Updated
Updated · The Sumter Item · Jul 17
Social Security Applies $2,040 Monthly Cap in First Claim Year, Requires Full Repayment Within 12 Months
Updated
Updated · The Sumter Item · Jul 17

Social Security Applies $2,040 Monthly Cap in First Claim Year, Requires Full Repayment Within 12 Months

2 articles · Updated · The Sumter Item · Jul 17

Summary

  • $2,040 a month can limit Social Security benefits for early claimants in their first year if their 2026 annual self-employment earnings also exceed $24,480.
  • SSA first checks the full-year earnings record from the IRS; if the annual limit is breached, it then reviews monthly earnings and can demand repayment for months when the claimant was not entitled to benefits.
  • Within 12 months of filing, a claimant may withdraw a retirement application, but must repay all benefits already paid to or for them to reset the claim and let future benefits grow.
  • After 12 months, the withdrawal option ends and only the annual earnings test applies until full retirement age; at FRA, earnings limits disappear and withheld months can raise later benefits.

Insights

Did you know Social Security has a 12-month 'do-over' rule that can fix a costly claiming mistake?
If working reduces your Social Security check before full retirement, is that money gone for good?
A new bill aims to scrap the earnings test. Should you still worry about working on Social Security?