Are you asking if there is an age when SS will no longer apply FICA to earned income? If so NO!!
No. Only earned income is counted against your Social Security.
Social security is not based on income but if you have the 40 quarters of work history and your age.
If you have a Social Security Number, you can be taxed regardless of your age.
It is a federal tax to support the Social Security old age and survivors benefits and the Social Security Disability Income benefits.
Yes it would be the same if you were working at age 100 and earned income from providing your services. You would still be required to pay the social security and medicare taxes on the earned income.
no - after age 70 1/2
Yes, you can collect Social Security and unearned income at the same time. There is no limit to the amount of unearned income (from investments, pensions, rental income, etc.) that you can receive while collecting Social Security retirement benefits. You are limited to how much earned income you can have (from wages or salary) if you are collecting Social Security before you reach your full retirement age, but there is no limit to the amount of unearned income you can have.
A person can start getting Social Security benefits at age 62. The longer a person waits the more Social Security pays. Because of additional income taxes on income from jobs, people with jobs normally wait until they are about 66 when the additional income tax caused because they are collecting social security stops before they start collecting Social Security. The additional income tax only applies to people with jobs. People with other retirement income do not need to pay it. So, people laid off at 62 without prospects of another job usually start collecting Social Security. People with good jobs hold off.
Age 73 is well beyond what Social Security considers full retirement age. There is no limit to how much income you can earn while continuing to draw benefits. You will not be penalized.
Social Security is a government redistribution program. It works something like this: All people between the ages of 18 (threshold of adulthood) and 62 (age of "retiree") pay a tax based on their income to the Social Security fund All people over the age of 62 collect a monthly check from the Social Security fund depending on their situation (married, number of dependents etc). This essentially means the money is being redistributed from youthful wage-earners to elderly retirees.
W. Robert Walton has written: 'The retirement decision' -- subject(s): Old age pensions, Retirement age, Retirement income, Social security, United States 'A time to live' -- subject(s): Retirement income, Social security
No. It would be treated as a normal pension payment.