SS will not be phased out or means tested if you are a millennial or older. This drum has been banged for 40 years and there’s been no urgency to fix it. Congress will just keep increasing the salary limit and pushing the eligibility years out for Millennials and younger. |
| I’m a nanny and if I wait until I’m 70, I’ll get $2750 a month. I regret working for a very long term family who had me work half on/off the books, because they were the only thing me who benefitted from that arrangement. I made the same in cash after taxes. Ah well. I was young and dumb! I will have to wait until 70 to collect. I have about $250k in savings, my shitty condo is paid off, and will likely inherit 1-2 million. Im single and never married, wish I’d gone to college or had a job with a pension or benefits. I’ll be okay, but poor. |
I'm sorry you made a mistake while you, but maybe do your budget and see if you can retire a bit younger if you want to. If you'll inherit 1-2 million, the income from that plus Social Security in a paid off condo might make it possible. You know, I went to college and even got a grad degree and quit soon after to have kids. I regret it sometimes, but the difference we've made in kids' lives (I also have worked as a pre-school teacher) really does mean something, even if it's not something people talk about much. |
Make an account with SS administration. Make sure it's the government website. They estimate it for you as of today. |
My immigrant neighbor earned about that in the 15 or so years she has been in the US and doing home attendant type work. She is also 68. I respect her achievement much more than that of so many people who were privileged in being born here and having a leg up for college and their white collar jobs. |
| My estimate for retiring at 65 in 2034 says $3300 vs. 4570 if I wait till age 70. |
Waiting until you are 70 to take SS benefits is one of the smartest things you can do. |
Only if you live past 82. And not much at that. |
But aren't you already doing that with a 401K etc? SS is diversification, it's more like an annuity in that it can't run out and is guaranteed at a certain amount. You want that certain amount to be as high as possible, actuarially. If you think you'll die soon, sure, take it at 62. |
It also provided with your kids with guaranteed survivor's benefits until they were 18, you with guaranteed disability insurance your whole working life, and will provide your spouse with guaranteed retirement income until they die whether or not they worked. |
If their spouse did. If you personally never worked and aren't a spouse you get nothing. |
Ok. Has nothing to do with what you’re responding to, but ok. |
I have never had a retirement account offered at any of my jobs, never-ever. I opened a Roth because I have very low income. I took a lot of risk outside of retirement account and it has paid off. I learned a lot since 2020 and I think I can do better than government. If SS runs out, then I'd better take it early. I also may get more % -wise than high-earners who have a lot more to lose if SS is not guaranteed. Investing it from 62-67 is exactly the amount that will make up the $500 shortfall later, but I more control over it. I'm fairly healthy and seems like I should live 91+ unless I get run over. I have dual citizenship. I plan to move to lower cost of living homeland with organic local food and all my childhood friends. While living there is cheap with all the fresh air and no crowds, I can see us traveling all over and spending the money that way. Retirement planning is extremely individual. I may have to revisit it if I'm not single anymore. |
This. The break even is pretty far into the future. Not sure yet what we will do since for us SS is just a piece of our retirement, not the whole thing. |
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About 20 percent of beneficiaries have a benefit of $1000 or less.
Data: https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/supplement/2022/5b.html#table5.b6 |