Social Security: 7 Things Every Woman Should Know About

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Marriage Doesn’t Limit Your Social Security Benefits

If you’re married and both you and your husband have worked, you can each request Social Security benefits separately and independently. But you two must have worked before and you must have separate work records.

Let’s say you have a claim of $2,000 per month and your husband has a claim of $2,500 per month. This means your combined retirement benefits should go up to $4,500 monthly.

So being married doesn’t influence your Social Security retirement benefit. Which indicates you’re not restricted to receiving 50% of your husband’s pension. Although Social Security spousal benefits might be a financial plus, if you’re not eligible, you can still carry out to provide your own financial security. Talk to a financial consultant or an attorney to ensure you have the right retirement plan.

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7 thoughts on “Social Security: 7 Things Every Woman Should Know About”

  1. Why do teacher who have retired under California social security rules don’t qualify for social security benefit’s?

  2. i AM 90 YRS OLD, FEMALE
    i START DRAWING MY S.S. AT 62 YRS . mY HUSBAND ID STILL LIVING AND 90YRS OLD. cAN i DRAW 1/3 OR 1/2 OF HIS SS

  3. I am a widow I made more than my husband so I had to retire under my earnings, Is there anyway of any other ss for me since he passed six years ago? I am almost 73/

  4. Dinah Tallman-Wright

    My husband passed in 2017. He would be 65 June 2023. I am his wife. I will be 60 Nov. 11 2022. Can I start collect his ssa in 2023 when he is 65?

    1. You can file for survivors benefits at age 60. You don’t have to wait. I was going to begin drawing ss and keep working at 62. They came back to me and offered survivors benefits which were more than mine. My husband died at 55 in 2015. I could have been collecting for the last 2 years had I known. File for it baby!

    2. I worked for Social Security for 37 1/2 years and retired in 2006. You can begin collecting widow’s benefits at age 60 if you are not working and earning more than the allowable limit. Check with your Social Security office – depending upon how much you and your husband each earned, you may want to switch from the widow’s rate to your own Social Security rate when you reach full retirement age or when you reach age 70.

  5. I was married for 24 years and now divorced and
    never remarried. Can I get social security from my ex husband. ? I collect STRS but never paid into social security.

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