The post Ford Is Calling Its ‘Gray Beard’ Engineers Back to Work. At 68, He Feared the Paycheck Would Cut His Social Security. Past Full Retirement Age, It Doesn’t. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
He is 68, a mechanical engineer who retired a couple of years ago, started his Social Security check, and thought his commuting days were over. Then his old employer called. The company wants him back, not full time, just enough to help younger engineers spot failure modes that algorithms have not yet learned. The pay is real. So is his hesitation. He has heard that going back to work can shrink the Social Security benefit he already claimed.
His situation is common right now. Ford (NYSE:F) has been calling veteran “gray beard” engineers back to the shop floor after concluding that artificial intelligence could not replace decades of hands-on judgment, and similar quiet re-hirings are happening across manufacturing and the trades. With unemployment sitting at 4.3% and experienced talent in short supply, un-retirement offers from former employers are landing in inboxes that thought they were done. One retiree recently described the exact knot our engineer is feeling: he wanted the work, he wanted the money, but he feared his benefit would get clawed back the moment payroll started.
Here is what should let him sleep tonight. The Social Security earnings test, which withholds part of your benefit when wages exceed a threshold, applies only before you reach full retirement age (FRA). Once you hit FRA, the test disappears. You can earn ten thousand dollars, a hundred thousand, or a million in W-2 wages, and Social Security will not reduce your monthly check by a single dollar.
Full retirement age depends on birth year. For anyone born in 1960 or later, FRA is 67. For people born in the late 1950s, it lands somewhere between 66 and 67. Our 68-year-old engineer is past it either way. The earnings test he is worried about simply does not apply.
The check keeps coming, at its full amount, no matter how many hours Ford puts on his timesheet.
A protected benefit still leaves room for other consequences. Three things move softly in the background when an older worker goes back on payroll.
The fear that drove his hesitation was the wrong one. The check is safe. The real questions are smaller: how much of the benefit will show up as taxable income next April, whether the paycheck pushes him into an IRMAA bracket that follows him into 2028, and whether the work itself is something he wants to do.
Going back to work after FRA is a tax planning exercise. A quick conversation with a tax preparer before the first paycheck hits is cheaper than a surprise in April or a Medicare letter two winters from now.
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The post Ford Is Calling Its ‘Gray Beard’ Engineers Back to Work. At 68, He Feared the Paycheck Would Cut His Social Security. Past Full Retirement Age, It Doesn’t. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


