The post A Couple Claimed at 62 and Invested It. The Dividends Pushed Their Own Social Security Into the Taxable Zone. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A couple, both about 64, claimed Social Security at 62 and invested every check in a taxable brokerage account, following the Dave Ramsey playbook. Two years in, the account has grown, dividends arrive quarterly, and a few winners have been trimmed for gains. Then the tax return arrives, and more of their Social Security is taxable than expected. This is the wrinkle the “claim early and invest it” debate almost never mentions. You can execute the strategy correctly and still hand back a meaningful chunk through a tax-code quirk unchanged since 1984.
On retirement forums, confused questions appear every spring: “We invested the checks like we were told to. Why is the IRS now taxing 85% of our benefits?” The answer lies in a calculation most people have never heard of.
The IRS determines how much Social Security is taxable using provisional income, sometimes called combined income. The formula: your adjusted gross income (AGI), plus any tax-exempt interest, plus half of your Social Security benefits. For a married couple filing jointly, once that number crosses $44,000, up to 85% of benefits become taxable. Those thresholds have not been adjusted for inflation since 1984, even as benefits themselves keep rising. The 2026 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) alone was 2.8%, pushing more retirees over a line that has stood still for forty-two years.
Every dividend, interest payment, and realized capital gain inside that taxable brokerage account lands on the tax return as ordinary income or capital gains. All of it lifts adjusted gross income, which lifts provisional income, which drags more Social Security into the taxable zone.
Say the couple collects roughly $40,000 a year in combined benefits. Half of that, $20,000, is already in the provisional income bucket before they earn a dime elsewhere. Add a pension, a part-time paycheck, or a brokerage account throwing off yields in the neighborhood of today’s roughly 4.5% 10-year Treasury rate, and they sail past $44,000 without trying. The 85% ceiling represents the share of the benefit subject to tax, and at that cap a larger income tax bill still arrives every April.
For anyone born in 1960 or later, claiming at 62 instead of the full retirement age (FRA) of 67 means roughly a 30% smaller monthly check for life. On a $2,500 benefit, that is $750 a month, or about $9,000 a year, gone permanently. The brokerage account has to clear that hurdle before the strategy breaks even, and now the dividends it generates are taxing a benefit that was already reduced. Suze Orman has put it bluntly: “Most of the time it absolutely makes no sense at all taking Social Security before your full retirement age.”
This is why the location of invested money matters as much as the decision to invest it. A Roth IRA throws off no provisional income, but Social Security checks cannot be deposited into a Roth without earned income from a job. That is the structural gap the brokerage approach creates. The same dividends that look great on a year-end statement also count toward the Medicare income-related premium surcharge, known as IRMAA, which kicks in a couple of years later based on the same tax return.
A taxable brokerage account is simply the most tax-visible account type, and pairing it with early Social Security stacks two taxable income streams on top of frozen thresholds.
If you are weighing this path, two questions matter most:
The hardest mistake to undo is the claiming age itself. The tax surprise is annoying but fixable through asset location and withdrawal sequencing. The reduced benefit follows you for life, as does the smaller survivor benefit your spouse would inherit. Model your own numbers before treating any rule of thumb as gospel.
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The post A Couple Claimed at 62 and Invested It. The Dividends Pushed Their Own Social Security Into the Taxable Zone. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
