Contributed by: Kali Hassinger, CFP®, CDFA®
Social Security benefits for nearly 64 million Americans will increase by 1.3% beginning in January 2021. The adjustment is calculated based on data from the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, or CPI‐W, through the third quarter. This cost of living adjustment (COLA for short) is among one of the smallest received, other than when the adjustment was zero.
The Social Security taxable wage base will increase to $142,800 for 2021, which is a 3.7% increase from $137,700 in 2020. This means that employees will pay 6.2% of Social Security tax on the first $142,800 earned, which translates to $8,854 of tax. Employers match the employee amount with an equal contribution. The Medicare tax remains at 1.45% on all income, with an additional surtax for individuals earning over $200,00 and married couples filing jointly who earn over $250,000.
Medicare premium increases have not yet been announced, but trustees are estimating Part B premiums will increase by about $9 or less per month for those not subject to the income‐related surcharge. Unfortunately, the Social Security COLA adjustment is often partially or completely wiped out by the increase in Medicare premiums.
For many, Social Security is one of the only forms of guaranteed fixed income that will rise over the course of retirement. The Senior Citizens League estimates, however, that Social Security benefits have lost approximately 33% of their buying power since the year 2000. This is why, when working to run retirement spending and safety projections, we factor an erosion of Social Security’s purchasing power into our clients’ financial plans.
Kali Hassinger, CFP®, CDFA®, is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional at Center for Financial Planning, Inc.® She has more than a decade of financial planning and insurance industry experience.