Security is actuarially sound for the most part, so I have no idea why this benefit is in there - it makes no sense to me. Nevertheless, it is a part of the system as it exists today.
Bottom line is that I receive $450 per month less in benefits, but at the end of each year my SocSec benefit increases by $110 per month. That computes to a 52-month break-even point. After that, I'm ahead by the increased monthly benefit for the rest of my life. From an investment standpoint, I see this as being no different than putting $5,400 per year into an IRA, then buying a single-premium annuity at age 67 which pays $110 per month for the rest of my life with no survivor benefit. And repeating that process for each of the remaining 3 years until age 70, when the increased benefit maxes out.
Now I do realize there's always the possibility of dying before reaching the break-even point and leaving money on the table. But as I see it, that isn't the greatest risk in retirement. I have always viewed the greatest retirement risk as outliving your assets and watching your buying power erode, so this strategy helps hedge somewhat against that outcome.
If anyone cares to comment on this, I'd be interested in hearing your perspective. Maybe I've missed a key element here. And if you have any clients approaching retirement who might be in a similar situation, they should at least consider the financial impact of a strategy like this.
Since my wife is already retired, I can do a two-step process to suspend my application and then apply for a "Free Spousal Benefit", which is half my wife's benefit. In exchange, my SocSec benefit continues to increase in exactly the same way as if I had not applied, which most financial calculators regard as an 8% return on the foregone benefit. But in this case, it's the 8% return PLUS the money I actually receive during the deferral period. Looks like the "Free Spousal Benefit" really is free. Social Security is actuarially sound for the most part, so I have no idea why this benefit is in there - it makes no sense to me. Nevertheless, it is a part of the system as it exists today.
Bottom line is that I receive $450 per month less in benefits, but at the end of each year my SocSec benefit increases by $110 per month. That computes to a 52-month break-even point. After that, I'm ahead by the increased monthly benefit for the rest of my life. From an investment standpoint, I see this as being no different than putting $5,400 per year into an IRA, then buying a single-premium annuity at age 67 which pays $110 per month for the rest of my life with no survivor benefit. And repeating that process for each of the remaining 3 years until age 70, when the increased benefit maxes out.
Now I do realize there's always the possibility of dying before reaching the break-even point and leaving money on the table. But as I see it, that isn't the greatest risk in retirement. I have always viewed the greatest retirement risk as outliving your assets and watching your buying power erode, so this strategy helps hedge somewhat against that outcome.
If anyone cares to comment on this, I'd be interested in hearing your perspective. Maybe I've missed a key element here. And if you have any clients approaching retirement who might be in a similar situation, they should at least consider the financial impact of a strategy like this.
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