Spousal Benefits for Divorcees

by | Nov 8, 2022 | Spousal IRA | 4 comments




You could be entitled to claim up to HALF of an ex’s Social Security benefit! Many divorced individuals do not realize that they are actually eligible to collect a spousal Social Security benefit based on their ex-spouse’s work record! In this video, Jim discusses how Spousal benefits for divorcees work as well as the criteria you must meet to claim these important benefits.

To get a free copy of The Little Black Book of Social Security Secrets go to www.paytaxeslater.com/ss.

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4 Comments

  1. deb patterson

    You didn't touch upon if he's currently receiving Ssi, because in one of there pamphlets it said I could receive a hirer disability amount on his work record! But I was told that I receive ssdi and because he gets ssdi I can't get his benefit amount! I'm legally disabled but because his sister is a retired licensed Court reporter and knows a lot of Judges he's gotten away with everything including a Judgement upon when he received a settlement to pay house off! He's working and making 1,200 week and up! I only get 733 +37 ssi because I'm below FPL I'm afraid to turn him in because he's dangerous and I'm not sure if I know his social security number but he signs everything over to his sister and being a member of the court and her husband being a retired Chicago police officer, he'll get away with it like usual! He was also a tax rebel and I talked him into filing taxes. I worked in a salon and finished cosmology school. I couldn't even afford to renew my license in 2011. So yes the one's you'd least expect it are the very ones defying the system his father had to pay back for being a tax rebel but not my ex probably because he just started filing with me!

  2. Ladybug

    L

  3. Donald Keller

    I was married for 63 years, and my wife passed away a years ago in July, she was drawing 816.00 a month in ss, and I was told because I draw right at 50,000 a year and a man at SS told me I make too much to draw on my Wifes SS, but yet you can have more then one ex spouse and they can all draw on your SS, but yet that money that was taken out of my wifes pay came out of our pay, I don't understand,

  4. Deborah Cazalas

    I was married over 10 years, divorced over 2 years and never remarried.
    I started receiving SSDI a few years ago. I will be 62 next January, my ex will be 64 next March, he plans on retiring when he is around 66. After turning 62, my SSDI will automatically become my SS.
    If I decide to draw on his at that time, would I receive half of what he would have had if he retired at 62, or at his present age are his date of retirement?

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