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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
Restricted application strategy

Can I file a restricted application for Social Security spousal benefits?

If you were born before January 2, 1954, you may still be able to file a restricted application — claiming only spousal benefits while your own retirement keeps growing toward age 70. If you were born on or after that date, this strategy is closed. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 ended it for everyone younger than this cohort.

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

Can I file a restricted application for Social Security spousal benefits?

You may file a restricted application for Social Security spousal benefits only if you were born before January 2, 1954, and you are at full retirement age. Section 831 of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 closed the strategy for younger filers. For the qualifying cohort, your own benefit can keep growing at eight percent per year through delayed retirement credits, up to age 70.

Medicare questions overlap with retirement timing more often than people expect, and the Chapter advisors are who I send people to.

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If you are 73 or older and still navigating Medicare on top of retirement timing, Chapter's licensed advisors will walk you through Part A, Part B, and Part D options without trying to sell you a specific plan. The service is free, and they understand the tradeoffs that come with claiming Social Security at the same time you're managing Medicare premiums.

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Here's what to do, in 4 steps.

Confirm cohort eligibility, run the math at SSA, file by appointment with the right form. Restricted application is a deadline-sensitive strategy — you cannot leave delayed retirement credits on the table past age 70.

1. Confirm your birth date is before Jan 2, 1954

⏱ 1 minuteFree

The cohort cutoff is the load-bearing fact. If you were born on or after January 2, 1954, restricted application is closed by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015. Pull your birth certificate or SSA earnings record and confirm before you do anything else.

SSA filing rules ›

2. Confirm your spouse has filed (or that you're independently entitled as a divorced spouse)

⏱ Few minutesFree

For a current spouse: your spouse must have filed for their own retirement. For a divorced spouse: you may file independently if you've been divorced 2+ years and were married 10+ years — your ex doesn't need to know. Either path opens the restricted application door.

SSA spousal benefits planner ›

3. Run the numbers — spousal now, own at 70

⏱ 15-30 minutesFree

Log into your my Social Security account and pull your projected benefit at age 70 versus today. The math works when your own benefit at 70 (after delayed retirement credits) exceeds your spousal benefit. For most in this cohort, that's the case — but verify before you file.

my Social Security account ›

4. File by appointment — explicitly request restricted application

⏱ 30-60 minutesFree

Book an in-person or phone appointment. When you sit down, say the words: 'I want to file a restricted application for spousal benefits only.' Don't let the agent default to deemed filing — that's the trap. If they push back, ask for a supervisor and reference POMS GN 00204.020.

Schedule an SSA appointment ›

The math behind the restricted application

Born before Jan 2, 1954 Eligible cohort
Full retirement age (66 for cohort) Required age to file restricted
8% per year delayed retirement credit Own benefit growth rate
BBA 2015 Section 831 Statute that closed the strategy

Which of these sounds more like you?

The restricted application strategy is real and high-value, but the cohort is narrow. Pick the row that fits your situation.

I was born before Jan 2, 1954Still in the eligible cohort

You may still qualify for the restricted application strategy. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 grandfathered your cohort — anyone born before January 2, 1954.

The move: file for spousal benefits only at full retirement age, let your own benefit accrue 8% per year in delayed retirement credits until 70. If you haven't filed yet and your spouse has, this is the play.

Don't wait. Delayed retirement credits stop at age 70. Past that, you're leaving money permanently on the table.

20 years at Social Security taught me this

I've seen people in this cohort walk away from tens of thousands of dollars because they didn't know they still qualified. The strategy is real for you — but only until 70.

I'm still working past full retirement ageClassic restricted application candidate

If you're working past your full retirement age and you're in the eligible cohort, restricted application was designed for you.

Your own retirement benefit keeps growing on two fronts: continued earnings may bump up your top 35 years, and delayed retirement credits add 8% per year. Meanwhile, spousal benefits give you cash flow now — the income offsets the wait.

No earnings test penalty applies past full retirement age, so working full-time doesn't reduce your spousal benefit.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. The math here is favorable for most cohort-eligible filers, but if your spouse's earnings record is weak or you have unusual situations, talk to a fee-only retirement planner.

My spouse filed years agoYou may be set up to execute

If your spouse already filed and you were born before January 2, 1954, you've got the two preconditions for restricted application.

What you need: confirm your spouse is on the rolls (a quick my Social Security login will show it), confirm your own birth date, then book an SSA appointment.

The one trap: SSA staff who don't see many of these may default to deemed filing. Be explicit — 'restricted application for spousal benefits only.' Reference POMS GN 00204.020 if needed.

20 years at Social Security taught me this

Most people don't realize the language at the SSA appointment matters this much. The default isn't restricted — you have to ask for it by name.

I was divorced 10+ years agoIndependently entitled divorced spouse

If you were married 10+ years, divorced 2+ years, and you're in the eligible cohort, you may qualify to file a restricted application as an independently entitled divorced spouse — your ex doesn't need to know, and your ex doesn't need to have filed.

This is one of the cleanest restricted-application setups. You file for divorced-spouse benefits only, your own benefit grows at 8% per year, and your ex is never contacted.

Bring your marriage certificate and divorce decree to the appointment.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Divorced-spouse restricted application is a clean play for the eligible cohort, but if there's a complicated marital history (multiple long marriages, remarriages), get a second opinion.

I was born after Jan 2, 1954Restricted application is closed

Restricted application is closed for you. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 — specifically Section 831 — ended the strategy for anyone who turned 62 on or after January 2, 2016. That's anyone born on or after January 2, 1954.

What applies to you: deemed filing. When you file for either your own retirement or spousal benefits, SSA treats you as having filed for both at the same time. You receive the higher of the two.

This is the law and there is no workaround.

Don't get caught by this

Don't get caught by this. Some financial websites and old advisors still describe restricted application as a live option — it isn't, for your cohort. Anyone telling you otherwise is years out of date.

I already filed for my own retirementCannot un-do, but consider voluntary suspension

Once you've filed for your own retirement benefit, you cannot pivot to restricted application. The window to file restricted closed when you filed your own claim.

What may still help: voluntary suspension. If you're at full retirement age or older, you may suspend your retirement payments and earn delayed retirement credits at 8% per year until 70. The mechanic is different from restricted application, but the goal — growing your own benefit — is the same.

There is also a 12-month withdrawal-of-application rule if your filing was very recent.

Don't get caught by this

Don't get caught by this. Filing for your own benefit before exploring restricted application is the most common regret I see. If you filed within the last 12 months, look at withdrawal of application before doing anything else.

I'm helping a parent in the eligible cohortAdult child / caregiver

If your parent was born before January 2, 1954, is at or past full retirement age, and hasn't yet filed for their own retirement — they may still execute the restricted application before they turn 70.

What your parent needs from you: help confirming birth date, pulling the my Social Security account, and showing up at the SSA appointment with the right language. The phrase that matters: 'I want to file a restricted application for spousal benefits only.'

The deadline pressure is real. Delayed retirement credits stop at 70. If your parent is 73 or 74, the strategy still works — partial DRCs from the months between FRA and current age — but the runway shrinks every month.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. If your parent has cognitive issues or you're acting as a representative payee, the appointment process is different — reference POMS GN 00502 series and bring documentation.

None of these fit meOr I'm not at full retirement age yet

If none of the situations above describe you, restricted application probably isn't your move — either you're not in the cohort, you're not at full retirement age, or your spousal situation doesn't fit.

Good news: there are other ways to optimize Social Security claiming, and most are more broadly available than restricted application.

Start with the deemed filing rule, then explore voluntary suspension if you're at FRA, or look at general retirement claiming strategy if you're earlier in the timeline.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Restricted application is one tool among many; the right strategy depends on your earnings, your spouse's earnings, your health, and your tax picture.

Pick what works for you.

Restricted application sits at the intersection of retirement, spousal, and divorced-spouse rules. Here's what else may apply, especially if you or a parent are in the eligible cohort.

Deemed Filing Rule

If you were born on or after Jan 2, 1954, deemed filing applies — SSA treats you as having filed for both your own retirement and spousal benefits at once. You may want to read the deemed filing rule to understand why restricted application is closed for your cohort.

Spousal Benefits

You may qualify for a spousal benefit equal to up to 50% of your spouse's primary insurance amount at full retirement age, regardless of cohort. Restricted application is one way to claim it; deemed filing is the other.

Voluntary Suspension

If you've already filed for your own retirement, you may qualify to suspend payments at full retirement age and earn delayed retirement credits until age 70. This is a different mechanic than restricted application — same goal of growing your own benefit.

Delayed Retirement Credits

You may qualify for an 8% per year increase to your own retirement benefit for every year you delay between full retirement age and 70. The restricted application strategy lives or dies on these credits.

Independently Entitled Divorced Spouse

If you've been divorced 2+ years and were married 10+ years, you may qualify for a divorced-spouse benefit even if your ex hasn't filed. This independence is what lets divorced cohort-eligible filers execute restricted application without coordinating with an ex.

Medicare at 65

You may qualify for Medicare at 65, separate from any Social Security retirement decision. If you're in the restricted-application cohort, you're well past 65 — but Medicare timing still matters for premium changes and IRMAA brackets.

Everything people ask me

Can I still file a restricted application?

Only if you were born before January 2, 1954, and you are at full retirement age. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 (Section 831) closed restricted application for anyone born on or after January 2, 1954. There is no workaround — if you're in the younger cohort, deemed filing applies.

What's the benefit of filing restricted?

You collect spousal benefits now (up to 50% of your spouse's primary insurance amount at FRA) while your own retirement benefit grows at 8% per year through delayed retirement credits, until age 70. For the qualifying cohort, that's typically tens of thousands of dollars in lifetime additional benefits.

What's my full retirement age?

For the cohort that still qualifies for restricted application (born before January 2, 1954), full retirement age is 66. For those born 1955-1959, FRA is between 66 and 2 months and 66 and 10 months. For 1960 and later, FRA is 67. Restricted application requires you to be at full retirement age or older.

Do I have to be at full retirement age to file restricted?

Yes. Restricted application is only available at full retirement age or later. If you file before FRA, deemed filing kicks in automatically and SSA will treat you as having filed for both your own retirement and any spousal benefits at once. There is no early-filing version of restricted application.

What if my spouse hasn't filed yet?

For a current spouse: your spouse must have filed for their own retirement benefit before you can claim spousal. For a divorced spouse: you may qualify as 'independently entitled' if you've been divorced 2+ years and were married 10+ years — your ex doesn't need to have filed. The independently entitled rule is what makes divorced-spouse restricted application particularly clean for the eligible cohort.

Can I file early — say, at 64 — and still do this?

No. Pre-FRA filing triggers deemed filing automatically. Even for the grandfathered cohort, restricted application is only available at full retirement age or later. If you file at 64, SSA will treat the claim as a filing for both your own retirement and any spousal benefit, and you'll receive the higher of the two — the restricted-application door closes.

Does restricted application apply to disability benefits?

Restricted application is primarily about retirement vs spousal benefits at full retirement age. Disability has different mechanics — deemed filing rules don't apply if you're receiving spousal benefits because you're entitled to disability, and survivor benefits also have their own carve-outs. If your situation involves disability or survivor benefits, the rules are different and worth a separate conversation.

Can I withdraw my own application and try restricted instead?

Maybe — if you filed within the last 12 months and you're in the eligible cohort. SSA allows you to withdraw an application within 12 months of becoming entitled, but you have to repay any benefits you've already received and the withdrawal must be approved. After 12 months, the door is closed. If you're considering this, act fast and consult an SSA representative before any deadlines.

What's the difference between restricted application and voluntary suspension?

Restricted application: at FRA, you file for spousal benefits ONLY — your own retirement is never filed for, so it grows untouched. Voluntary suspension: you've already filed for your own retirement, then you suspend payments at FRA to earn delayed retirement credits. Both grow your own benefit at 8% per year, but restricted application is closed for those born on/after Jan 2, 1954, while voluntary suspension is still available to anyone at FRA.

What's the difference between restricted application and file-and-suspend?

File-and-suspend was a different mechanic: a worker filed for their own retirement, then immediately suspended it, which let a spouse claim spousal benefits while the worker earned delayed retirement credits. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 closed file-and-suspend for requests submitted on or after April 30, 2016 — you can no longer collect spousal benefits while the worker's own benefit is suspended. Restricted application is also closed (for younger cohorts), but it operated differently and has its own grandfathering rules.

Sources

Every figure and rule on this page is verified against primary sources. Last verified 2026-04-27.

  1. Restricted application is closed for individuals who turn 62 on or after January 2, 2016 — that is, those born on or after January 2, 1954. Closed by Section 831 of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-27)
  2. Restricted application remains available to individuals who turned 62 before January 2, 2016 — those born before January 2, 1954. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 grandfathered this cohort.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-27)
  3. To file a restricted application, the filer must be at full retirement age or older. Pre-FRA filing triggers deemed filing automatically.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  4. Delayed retirement credits accrue at 8% per year (2/3 of 1% per month) for individuals born in 1943 or later, beginning at full retirement age.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  5. Delayed retirement credits accrue from full retirement age until age 70 — the maximum credit window. POMS RS 00615.690 confirms 'increment month is any month beginning with the month of FRA and ending …secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  6. No delayed retirement credits accrue after age 70. POMS RS 00615.690 effective dates confirm: 'Effective with 1984, the work test ended at age 70, so the granting of DRCs ended at age 70.'secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  7. A spousal benefit at full retirement age equals up to 50% of the worker's primary insurance amount.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  8. Spousal benefits do not earn delayed retirement credits. DRCs apply only to a worker's own retirement benefit, not to spousal or dependent benefits.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  9. For a current spouse to claim a spousal benefit, the worker (the other spouse) must be entitled to retirement or disability benefits — generally meaning they have filed.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  10. An independently entitled divorced spouse may claim divorced-spouse benefits without the ex-spouse having filed, provided the marriage lasted 10+ years and the divorce occurred 2+ years ago.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-27)
  11. File-and-suspend (a related but distinct strategy) closed for requests submitted on or after April 30, 2016. Workers can still voluntarily suspend benefits at FRA to earn DRCs, but spousal benefits …ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-27)
  12. Full retirement age for individuals born 1943 through January 1, 1955 is age 66. This includes the entire restricted-application-eligible cohort (born before January 2, 1954).ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  13. The my Social Security online account portal lets eligible filers view personalized retirement benefit estimates at nine different claim ages, file applications, and check filing status. Available at …ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-07)
  14. Withdrawal of an application is permitted within 12 months of becoming entitled to benefits. The applicant must repay any benefits already received and the withdrawal must be approved by SSA.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  15. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 was signed into law on November 2, 2015. Section 831 included the deemed filing and voluntary suspension changes that closed restricted application and …govinfo.gov(verified 2026-05-07)

Helping a parent claim restricted application?

If your parent was born before January 2, 1954 and hasn't filed yet — they may still execute the restricted application before they turn 70. The window is closing. They can claim spousal income now while their own benefit keeps growing eight percent per year. The SSA appointment must be booked carefully — you have to explicitly ask for the restricted application or staff may default to deemed filing.

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