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Liz Weston

Q&A: Calculating Social Security benefits when a lengthy marriage ends

September 16, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I was married for 18 years before filing for a divorce. I am 71 and my husband is 76 and still working full time. He waited until he was 70 to collect his Social Security. Social Security told me to wait to file until he did to collect the maximum amount. I did, and then they told me that 50% of his benefit is less than my own benefit. Therefore I do not qualify to get benefits as a divorced spouse. I only get $1,200 a month. I made about $30,000 a year while he made six figures. I do not understand Social Security. I am barely getting by.

Answer: You got some bad information. Divorced spousal benefits, like spousal benefits for those who are still married, are based on the primary worker’s benefit at full retirement age. Spousal and divorced spousal benefits aren’t eligible for the delayed retirement credits that increase workers’ benefits when they delay applying for Social Security after full retirement age. In other words, you couldn’t benefit from your ex’s delayed start.

Like other retirement benefits, however, spousal and divorced spousal benefits are reduced if the applicant starts benefits before their own retirement age. If you applied at 65 and your full retirement age was 66, for example, you wouldn’t have qualified for the maximum divorced spousal benefit. Your own retirement benefit was reduced as well. If you’d been able to wait until after full retirement age to apply, your own benefit could have been increased by 8% for every year you waited until age 70.

It may seem odd that your benefit is still greater than what you could have received from his record, given the disparity in your incomes. But Social Security is designed to replace a bigger chunk of lower-paid workers’ incomes compared with higher-paid ones, on the assumption that lower-paid workers have a harder time saving for retirement. His income may have been four times larger than yours in recent years, but his Social Security benefit wouldn’t be four times bigger, or even twice as large.

What’s done is done, of course, but there may be a larger benefit in your future. If he dies before you do, then you would be eligible for a divorced spousal benefit, which would be 100% of his benefit (the one he’s getting when he dies, complete with delayed retirement credits and cost-of-living increases).

Filed Under: Divorce & Money, Q&A, Social Security Tagged With: divorced spousal benefits, divorced survivor benefits, Social Security

Q&A: Health savings accounts offer big tax benefits. The trick is knowing when to use the funds

September 16, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: My retirement account covers all my expenses, including medical. I also have $60,000 in a health savings account that is invested in a mutual fund. I’m struggling with how to use that. I could use it for all current medical costs, or just for unexpected big ones. Or I could keep the HSA as backup in hopes of leaving it to my heirs. All options seem to have advantages, and I’m stuck. Your thoughts?

Answer: HSAs offer a rare triple tax benefit: Contributions are deductible, the money grows tax deferred and withdrawals can be tax free if there are qualifying medical expenses.

If anyone other than your spouse inherits the HSA, however, it basically stops being an HSA. The account becomes taxable to the beneficiary in the year you die, which means the HSA loses one of its three tax breaks.

Inheriting an account that’s taxable is probably better than no inheritance at all. But generally it’s better to use the HSA yourself or leave it to a spouse and designate other money for heirs.

Trying to figure out the optimum rate of spending this money is obviously tricky. The longer you leave it alone, the more it can grow. But the longer you live without spending it, the greater the risk you’ll die without taking advantage of those tax-free withdrawals.

If you’re reluctant to tap the HSA, give yourself the option of “deathbed drawdown.” By keeping good records, you may be able to empty the account at the last minute and avoid taxes.

As you may know, you don’t have to incur a qualified medical expense in the same year you take an HSA withdrawal for the distribution to be tax free. As long as the expense is incurred after the HSA is established and before you die, it can justify a tax-free withdrawal, as long as the expense wasn’t reimbursed — paid by insurance or used for a previous HSA withdrawal. So keep careful records of all the medical expenses that you pay out of pocket. If you get a bad diagnosis or your health starts to deteriorate, you can use those receipts to justify a tax-free withdrawal.

Filed Under: Banking, Investing, Q&A, Retirement, Retirement Savings, Taxes Tagged With: deathbed drawdown, health savings account, HSA, HSAs

This week’s money news

September 9, 2024 By Liz Weston

This week’s top story: 3 side gigs for full-time working moms. In other news: Two key student debt relief programs expire Sept. 30, weekly mortgage rates, how to score a low personal loan rate in 2024.

3 Side Gigs for Full-Time Working Moms
Four moms share side gigs that are flexible and provide solid sources of extra income for their families.

Act Now: Two Key Student Debt Relief Programs Expire Sept. 30
If you have defaulted student loans or you’ve been skipping payments, you need to act by Sept. 30, 2024 — before the on-ramp and Fresh Start programs expire.

Weekly Mortgage Rates Stand Still as Housing Market Cools
They’ve fallen more than a percentage point in the last four months, and lots of people are waiting for them to drop even more before they press play.

How to Score a Low Personal Loan Rate in 2024
Borrowers who maintain high credit scores and low debt-to-income ratios have the best chances at getting a low personal loan rate.

Filed Under: Liz's Blog Tagged With: Personal Loans, student debt relief program, Weekly mortgage rate, working moms

Q&A: My house grew, but not my insurance policy

September 9, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: My home insurer has outdated specifications for my home that seem to come from public records (the house has more bedrooms and is larger now). So the estimated replacement cost can’t be anywhere near accurate. What’s the best way to provide them with authoritative information that would leave no doubt what we need to rebuild if that becomes necessary? An appraisal?

Answer: An appraisal may be overkill, but you’re long overdue for a conversation with your insurance agent.

Ask the agent to calculate the cost to rebuild your home given the actual square footage and other features. Insurers use proprietary systems to calculate these costs, so you may also want to check with two or three other companies. Also consider talking to a local contractor or two to find out the average cost to rebuild in your area.

Going forward, you should be checking to make sure your coverage is adequate every two or three years and after any major improvements.

Your premiums are likely to rise, perhaps substantially, once your insurer has the correct information. But your policy will do what it was designed to do, which is to protect you from a catastrophic loss. Otherwise, you could be left without enough money to rebuild.

Filed Under: Insurance, Q&A, Real Estate

Q&A: Looking to Medicaid to pay for assisted living

September 9, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I am going to sell my house, pay back my reverse mortgage, spend down and go on Medicaid in order to pay for assisted living that I need. What are some good resources I can contact to help me navigate all this? I have done a lot but am still needing more help.

Answer: Medicaid, the government health insurance program for the poor, typically doesn’t cover the room and board costs of assisted living, but many states offer Medicaid waivers that pay some assisted living expenses. Even if you qualify, though, there are typically a limited number of waivers available and you may be put on a wait list.

You definitely shouldn’t sell your home or spend down your resources before consulting with an expert. You can contact the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA) for a referral to a lawyer who specializes in this complex area or use the American Council on Aging’s free locator tool to find a Medicaid planner.

Filed Under: Medicare, Mortgages, Q&A, Real Estate, Retirement, Social Security

Q&A: These major financial decisions shouldn’t be DIY projects. Talk to an expert!

September 9, 2024 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I anticipate being dead soon (cancer). I have established an irrevocable trust for my 8-year-old child, with my 47-year-old wife as the trustee. With respect to taxes and other issues and naming beneficiaries, what is the optimal strategy regarding my child for life insurance and traditional and Roth IRAs? My wife will get the 401(k).

Answer: The best person to answer those questions is the estate planning attorney you (presumably) used to create the irrevocable trust. Estate planning should not be a do-it-yourself activity, particularly when minor children are involved. The wrong plan could give too much too soon to your child, or tie up the money too long. You also don’t want to unreasonably stint your wife in your efforts to preserve money for your child. Also, the optimal strategies for tax purposes may not be the best for your family’s situation.

For example, the best way to minimize taxes may be to leave all the retirement money to your wife. Spouses who inherit retirement funds have the option of treating the accounts as their own. That means your wife wouldn’t have to begin required minimum distributions from the 401(k) or the traditional IRA until she’s 75. (The current RMD age is 73, but it rises to 75 for people born in 1960 and later.) She would not have to take distributions from a Roth IRA she inherits from you.

Non-spouse heirs generally have to drain retirement accounts within 10 years. Minors who inherit retirement funds don’t have to take the first distribution until they turn 21, but then the accounts must be emptied within 10 years.

Life insurance proceeds typically aren’t taxable, or payable to a minor child. But you can create a trust to receive and dole out the proceeds to your child. Your estate planning attorney can help you set this up.

Filed Under: Financial Advisors, Insurance, Kids & Money, Legal Matters, Q&A, Retirement Savings

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