To the same place that it was going before you started receiving your SSB. To the trust fund.
when i was 16 years old i was earn monthly 1500 dollar
The amount of money you can make while collecting Social Security depends on your age and whether you have reached full retirement age. If you are under full retirement age, there is a limit to how much you can earn before your Social Security benefits are reduced. Once you reach full retirement age, there is no limit on how much you can earn while collecting Social Security.
Sure, but it's a waste of time. Applying for disability is a pain in the a** and it won't get you any more money. You should be collecting regular Social Security right now, even if you're still working.
Social Security payments received upon retirement depend almost entirely on the amount of money that has been paid into the system in the working years before that time. How much work is done and what income is earned are the main factors. Also important are the legal guidelines of the Social Security system itself at the time of one's retirement.
You cannot access your social security entitlement until you are eligible to collect social security. Then the people who are working will fund your entitlement.
Social security is basically when the government takes a certain percentage of money from the working generation and gives it to the retired generation. When the working generation become retired, they receive social security. Social security started after the Great Depression, when the government needed to make sure that people had money stored away to live after they stopped working. People get certain amounts of social security depending on how much they and their spouses worked as young people, as well as what jobs and how much they gave to social security. The current problem with social security is that the baby boomers are now becoming retired, and there are more of them than the current generation of working people. There is not enough money to support these retiring people, and unless the government subsidies social security or takes other measures, it is likely to fall apart before people currently in their 30s and 40s become retired. So basically, the idea of how social security works is that you put away money and you will get that money when you retire.
Social Security determines if an individual is working by looking at their earnings and employment status. They consider factors such as the amount of money earned, the type of work being done, and how many hours are worked.
If you collect Social Security at age 62 and continue to work, there is a limit to how much money you can earn without reducing your Social Security benefits. This limit changes each year, but in 2021, you can earn up to 18,960 before your benefits are reduced.
The amount of money you can make on Social Security depends on your earnings history and when you start receiving benefits. The average monthly benefit for retired workers in 2021 is about 1,500, but individual amounts can vary. Working while receiving Social Security benefits may also affect the amount you receive.
is there a limit as to how much money a person on social security can accumulate
It depends on several factors. First of all if your entire working career has been as a teacher in one of the 14 states whose teachers do not pay into social security, then the answer would be that you would receive no social security benefit because you never paid any money into it. Now, lets say you work as a teacher for 15 years in a state whose teachers DO pay into social security, such as Pennsylvania. You then decide to work for 15 years as a teacher in Ohio whose teachers do NOT pay into social security. Once you retire, you would indeed get social security due to the fact you worked 15 years in PA and paid into SS. HOWEVER, you would take a hit (called the Windfall Provision) because you are also collecting money from Ohio's pension.
No, you cannot use a social security card to withdraw money. A social security card may be useful if you want to open a bank account, though, and you can withdraw money from that.