Social Security and gray divorce

retirement-heart

A couple's claiming strategy backfires after their marriage fails.

  • January 4, 2019

  • By Mary Beth Franklin

Over the holidays, a financial adviser contacted me with questions about how to help one of his newly divorced clients, a classic example of the growing trend of gray divorce, which occurs when a long-time marriage dissolves in or near retirement.

The adviser was certain that the former wife, who is collecting a Social Security benefit worth less than half of her ex-husband’s benefit amount based on their joint claiming strategy, would receive some sort of increase to equalize their benefits after the divorce. He was sorely disappointed.

Both former spouses were born in 1950, which means they had access to a Social Security claiming strategy no longer available to people born after that date. The husband filed and suspended his Social Security benefit when he turned 66, a few months before the April 29, 2016, deadline that eliminated the strategy forever. It allowed him to trigger spousal benefits for his wife while his own retirement benefit continued to grow by 8% per year up until age 70.

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