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  2. How Severance Pay Affects Your Social Security Benefits - AARP

    www.aarp.org/retirement/social-security/questions-answers/severance-pay-social...

    Keep in mind. If you were self-employed before retiring, net income you receive in the year after you start Social Security for services you performed before you began collecting benefits counts as special payments. If you believe income reported to Social Security includes a special payment, call 800-772-1213 or contact your local Social ...

  3. 1040 Calculator Estimates Your Federal Taxes - AARP

    www.aarp.org/money/taxes/1040-tax-calculator

    1040 Tax Calculator. Enter your filing status, income, deductions and credits and we will estimate your total taxes. Based on your projected tax withholding for the year, we can also estimate your tax refund or amount you may owe the IRS next April. Change the information currently provided in the calculator to match your personal information ...

  4. How To Analyze an Early Retirement Package - AARP

    www.aarp.org/retirement/planning-for-retirement/info-2020/stop-work-timing...

    A severance payment of six months to a year might give you enough time for a new job; for most people, a month or two of severance won't. Even if you do get a large severance payment, don't get blinded by a big check. It's there to tide you over until you get a new job, or to help pay your expenses in retirement.

  5. What Happens if You Work After Starting Social Security? - AARP

    www.aarp.org/retirement/social-security/info-2021/working-while-collecting...

    If you earn the exempted amount — $18,960 in 2021 — or less, there's no reduction. But if this isn't the year in which you reach your full retirement age, your benefits are reduced by half the amount that your earnings exceed that annual limit. For example, say you're earning $30,000 a year, or $11,040 over this year's earned income limit.

  6. Smart Ways to Help You Pay for the Cost of a Funeral - AARP

    www.aarp.org/home-family/friends-family/info-2020/paying-for-cost-of-funeral.html

    You can get a loan to pay for a funeral from banks, credit unions and specialized lenders. But these are personal loans, which means they’re unsecured, hard to get and expensive. Interest rates range from 5 percent to 36 percent on personal loans, depending on the borrower’s credit score. That’s like paying for a funeral on a credit card.

  7. What To Do When Medicare Premiums Rises Due To Previous Income -...

    www.aarp.org/retirement/social-security/questions-answers/medicare-premium...

    Yes. You can apply to Social Security to reduce your Medicare premium in light of changed financial circumstances. Social Security uses tax information from the year before last — typically the most recent data it has from the IRS — to determine if you are a “higher-income beneficiary.”. If so, you will be charged more than the ...

  8. 7 Ways to Pay Less Taxes on Social Security Benefits - AARP

    www.aarp.org/retirement/social-security/info-2023/reduce-taxes-on-benefits.html

    7. Pivot to a tax-efficient investment portfolio. Loading up taxable investment accounts with assets that generate lots of income, such as real estate investment trusts, dividend-paying stocks or most types of bonds, can increase the tax hit on your Social Security benefits.

  9. How Are Social Security Benefits Taxed? - AARP

    www.aarp.org/retirement/social-security/questions-answers/how-is-ss-taxed.html

    The portion of your benefits subject to taxation varies with income level. You’ll be taxed on: up to 50 percent of your benefits if your income is $25,000 to $34,000 for an individual or $32,000 to $44,000 for a married couple filing jointly. up to 85 percent of your benefits if your income is more than $34,000 (individual) or $44,000 (couple).

  10. Lump-Sum vs Monthly Pension Payments: Which Is Better? - AARP

    www.aarp.org/retirement/planning-for-retirement/info-2020/monthly-pension-vs...

    And the right choice may not be obvious. If you take a lump sum — available to about a quarter of private-industry employees covered by a pension — you run the risk of running out of money during retirement. But if you choose monthly payments and you die unexpectedly early, you and your heirs will have received far less than the lump-sum ...

  11. Everything You Need To Know About Roth IRAs - AARP

    www.aarp.org/money/investing/info-2023/roth-ira-basic-guide.html

    The Roth IRA is an individual retirement account that comes with perks that traditional IRAs don’t offer. The biggest benefit of the Roth IRA is how tax-friendly it is. Although you can’t take a tax deduction on Roth IRA contributions, the money you sock away grows tax-free and also comes out tax-free, provided you follow the withdrawal rules.