Commentary

Social Security Benefits to Inch Up 1.7% in 2015

The nation’s elderly and disabled Social Security recipients will receive a 1.7 percent increase in payments in 2015. This is expected to raise the average monthly payment for the typical retired worker by $22. The increase is slightly higher than last year’s 1.5 percent cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). The same COLA will apply to pensions for federal government retirees and to most veterans.

As was the case last year- the small rise in benefits will not be whittled down by a Medicare premium increase because the standard Medicare Part B monthly premium will remain $104.90 in 2015– the same as it was in 2014.  Most Medicare recipients have their premiums deducted from their Social Security payments.  (In a recent column- Reuters columnist Mark Miller argues that the COLA doesn’t measure retiree inflation accurately and that it’s time to “adjust the adjustment.”)

The COLA by the Numbers

Starting in January 2015- the average monthly Social Security retirement payment will rise from $1-306 to $1-328 a month for individuals and from $2-140 to $2-176 for couples. The 1.7 percent increase will apply to both elderly and disabled Social Security recipients.  The maximum Social Security benefit for a worker retiring at full retirement age- which is age 66 for those born between 1943 and 1954- will be $2-663 a month.

The Social Security COLA also raises the maximum amount of earnings subject to Social Security taxation to $118-500 from $117-000.  This means that those earning incomes above $118-500 will pay no Social Security tax on any income above that threshold.

The COLA increases the amount early retirees can earn without seeing a cut in their Social Security checks.  Early retirees are individuals who begin drawing Social Security before their full retirement age. There are earnings limits on these individuals. Although there is no limit on outside earnings beginning the month an individual attains full retirement age- those who choose to begin receiving Social Security benefits before their full retirement age may have their benefits reduced- depending on how much other income they earn.

Early retirees who will reach their full retirement age after 2015 may now earn $15-720 a year before Social Security payments are reduced by $1 for every $2 earned above the limit. Those early beneficiaries who will attain their full retirement age in 2015 will have their benefits reduced $1 for every $3 earned if their income exceeds $41-880 in the months prior to the month they reach their full retirement age.

For 2015- the monthly federal Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payment standard will be $733 for an individual and $1-100 for a couple.

For a complete list of the 2015 Social Security changes- go to: http://www.ssa.gov/news/press/factsheets/colafacts2015.html

For further reading, see more ElderLawAnswers information on Social Security.