• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Why Even Warren Buffett Is Cashing Out of One of His Biggest Winners Right Now

November 9, 2025

I’m a Professional Investor: You Need to Learn About the Next New Investment on the Horizon

November 9, 2025

Risk Tolerance Feels Good But Risk Capacity Pays Your Retirement Bills

November 8, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Why Even Warren Buffett Is Cashing Out of One of His Biggest Winners Right Now
  • I’m a Professional Investor: You Need to Learn About the Next New Investment on the Horizon
  • Risk Tolerance Feels Good But Risk Capacity Pays Your Retirement Bills
  • 8 Mistakes to Avoid When Buying Coffee at the Grocery Store
  • 15 Short Certificate Programs That Can Open Doors to Higher-Paying Jobs
  • Ex-Trump advisor raises alarm over bipartisan credit card plan that could hurt Americans
  • US household debt hits a new record, NY Fed finds
  • Pols Fear Social Security Reform, But Experts Lean In With Solutions
Sunday, November 9
Facebook Twitter Instagram
FintechoPro
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
FintechoPro
Home » Social Security Admits Its Website Has Been Providing Crazy Estimates
Taxes

Social Security Admits Its Website Has Been Providing Crazy Estimates

News RoomBy News RoomNovember 4, 20230 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

In this October 20th Forbes column, I claimed that Social Security’s website was projecting lower benefits for worker than it had just a few months back. This was confirmed today in an email that Social Security sent to recent visitors.

One of my company’s Maximize My Social Security software users sent me the notice below, which he received today from Social Security. The notice admits it’s been providing mistaken benefit estimates. This is highly troubling on several grounds.

  • The mistake was massive. Workers were, in the two cases I discussed, being told their future benefits were up to 17 percent lower than had previously been estimated.
  • The mistake apparently wasn’t caught until our client notified me that, unlike Social Security’s software, our software was showing no change, let alone a huge change, in his future benefit.
  • Social Security apparently didn’t realize it was providing crazy benefit estimates to, presumably, millions of its website visitors until I notified a senior official at Social Security.
  • The mistaken information was disbursed for over more than a month — between September 23rd and October 27th!
  • There was no clear reason for anyone to modify the website’s benefit estimator code. Yes, their estimates can be miles off base for those under 60 — because they assume no future economy-wide wage growth, which makes a huge difference to projected future benefit. And, yes, their estimates can be far off base for those under 60 because they assume no future inflation, notwithstanding the very high inflation we’ve just experienced and the significant inflation we continue to experience. And, yes, their estimates can be far off base for those working after age 60 due both to assuming no future inflation and that those working after age 60 continue doing so until full retirement age. But Social Security has chosen to adopt these assumptions forever and hasn’t suggested it was changing them (unless I missed an announcement). So, if there was no reason to change the code, how did the code change to produce bizarre benefit estimates — for an entire month?!!! The answer is either someone internal was fiddling with the code for no good reason or worse — Social Security got externally hacked.
  • I suspect a hack, although I have no direct evidence of this. Certainly, Social Security wouldn’t disclose a hack if it did, indeed, arise. Actually, I suspect this is the second hack Social Security has experienced in the last two years. On February 23, 2022, I reported in Forbes that Social Security had sent unknown millions of workers benefits statements that were completely screwed up. The statement emailed to me by a different client, which I copied in my column, specified essentially the same retirement benefit at age 62 as at full retirement age. It also specified a higher benefit for taking benefits several months before full retirement age. Anyone who knows about Social Security’s rules could tell, at a glance, that the benefit statement was nuts. Benefits taken at age 62 are 30 percent lower, in real terms, than those taken at the full retirement age of 67. And they certainly aren’t higher if taken a few months before full retirement. Again, this is the same benefit statement that SSA has been sending out for years. Why would anyone internal have been assigned to “fix” it if it wasn’t broken — hence, my concern that the system is being backed. Interestingly, I believe I was, yet again, the first person to report this to senior Social Security officials.

Here’s the only way I know to get completely correct information about your Social Security benefits:

Don’t Ask Social Security a Single Question. Don’t Read What’s On Social Security’s Website. Don’t Trust their Calculators or Benefit Statements, AND DON

DON
’T TRUST THE BENEFIT AMOUNTS YOU’RE RECEIVING
.

This is harsh, but that’s where I’m at. I’m particularly concerned that no one consults Social Security in light of the fact that Social Security is annually clawing back over 1 million Americans for alleged, but not proven overpayments — i.e., for Social Security miscalculating their benefits.

Social Security Is Clawing Back the Benefits of Almost 1 Million Americans Annually. You Could Be Next!

60 Minutes is running an exposé on the system’s financial abuse this Sunday — November 5th. Here’s a promo. You’ll see, if you watch the episode, Anderson Cooper interviewing famed personal finance journalist, Terry Savage, me, and several clawback victims.

I’ve been writing about what I’ve been calling Social Security horror stories for over a decade. This spring, Terry and I decided to ask people to send us their horror stories. In short order, we collected over 150. And more are arriving daily.

They will all be posted, starting next week, at SocialSecurityHorrorStories.com. You’ll also be able, starting on November 6th, to post your own horror story and get a copy of our new book Social Security Horror Stories — Protect Yourself From the System and Avoid Clawbacks. We’re self-publishing the book on Amazon
AMZN
.

Terry and I are determined to get Congress to stop Social Security’s abusive practices. Its clawbacks typically run in the tens of thousands of dollars. They typically are demanded decades after the alleged overpayments. They come with no explanation. The appeal process is straight out of Kafka. They can range from $175 to $301,000. Clawback victims can be five years old or 85. Rich or poor, it doesn’t matter. Social Security’s mantra is, in effect,

Our Mistake is Your Mistake and Pay Up or We’ll Stop Your Benefit

Since Terry appears regularly on CBS in Chicago, she was able to contact the producers of 60 Minutes. They immediately realized this is a huge, terrible, and fixable (by Congress) story.

How do clawbacks connect to Social Security’s website miscalculations? The answer is that the system is making benefit-calculation mistakes — indeed, it may be making mistakes about its mistakes — left, right and center. The reasons are laid out in our book as a simple means of protecting yourself from clawbacks and, if you are already collecting, checking that the benefit you’re receiving is actually neither too high or too low, but absolutely correct to the dollar.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Building Housing Lowers Prices But “Supply Skeptics” Don’t Believe It

Taxes November 30, 2023

Options To Improve Child Tax Credit For Low-Income Families: An Update

Taxes November 29, 2023

The (Foreign) Gift That Keeps On Giving – IRS Penalties

Taxes November 28, 2023

IRS Doesn’t Need The Blocked Income Tax Regulations In Coca-Cola

Taxes November 27, 2023

Most Married Couples File Taxes Jointly With IRS, But Should You?

Taxes November 26, 2023

Which Trusts Save Taxes, Which Do Not, And Which Are Illegal?

Taxes November 24, 2023
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

I’m a Professional Investor: You Need to Learn About the Next New Investment on the Horizon

November 9, 20251 Views

Risk Tolerance Feels Good But Risk Capacity Pays Your Retirement Bills

November 8, 20251 Views

8 Mistakes to Avoid When Buying Coffee at the Grocery Store

November 8, 20251 Views

15 Short Certificate Programs That Can Open Doors to Higher-Paying Jobs

November 8, 20250 Views
Don't Miss

Ex-Trump advisor raises alarm over bipartisan credit card plan that could hurt Americans

By News RoomNovember 7, 2025

FIRST ON FOX: Former Trump economic advisor and Unleash Prosperity’s Steve Moore has sounded the…

US household debt hits a new record, NY Fed finds

November 7, 2025

Pols Fear Social Security Reform, But Experts Lean In With Solutions

November 7, 2025

Want to Retire Overseas on a Military Pension? Here Are the 5 Best Places to Stretch Your Dollars.

November 7, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 FintechoPro. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.