Effect of Delayed Retirement

Not only does your benefit amount go up, but the survivor benefit paid out to a surviving spouse also goes up if you wait to begin collecting your Social Security benefits until you reach full retirement age or later, up until the maximum allowed, which is currently 70 as of 2021. Survivor benefit amounts include any delayed retirement credits that accrue until the passing of the earner. But this isn’t the case with spousal benefits. It will result in an increase of 5.5% to 8% per year if you delay retirement and keep on earning credits. There’s no plus in waiting beyond your full retirement age to collect a spousal benefit. But you can gain from waiting to begin your own benefits if you’re married and if you’re the higher earner. This will also increase the survivor benefit.

The Earnings Test

Joint benefits for married couples often increase when the spouse who earns less begins taking benefits earlier. But this depends on those benefits not being lost due to the earnings test while the spouse who earns more delays benefits until age 70. The test only applies to those who haven’t yet reached the normal retirement age.

Switching Your Plan for Survivor Benefits

You can begin taking benefits as a widow or widower based on your own earnings record. Then you can later switch to survivor’s benefits. You might also begin survivor’s benefits and later switch to benefits based on your own record. Both choices mean filing a restricted application. This means you’re restricting your request to either your own benefit amount or a survivor benefit amount. Switching isn’t allowed between spouse’s benefits and benefits based on your own record unless you were born on or before January 1, 1954. You must also have reached your full retirement age. The date of birth rule came into play due to changes that became law in November 2015.

Length of Marriage Requirements

The rules vary for how long you must be married to claim these types of benefits. It’s nine months to be eligible for a survivor benefit on your spouse’s record. It increases to one year to be eligible for a spousal benefit on a current spouse’s work record. Two years are required if your divorced spouse has reached age 62 but hasn’t yet filed. You must be divorced for two years before you can claim a spousal benefit based on their record. There’s no two-year rule for claiming on an ex-spouse’s record if they’ve filed for benefits. You must have been married for 10 years to claim a spousal benefit on an ex-spouse’s record.