Your Social Security Benefits
BOSTON (CBS) - 94% of all workers are currently covered under Social Security.
Your Social Security Benefits
34% of the workforce has no savings set aside specifically for retirement.
You are going to need your Social Security benefit in retirement.
To receive Social Security benefits, you must work and pay taxes into the system. An exception would be an at-home spouse or a child of a worker who could collect benefits as a dependent or a survivor.
You earn Social Security "credits" that count toward eligibility for future benefits. You can earn a maximum of four credits each year. This year you need to earn $1,200 for each credit. The amount of money needed to earn one credit increases every year.
Most individuals need 40 credits (10 years of work) to qualify for retirement benefits. Younger people need fewer credits to be eligible for disability benefits or for their family members to be eligible for survivor benefits if they should die.
During your working lifetime, you will hopefully earn more credits than you need for eligibility. The extra income you earn will increase your final benefit because the more you earn and the longer you work the larger your benefit will be because of the way the benefit formula is set up.
This year your employer and you will each contribute 6.2 percent of your gross salary, up to $117,000. Self-employed individuals will pay 12.4 percent of their taxable income into Social Security (again, up to the annual limit). Self-employed individuals are allowed a deduction for half of the tax. The limit on the taxable income goes up every year.
You can apply for benefits online or do it in person at a SSA office near you. Call 800-772-1213 to set up an appointment.
If you are many years away from collecting your benefit, you can estimate what that benefit will be. The Retirement Estimator on the Social Security website is a great planning tool. Many things in the future could change the final number though. It is meant to be a planning tool.
More: Hang on to those W-2s you receive from your employer. That W-2 may be the only proof you have of former employment. The Social Security Administration records your earnings information on an annual basis. It receives the information from your employer in order to credit your account. If your name or number is incorrect, someone else may be credited with your earnings.
If there are errors, correct them as soon as possible with the Social Security. As long as you have proof of your earnings they will make the correction, no matter how far in the past the error occurred.