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Dr. Ed Weir, Former SSA District Manager
Dr. Ed Weir, PhD Former SSA District Manager · 20 Years Inside Social Security · “Former” Sergeant, USMC LIVE Q&A almost every day on YouTube
A straight answer from Dr. Ed

How much is the Social Security spousal benefit?

Here's the deal: the spousal benefit calculation is simpler than people make it. It's 50% of your spouse's PIA at your full retirement age — not 50% of their actual check, and not affected by when they filed. Filing early reduces your amount; filing late doesn't grow it. Let me walk you through the math.

Dr. Ed Weir, PhD · 20 years inside Social Security · "Former" Sergeant, USMC
Updated April 2026

How much is the Social Security spousal benefit?

The maximum Social Security spousal benefit is 50% of the worker's Primary Insurance Amount (PIA) at the claimant's full retirement age. Filing before FRA permanently reduces it; filing after FRA doesn't grow it. The worker's own filing age does not affect the spousal calculation — spousal is always based on the worker's PIA. As of January 2025, the Government Pension Offset has been repealed.

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Here's what to do.

The math is easier than people think. Run through these in order to get to your number.

1. Find the worker's PIA — not the actual collected amount

⏱ 5 minutesFree

The spousal calculation uses the worker's Primary Insurance Amount (PIA), which is their benefit at their FRA. If they filed early at 62, their actual check is reduced — but the PIA is the higher full-FRA number. Log into the worker's my Social Security account and look at the FRA estimate, not the current monthly amount.

SSA my account ›

2. Multiply by 50% — that's your maximum spousal at your FRA

⏱ 1 minute of mathFree

Take the worker's PIA and multiply by 0.5. That's the maximum spousal benefit you can receive, payable at your full retirement age. If the worker's PIA is $3,000/month, the max spousal is $1,500/month. If your own retirement benefit at FRA exceeds this number, you'll receive your own instead.

POMS RS 00615.020 ›

3. Apply the early-filing reduction if you're claiming before YOUR FRA

⏱ 10 minutesFree

If you file spousal before your FRA, the reduction is 25/36 of 1% per month for the first 36 months and 5/12 of 1% per month beyond that. At 62 with FRA 67, that's 35% off, so you'd receive 32.5% of the worker's PIA instead of 50%. Use SSA's online calculator to confirm your specific reduction.

SSA Quick Calculator ›

4. If you have a non-covered government pension, GPO was repealed in January 2025 — confirm SSA recalculated

⏱ 30 minutes (call SSA)Free

The Social Security Fairness Act of 2024 repealed the Government Pension Offset (and WEP) effective January 2025. If you previously had your spousal or survivor benefit reduced because of a state, federal, or non-covered pension, SSA should have recalculated. If you haven't seen the adjustment, contact SSA at 1-800-772-1213 and ask specifically about the Fairness Act recalculation.

SSA on Social Security Fairness Act ›

2026 spousal-benefit math

50% Maximum spousal benefit (% of worker's PIA at your FRA)
35% Reduction at age 62 (FRA 67)
32.5% Spousal at 62 with FRA 67 (% of PIA)
150–188% Family maximum range (% of PIA)

Which of these sounds more like you?

The spousal calculation has a few wrinkles — family maximum, GPO repeal, dual entitlement. Find the situation closest to yours.

How do I find my spouse's PIA?Use the FRA estimate, not the current check

Log into the worker's my Social Security account at ssa.gov/myaccount. Look at the estimated benefit at full retirement age — that's the PIA. Don't use the current monthly check if they filed early; that's the reduced amount, not the PIA.

If the worker isn't online, SSA can mail a Statement on request. Or call 1-800-772-1213 for the FRA amount.

I'm filing at FRA — the math is straightforward50% flat, no reduction

If you file spousal at your full retirement age, the calculation is: worker's PIA × 0.50 = your spousal benefit. No reduction. No COLA-stacked formulas. Just half of the worker's full benefit.

If the worker's PIA is $3,200, your spousal at FRA is $1,600/month. SSA pays the higher of this or your own retirement amount.

I'm filing at 62 — what's the actual number?32.5% of PIA with FRA 67

Filing at 62 with FRA 67 means a 35% reduction: you get 32.5% of the worker's PIA instead of 50%. If the worker's PIA is $3,200, your spousal at 62 is $1,040/month, not $1,600.

That reduction is permanent. Subsequent COLAs apply to the reduced amount.

My spouse filed at 62 — does my spousal go down too?No — spousal uses PIA, not the worker's check

The worker's early-filing reduction does not reduce your spousal benefit. The spousal calculation always uses the worker's PIA (FRA amount). If your spouse filed at 62 with FRA 67, their check is reduced by 30%, but your spousal calculation still uses the unreduced PIA.

The practical exception is the family maximum, which can cap the total paid on a single record — but that affects all dependents proportionally, not just you.

20 years at Social Security taught me this

People assume their spousal must be lower because the worker filed early. It's not. The PIA is the PIA. The most common mistake I saw was clients calculating spousal off the worker's actual check.

We have multiple kids on my record — family max?Family max can constrain total payments

If multiple dependents (spouse and minor children) are drawing on the same worker's record, the family maximum applies. The cap ranges from 150% to 188% of the worker's PIA — so the worker's own benefit plus all dependents combined can't exceed that ceiling.

If the total exceeds the cap, dependent benefits are reduced proportionally. The worker's own benefit is not reduced; only the dependents' shares are scaled down.

Don't budget at full 50% if you have multiple dependents

If you have a spouse plus two kids drawing on a record, the family max often forces a cut. Get SSA to run the actual numbers — don't assume each dependent gets the listed maximum.

I have a non-covered government pensionGPO was repealed in January 2025

The Government Pension Offset (GPO), which used to reduce spousal/survivor benefits by two-thirds of any non-covered government pension, was repealed by the Social Security Fairness Act of 2024. Effective January 2025.

If you previously had GPO applied, SSA should have recalculated your benefit and issued any retroactive amounts. If you haven't seen the adjustment in your check, call SSA at 1-800-772-1213 and reference 'Social Security Fairness Act recalculation.'

Major win for federal/state retirees

I worked GPO cases for years — this repeal restored full spousal and survivor benefits to over 2 million retirees, primarily teachers, police, firefighters, and federal CSRS employees. If you stopped applying because GPO would have wiped out the benefit, reapply.

My own retirement may be higher than spousalSSA pays the higher of the two

If your own retirement amount at your filing age exceeds the spousal calculation, SSA pays your own retirement — not both stacked. The spousal benefit only fills the gap when your own is less than the spousal amount.

For those born January 2, 1954 or later, filing for either before FRA triggers a deemed claim of both. So in practice, you don't get to delay one and take the other early.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

If your own benefit will eventually exceed the spousal amount with delayed credits, you may want to delay your own retirement to 70. A fee-only Social Security planner can run the numbers. The break-even depends on your full income picture.

I'm helping a parent run the numbersBystander — the two inputs that drive everything

To run the spousal calculation for a family member, you need two numbers: the worker's PIA (FRA estimate from ssa.gov/myaccount) and the spouse's full retirement age. Multiply PIA by 0.5 for the FRA spousal amount. Apply the early-filing reduction if claiming earlier.

If the parent has their own work record, also gather their FRA estimate. SSA pays the higher of own retirement or spousal, not both.

Other programs worth checking while you sort this out

If your monthly income is modest, you may qualify for help with Medicare costs, food, utilities, or property taxes. Worth a five-minute look.

Medicare Savings Program (MSP)

If your countable income is modest, MSP can pay your Part B premium of $202.90/month plus deductibles and copays. Most retirees and spouses who qualify never apply because nobody tells them.

Extra Help (Low Income Subsidy)

Extra Help reduces Medicare Part D drug costs to near zero for those with limited income. SSA administers it directly. Worth a five-minute screen if your spousal benefit is on the lower end.

Medicaid

If your retirement and spousal income is below your state's threshold, you may qualify for Medicaid alongside Medicare. Medicaid covers what Medicare leaves out — long-term services, dental, vision, transportation.

SNAP

Food assistance for low-income households. Senior households often qualify at higher gross income than they expect because of the standard deduction and medical-expense deduction.

LIHEAP

Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program helps pay heating and cooling bills. Each state runs its own program; income thresholds and benefit amounts vary.

Property Tax Relief

Most states offer senior property tax exemptions, deferrals, or circuit-breaker credits that significantly reduce property tax burden for retirees who own their home.

Everything people ask me

What is the maximum spousal benefit?

50% of the worker's Primary Insurance Amount (PIA), payable at the claimant's full retirement age. Filing earlier permanently reduces it. Filing later does not increase it — spousal benefits do not earn delayed retirement credits.

Does the worker's filing age reduce my spousal benefit?

No. The spousal benefit is calculated from the worker's PIA (the FRA amount), not from the actual check the worker is collecting. If the worker filed early at 62, their check is reduced — but your spousal calculation still uses the unreduced PIA.

What's the spousal benefit at age 62 if FRA is 67?

32.5% of the worker's PIA. The reduction at 62 with FRA 67 is 35%, leaving 32.5% of the full 50% maximum. The reduction is permanent.

What's the early-reduction formula?

25/36 of 1% per month for the first 36 months before FRA, then 5/12 of 1% per month for additional months. So 36 months early = 25% reduction; 60 months early (62 with FRA 67) = 35%.

Does the family maximum apply?

Yes, if multiple dependents draw on the same record. The family maximum ranges from 150% to 188% of PIA. If total dependent benefits exceed the cap, dependents are reduced proportionally. The worker's own benefit is not reduced.

Can I get spousal AND my own retirement?

No — not stacked. SSA pays the higher of the two. If your own retirement exceeds the spousal amount, you receive your own. If the spousal is higher, you receive the difference on top of your own up to the spousal amount.

What was the Government Pension Offset?

GPO was a rule that reduced spousal/survivor benefits by two-thirds of any non-covered government pension (federal CSRS, state teacher/police pensions). It was repealed by the Social Security Fairness Act of 2024, effective January 2025.

Is GPO completely gone now?

Yes. The Social Security Fairness Act fully repealed both GPO and WEP effective January 2025. SSA has been recalculating benefits and issuing retroactive payments to affected retirees. If you haven't received your adjustment, call SSA.

Will COLA increases apply to my spousal benefit?

Yes. Cost-of-living adjustments apply to spousal benefits the same way they apply to retirement benefits. The COLA is added to your reduced or full spousal amount each January based on CPI-W.

What if my spouse is the lower earner — can they get a higher benefit?

If the lower-earning spouse's own retirement exceeds half of your PIA, they get their own benefit. If their own is less than half your PIA, they get a spousal amount that brings them up to 50% of your PIA at their FRA. They never get more than 50% of your PIA on the spousal side.

Sources

Every figure and rule on this page is verified against primary sources. Last verified 2026-04-26.

  1. Maximum spousal benefit equals 50% of the worker's Primary Insurance Amount, payable at the claimant's full retirement age.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  2. Spousal early-filing reduction = 25/36 of 1% per month for first 36 months before FRA; 5/12 of 1% per month thereafter.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  3. Maximum reduction at age 62 with FRA 67 = 35%, paying 32.5% of worker's PIA.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  4. Spousal benefit is calculated from worker's PIA, not from the worker's actual filing-age benefit; worker's early-filing reduction does not reduce spouse's benefit.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  5. Spousal benefits do not earn delayed retirement credits past FRA.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  6. Family maximum benefit ranges from 150% to 188% of worker's PIA, capping total amounts paid to dependents on a single record.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-27)
  7. Social Security Fairness Act of 2024 repealed the Government Pension Offset effective January 2025.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-27)
  8. Social Security Fairness Act also repealed the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) effective January 2025.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-27)
  9. PIA is calculated from the worker's 35 highest-earning years indexed for inflation through the AIME and bend-point formula.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  10. When a beneficiary is dual-entitled (own retirement plus spousal), SSA pays the higher of the two amounts; the lower benefit is offset by the higher.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-27)

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