Social Security Matters
Editor’s Note: After a long career in the data processing industry, Russell Gloor joined the Association of Mature American Citizens in 2013. Gloor received training from the National Social Security Association and was accredited by the NSSA® as a Social Security adviser in 2016. Currently part of the AMAC Foundation’s Social Security Advisory team, he annually counsels thousands of American seniors about their Social Security options. In addition to answering Social Security questions daily, he also authors the AMAC Foundation’s nationally syndicated weekly “Ask Rusty” advice column and has written three Social Security instructional books about Social Security.
Dear Rusty: I am a 63-year-old single lady, and I have questions regarding Social Security “early retirement,” though I will still be working full time. I know there is a maximum allowable income limit and, if I exceed that, I will need to return probably two-thirds of my received Social Security benefit. I’m thinking about taking those early Social Security benefits (about $1,400 per month) and putting them in my high yield savings or CD where I can gain the interest on it and have it stay “liquid” so I can return what I need to. My current interest rate is 3.65% on the savings and over 4.25% on CD, with options for three, six, nine months or longer but I want to be able to access the money to pay Social Security back at the end of the year. Can you advise me on this? Signed: Still Working but Wondering
Dear Still Working but Wondering: I commend you, for investigating your options before claiming early Social Security benefits while still working. The 2026 annual earnings limit for those collecting early Social Security benefits is $24,480 (changes annually). If your 2026 work earnings exceed the annual limit, Social Security will take away $1 in benefits for every $2 you are over the limit. The annual earnings limit lasts until you reach your full retirement age and the limit is about 2.5 times higher during the year you attain FRA.
When you apply for benefits, Social Security will ask if you are working and, if so, how much you make. Using that info, they will evaluate whether you can take benefits now and, if so, how many months they can actually pay your benefits. For example, if your projected 2026 earnings are, say, $100,000, you would be about $75,000 over the annual limit which means that half of that ($37,500) would need to be paid back to Social Security. Since your monthly Social Security benefit at your current age would be about $1,400 per month, Social Security will say you are temporarily ineligible to collect early benefits because you cannot pay back within one year what you would owe for exceeding the limit. In other words, they won’t pay your Social Security benefits just yet because your earnings are too high and they do not want to overpay benefits which you will only need to return.
For additional perspective, if your expected 2026 earnings are less (say about $50,000) – that means you would be about $25,000 over the limit – about half of that (about $12,500) would need to be paid back to Social Security. In that event, the Social Security Administration would tell you they will withhold nine months of your Social Security payments in advance and pay your benefits for only three months. This is because the overpayment, with your current benefit of about $1,400, could be recovered by withholding your Social Security payments for nine months. They do not want to intentionally overpay your Social Security benefits.
So, despite your best repayment intentions, Social Security will not favor intentionally overpaying your benefits.
Historically, overpayment of benefits due to exceeding the annual earnings limit has been a notoriously difficult issue for the Social Security Administration. So, to get your early Social Security benefits while you are working full time, you would likely need to lie about your anticipated 2026 earnings on your application for Social Security benefits, which we strongly discourage. Keep in mind this all changes when you reach your FRA (67), because the earning limit goes away entirely when you reach FRA (and the limit goes up by about 2.5 times in the year you attain full retirement age). So, depending on your earnings level, you may wish to either wait until your full retirement age, or until you stop working full time, to claim Social Security.
Now, as for the general idea of taking early benefits and investing them, many have said they wish to do that, and we understand that logic. Our caution is that it requires religious discipline to put the Social Security money into a higher yield investment vehicle to accomplish the goal of beating the Social Security increase realized when you wait to claim. Many who try it succumb to the temptation to use the invested funds for emergency needs (and sometimes nonemergency needs).
I offer this only as something to be aware of, as some have shared that they failed in their investment objectives with their Social Security money.
This article is intended for information purposes only and does not represent legal or financial guidance. It presents the opinions and interpretations of the AMAC Foundation’s staff, trained and accredited by the National Social Security Association. NSSA® and the AMAC Foundation and its staff are not affiliated with or endorsed by the Social Security Administration or any other governmental entity. To submit a question, visit their website (amacfoundation.org/programs/social-security-advisory) or email ssadvisor@amacfoundation.org.








