I had a client today who was trying to help a relative figure out whether to start collecting her Social Security. The relative is 62, makes $20,000 a year, and would probably receive about $750 a month based on her ex-husband's earnings record (more than what she would receive on her own). That would be reduced to about $500 a month because her income exceeds the annual limit for persons under "normal" retirement age.
This isn't really a tax question, but there are tax implications to it, and clients at least need to be told to contact Social Security for specifics on their individual situation. I usually tell clients that if they can provide me with their date of death, I can compute the best time to start collecting benefits. I also remind them that if they delay the start of Social Security and then are run over by a truck the day after their 66th birthday, their survivors will lament that no benefits were received before then.
Then tonight there is an article in the New York Times about an economist who takes a contrarian view on this issue. While most financial advisers suggest starting Social Security early and IRA distributions late, he says that for some people it would work out better if they did it the other way around -- IRA money now, Social Security later.
The story is at
It also contains this interesting point:
>>over a lifetime a plumber has a higher standard of living than a physician with a general practice because the doctor starts earning later, pays higher taxes and high malpractice insurance premiums. <<
This isn't really a tax question, but there are tax implications to it, and clients at least need to be told to contact Social Security for specifics on their individual situation. I usually tell clients that if they can provide me with their date of death, I can compute the best time to start collecting benefits. I also remind them that if they delay the start of Social Security and then are run over by a truck the day after their 66th birthday, their survivors will lament that no benefits were received before then.
Then tonight there is an article in the New York Times about an economist who takes a contrarian view on this issue. While most financial advisers suggest starting Social Security early and IRA distributions late, he says that for some people it would work out better if they did it the other way around -- IRA money now, Social Security later.
The story is at
It also contains this interesting point:
>>over a lifetime a plumber has a higher standard of living than a physician with a general practice because the doctor starts earning later, pays higher taxes and high malpractice insurance premiums. <<
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