Planning
for Earned Income in Retirement
Presented by Jared Daniel of Wealth Guardian Group
What is it?
If
you're like a lot of people, retirement won't be the world of gardening,
golfing, traveling, and tennis you once envisioned. Rather, retirement will
mean relaxing and working. Maybe you've retired from your “regular" job
and started a business, or perhaps you want to work part-time just to stay
busy. However, if you work after you start receiving Social Security retirement
benefits, your earnings may affect the amount of your benefit check.
How your earnings affect your benefit
Your earnings in retirement may
increase your retirement benefit
Your
monthly Social Security retirement
benefit is based on your lifetime earnings. When you become entitled to
retirement benefits at age 62, the Social Security Administration (SSA) calculates
your primary insurance amount (PIA) upon which your retirement benefit will be
based. Later, your PIA will be recalculated annually if you have had any earnings
that might substantially increase your benefit. So if you continue to work
after you start receiving retirement benefits, these earnings may eventually
increase your PIA and thus your retirement benefit.
Your earnings in retirement may
decrease your retirement benefit
If
you earn income over a certain limit by working after you begin receiving
retirement benefits, your benefit may be reduced proportionately. This limit,
known as the retirement earnings test exempt amount, affects only beneficiaries
under normal retirement age. The benefit reduction is based on your annual
earnings and is not permanent; your monthly benefit is reduced starting in
January of the year following the year you had excess earnings and will be
reduced until the excess earnings are used up.
Example(s): Emily is entitled to a Social Security retirement benefit of
$800. When she was 64, her annual earnings exceeded the retirement earnings
test exempt amount, so her benefit was reduced by $600. Consequently, in
January of the following year, she received only a $200 monthly benefit check
($800 minus $600 equals $200). However, in February, she again received an $800
monthly benefit check.
Tip: If your monthly benefit is reduced in the short term due to
your earnings, you'll receive a higher monthly benefit later. That's because
the SSA recalculates your benefit when you reach full retirement age, and omits
the months in which your benefit was reduced.
How much is the retirement earnings
test exempt amount?
In
2015, the annual exempt amount is $15,720 ($15,480 in 2014) for beneficiaries
under normal (full) retirement age.
However, in the year you reach full retirement age, a different limit applies.
The limit in 2015 is $41,880 ($41,400 in 2014), which applies to earnings up
to, but not including, the month you reach normal retirement age.
How much benefit is withheld if you exceed
the annual earnings limit?
If
you're under normal retirement age, $1 in benefits is withheld for every $2 of
earnings in excess of the annual exempt amount.
Example(s): Ida was a self-employed potato farmer. After she began receiving
Social Security retirement benefits at age 62, she continued to sell potatoes
at her produce stand outside of Boise. Since she exceeded the annual retirement
earnings test exempt amount by $380, $190 was withheld from her benefit check
the following January.
In
the year you reach normal retirement age, $1 in benefits is withheld for every
$3 of earnings in excess of the special exempt amount that applies that year,
but only counting money earned before the month you reach normal retirement
age.
Example(s): In the year that Ida reached normal retirement age, she earned
$3,200 more than the special earnings limit that applies in that year. However,
she earned $500 of that after she had reached normal retirement age, so that
amount wasn't counted in calculating how much benefit would be withheld.
Instead, the remaining $2,700 was used in the calculation, and $900 was
withheld from Ida's benefit ($1 for every $3 in excess of the earnings limit).
What kinds of earnings may affect your
benefit?
Earnings that might reduce your benefit
·
Wages
you earned as an employee (counted for the taxable year they're earned)
·
Net
earnings from self-employment (usually counted in the year earnings are
received)
·
Other
types of work-related income, such as bonuses, commissions, and fees
Earnings that won't reduce your benefit
·
Pensions
and retirement pay
·
Workers'
compensation and unemployment compensation benefits
·
Prize
winnings from contests, unless part of a salesperson's wage structure, or
entering contests is your "business"
·
Tips
that are less than $20 a month
·
Payments
from individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and Keogh plans
·
Investment
income
·
Income
earned in or after the month you reach normal retirement age
Other
types of earnings may affect your benefit. If you have additional questions
about how the Social Security Administration defines earnings, contact the SSA
at (800) 772-1213.
Which of your benefits may be affected
by excess earnings?
Your own retirement benefit
Your
Social Security retirement benefit
may be reduced if you earn income over the retirement earnings test exempt
amount.
Benefits paid to your spouse or child
If
you have retired and your spouse and/or child receives benefits based on your
Social Security record, any excess earnings you have may reduce their benefits.
In addition, any excess earnings they have may reduce their own benefits but
not your benefit.
Example(s): Bill is 63 and receives a Social Security retirement benefit.
His wife Betty, who is also 63, receives a retirement benefit based on Bill's
earnings that is equal to 50 percent of Bill's benefit. If Bill earns $200 over
the retirement earnings test exempt amount, his benefit is reduced by $100
($200 divided by 2) the following January. Betty's benefit is reduced by 50
percent of that amount, or $50.
However,
assume that Betty also works and earns $200 over the retirement earnings test
exempt amount. Her benefit will be reduced by $100 ($200 divided by 2). Her
benefit is reduced an additional $50 by Bill's excess earnings. Bill's benefit,
however, is reduced by $100 because of his own excess earnings but is not
affected by Betty's excess earnings.
Benefits paid to your survivors
If
you die and a member of your family receives a survivor's benefit, that benefit
may be reduced if the family member earns money in excess of the retirement
test exempt amount.
Example(s): When Bill dies, Betty, his widow, begins receiving survivor's
benefits based on Bill's Social Security record. Since she earns $200 more than
the exempt amount that year, Betty's survivor's benefit of $825 is reduced by
$100 in January of the following year.
The earnings test is different in the
first year of retirement
Earnings from an employer
In
the first year of retirement, the earnings test is applied differently than in
later years. Normally, the earnings
test is based on the amount of income you earned annually; however, in the
first year of retirement, the earnings test can be based on the amount of
income you earned monthly, if that would benefit you. You can receive a full
Social Security benefit check for any whole month in which your earnings don't
exceed 1/12th of the annual exempt amount.
Example(s): Caleb retired on July 31 at age 62. From January through July
of that year, he earned $40,000. After he retired, he began working part-time
and earned only $300 a month from August to December (each month, less than the
monthly earnings exempt amount). Thus, even though his annual earnings during
the year he retired greatly exceeded the annual earnings exempt amount, Caleb's
benefit check was not reduced the following year.
Earnings from self-employment
If
you're self-employed, the SSA also considers whether you perform substantial
services in your business. You will receive full benefits for any month you're
not substantially self-employed. In general, you're considered to be
substantially self-employed if you worked as a self-employed person more than
45 hours in one month. If you work less than 15 hours in one month, you will
not be considered substantially self- employed, and you probably will receive
your full retirement benefit for that month. If you work between 15 hours and
45 hours a month, you may or may not be considered substantially self-employed
by the SSA, and your retirement benefit may be affected.
How you can keep your post-retirement
earnings from exceeding the earnings exempt amount
Time your post-retirement earnings
If
you expect you will have substantial earnings after you retire and you have not
yet reached normal retirement age, you may be able to time your post-retirement
earnings to prevent withholding of all or part of your Social Security
retirement benefit.
Create a self-employment loss
If
you're self-employed, you may be able to generate a self-employment loss to offset
excess self-employment income.
Incorporate a sole proprietorship
If
you incorporate a sole proprietorship as an S corporation, you may be able to
reduce your self-employment earnings by receiving profit distributions that
will not be considered self-employment income for the purposes of the
retirement earnings test.
Shift earnings to others
You
may be able to reduce your net self-employment earnings if you shift earnings to
others by forming a partnership with your spouse or employing minor children.
Caution: The SSA may scrutinize questionable retirement arrangements.
Under the law, you are entitled to work and combine your Social Security
benefits and earnings in such a way as to get the most income you can. However,
you should not understate your earnings or establish fictitious business
arrangements.
Jared Daniel may be reached at www.WealthGuardianGrop.com or our Facebook page.
IMPORTANT
DISCLOSURESBroadridge Investor Communication Solutions, Inc. does not provide
investment, tax, or legal advice. The information presented here is not
specific to any individual's personal circumstances.To the extent that this
material concerns tax matters, it is not intended or written to be used, and
cannot be used, by a taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be
imposed by law. Each taxpayer should
seek independent advice from a tax professional based on his or her individual
circumstances.These materials are provided for general information and
educational purposes based upon publicly available information from sources
believed to be reliable—we cannot assure the accuracy or completeness of these
materials. The information in these
materials may change at any time and without notice.
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