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Your Social Security Benefits
How Much Can You Earn without Reducing Your Benefits?
It depends on the year you were born and how long until you reach full retirement age, abbreviated as FRA. That's the age at which you would collect 100 percent of the monthly benefit payment Social Security calculates from your lifetime earnings history.
Suppose you will turn 62, the earliest age to claim retirement benefits, in 2020. For people born in 1958, full retirement age is 66 years 8 months. Until then, Social Security doesn’t consider you fully “retired” if you make more than a certain amount from work, and it will deduct a portion of your benefits if your earnings exceed that limit. Once you reach FRA, there is no cap on how much you can earn and still receive your full Social Security benefit. The earnings limits are adjusted annually for national wage trends. In 2020, you lose $1 in benefits for every $2 earned over $18,240. If you have a part-time job that pays $25,000 a year — $6,760 over the limit — Social Security will deduct $3,380 in benefits. Suppose you reach full retirement age this year. In that case, the earnings limit is $48,600, with $1 in benefits withheld for every $3 earned over the limit. That applies until you actually hit your FRA; past that, there is no earnings limit. If you’re self-employed, Social Security counts your net income only; if you receive wages, earnings-limit calculations are based on your gross pay. The Social Security pamphlet “How Work Affects Your Benefits” and its Retirement Earnings Test Calculator can provide more details. Keep in mind
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