Marriage has no impact on your Social Security retirement benefit, which is based on your work record and earnings history. However, remarriage can affect your benefits — not your retirement benefits, but any benefits you are collecting on the record of a deceased or former spouse.
Do married couples get more Social Security?
If you or your spouse (or even both of you!) can wait until you’re 70, you’ll receive your highest Social Security payments—up to 132% of your primary insurance amount (PIA) if your full retirement age (FRA) is 66, and 124% of your PIA if your FRA is 67.
What’s the difference between spouses Social Security benefits and your own?
If your benefits as a spouse are higher than your own retirement benefits, you will get a combination of benefits equaling the higher spouse benefit. Here is an example: Mary Ann qualifies for a retirement benefit of $250 and a spouse’s benefit of $400.
Do you have to be a spouse to get Social Security?
If you have not worked or do not have enough Social Security credits to qualify for your own Social Security benefits, you may be able to receive spouse’s benefits. To qualify for spouse’s benefits, you must be:
How much social security will my husband get when I retire?
Depending on your age upon claiming, spousal benefits can range from 32.5 percent to 50 percent of your husband’s or wife’s primary insurance amount (the retirement benefit to which he or she is entitled at full retirement age, or FRA).
How are Social Security benefits calculated when a spouse dies?
The survivor benefit is generally calculated on the benefit your late spouse was receiving from Social Security at the time of death (or was entitled to receive, based on age and earnings history, if he or she had not yet claimed benefits). The actual amount of your payment will differ according to your age and family circumstance: