None at all. That information is not part of a Social Security number. Numbers are issued in sequence- one after the other- in different regions.
No. The red numbers on the back of a social security card are control numbers that verify the authenticity of the card. They serve no other purpose.
A person cannot legally have two Social Security numbers. On occasion, the Social Security Administration may cancel an old number and transfer a person's records to a new number if the person's life or safety is in jeopardy, or in certain cases of identity theft. Only the new number will be valid.Beware companies offering to repair your credit by providing you with a new number. This is fraudulent.
The "lowest" social security number (001-01-0001) was the one issued to Grace D. Owen of Concord, New Hampshire the first three digits of social security numbers are used as identifiers for where a person was born
A tax file number in the United States is usually a person's Social Security Number. Every legal taxpayer in the nation has one of these numbers.
A Social Security Number can be broken down into three parts.Area Number, Group Number and Serial Number.The first three numbers represent the state in which the person was issued the Social Security Number (NOT neccessarily the state of birth, merely the location the card was issued.)Group Numbers: A two didget number by which all SSNs are broken down into smaller blocks to make administration easier. The group designations do not run sequentially but rather in their own pattern.Serial Numbers: Within a group designation serial numbers run consecutively from 0001 through 9999 THEREFORE, the SSN does not neccessarily designate your age. It cannot be used to show your exact age but it could be used comparitively. For example... If given two individuals with Social Security Numbers from the same Area and Designation but one had the last four 3004 and the second 4599 you could "guess" that the first individual received their Social Security Number first and therefore "may" be slightly older.
Social security numbers do not expire. They belong to the person who receive them for life. If the person legally returns to the United States, they would pick right back up using the same social security number.
The first person to receive a social security number is actually unknown. See Related Links.
First three numbers is the geographical area. Next two numbers is the group number. They start with odd then do even, not in a consecutive order. The last four is the serial number from 0001 to 9999. Unfortunately not that interesting or intuitive, kind of random numbers picked for each person.
The State identifier depends on what span of years the number was issued. Typically, the State Identifier is where the person lived at the time (the specific date) when the Social Security Number was issued. The Social Security Administration can tell you about your SS Number, if you cannot remember what State you lived in when you (or your parents) originally applied for your Social Security number.
It identifies you. It gives some information about the person. It is not a count or a total or an average, or any numeric kind of information. While it does have the word number in it, it is not counting anything. You never add social security numbers together, or get the average social security number or do any other such numerical calculation with them. You do that with quantitative data.
The person in need of "proxy" has to be the one to designate any alternate.
A person with a "crooked" social security number was asked for it.