Windfall Elimination Provision
Your Social Security retirement or disability benefits may be reduced.
If you work for an employer who does not withhold Social Security taxes from your
salary, such as a government agency or an employer in another country, the pension
you get based on that work may reduce your Social Security benefits. The Windfall
Elimination Provision affects how the amount of your retirement or disability benefit
is calculated if you receive a pension from work where Social Security taxes were
not taken out of your pay. A modified formula is used to calculate your benefit
amount, resulting in a lower Social Security benefit than you otherwise would receive.
When your benefits may be affected The Windfall Elimination Provision
primarily affects you if you earned a pension in any job where you did not pay Social
Security taxes and you also worked in other jobs long enough to qualify for a retirement
or disability benefit. For example, this provision affects Social Security benefits
when any part of a person’s federal service after 1956 is covered under the Civil
Service Retirement System (CSRS). However, federal service where Social Security
taxes are withheld (Federal Employees’ Retirement System or CSRS Offset) will not
reduce your Social Security benefit amounts. The Windfall Elimination Provision
may apply if:
You reached 62 after 1985; or
You became disabled after 1985; and
You first became eligible for a monthly pension based on work where you did not
pay Social Security taxes after 1985, even if you are still working.
Why a different formula is used
Social Security benefits are intended to replace only a percentage of a worker’s
pre-retirement earnings. The way Social Security benefit amounts are figured, lower-paid
workers get a higher return than highly paid workers. For example, lower-paid workers
could get a Social Security benefit that equals about 55 percent of their pre-retirement
earnings. The average replacement rate for highly paid workers is about 25 percent.
Before 1983, people who worked mainly in a job not covered by Social Security had
their Social Security benefits calculated as if they were long-term, low-wage workers.
They had the advantage of receiving a Social Security benefit representing a higher
percentage of their earnings, plus a pension from a job where they did not pay Social
Security taxes. Congress passed the Windfall Elimination Provision to remove that
advantage.
How does it work?
Social Security benefits are based on the worker’s average monthly earnings adjusted
for inflation. They separate your average earnings into three amounts and multiply
the amounts using three factors. For example, for a worker who turns 62 in 2008,
the first $711 of average monthly earnings is multiplied by 90 percent; the next
$3,577 by 32 percent; and the remainder by 15 percent. The sum of the three
amounts equals the total monthly payment amount. The 90 percent factor is reduced
in the modified formula and phased in for workers who reached age 62 or became disabled
between 1986 and 1989. For those who reach 62 or became disabled in 1990 or later,
the 90 percent factor is reduced to 40 percent. There are exceptions to this rule.
For example, the 90 percent factor is not reduced if you have 30 or more years of
“substantial” earnings in a job where you paid Social Security taxes. If you have
21 to 29 years of substantial earnings, the 90 percent factor is reduced to between
45 and 85 percent.
Some exceptions...
The Windfall Elimination Provision does not apply to survivors benefits. It also
does not apply if:
You are a federal worker first hired after December 31, 1983;
You were employed on December 31, 1983, by a nonprofit organization that did not
withhold Social Security taxes from your pay at first, but then began withholding
Social Security taxes from your pay;
Your only pension is based on railroad employment;
The only work you did where you did not pay Social Security taxes was before 1957;
or
You have 30 or more years of substantial earnings under Social Security.
... and a guarantee If you get a relatively low pension, you are protected. The reduction in your Social Security benefit cannot be more than one-half of the amount of your pension based on your earnings after 1956 on which you did not pay Social Security taxes.
