Quick Read
A spouse earning $1,200 monthly can claim an additional $300 spousal top-up by asking Social Security explicitly, raising the check to $1,500 and the household total to $4,500.
The higher earner’s claiming age is the hardest decision to undo: filing at 62 instead of 67 permanently shrinks both his benefit and his spouse’s survivor amount.
A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.
She is 67, raised four children through 18 years out of the workforce, and returned to part-time office work in her 50s. Her own Social Security record produces a benefit of $1,200 a month. Her husband, the longer earner, qualifies for roughly $3,000 at his full retirement age (FRA). She assumed Social Security would mostly arrive in his check, with hers as a modest supplement. When they sat down with the household number, one box on the application changed the picture: her own monthly check rises to $1,500, and the combined household income moves to $4,500.
Couples often find themselves in this position. A version that shows up regularly on retirement forums: the husband files for his benefit, the wife assumes hers is locked at whatever her record produces, and nobody mentions the spousal top-up sitting on the table.
The Spousal Top-Up That Most People Miss
The rule is straightforward. A spouse can receive up to half of the higher earner’s Primary Insurance Amount (PIA), the benefit amount calculated at full retirement age. In practice, the lower-earning spouse receives her own check plus a top-up that fills the gap between her benefit and the 50% mark.
Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement
Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.
In their case, the arithmetic is simple:
Husband’s full retirement benefit: $3,000 a month. This is the anchor figure for everything that follows.
Half of his benefit: $1,500. That is the ceiling for her spousal entitlement.
Her own benefit: $1,200. The Social Security Administration (SSA) pays this first.
Spousal top-up: $300, the difference between her own check and the $1,500 ceiling. Combined, she receives $1,500.
Two conditions must hold. The higher-earning spouse must have already filed for his own retirement benefit. And the lower-earning spouse must apply for the spousal portion. The SSA will pay it, but does not chase you down if you skip the question on the application. The relevant form is SSA-2-BK.
Because she is at her FRA of 67, there is no reduction. Had she claimed at 62, both her own benefit and the spousal portion would have been permanently smaller. That $300 monthly top-up compounds across a 20-year retirement, before any cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs). The 2026 COLA of 2.8% grows that figure each year.
Why Her Husband’s Claiming Age Matters More Than Hers
Two interactions with the rest of their picture deserve attention.
The first is survivor benefits. When the higher-earning spouse dies, the surviving spouse steps up to 100% of his benefit, not 50%. Her $1,500 would become roughly $3,000, replacing his check entirely. Every dollar he adds to his benefit by waiting to file flows through to her survivor check later. His claiming age shapes two lifetimes of income.
The second is taxes. With $4,500 a month in Social Security plus any traditional IRA or pension withdrawals, most of their benefits become taxable. Once a couple’s combined income crosses roughly $44,000, up to 85% of Social Security can be pulled into taxable income. That is a reason to think carefully about Roth conversions during low-income years before required minimum distributions (RMDs) begin at age 73.
Inflation pressure is real. Consumer prices rose 3.8% year over year in April 2026, the highest reading in nearly three years, with groceries, gas, and electricity all climbing faster than wages. A fixed pension loses ground against that backdrop every year. The annual COLA on Social Security is one of the few automatic inflation adjustments in most retirement income plans, which is part of what makes the base benefit worth protecting.
What to Walk Away With
If one spouse has a thin earnings record because of years spent raising children or caring for family, the spousal benefit is almost always worth applying for. The higher earner must be receiving his own benefit first, and the lower-earning spouse must ask for the top-up explicitly when she files. A call to Social Security to confirm both boxes are checked takes 20 minutes and is worth $300 a month in this household.
The hardest mistake to undo is the higher earner’s claiming age. His benefit sets the ceiling on her spousal top-up today and becomes her entire check the day he passes. Filing early at age 62 instead of 67 trims both numbers permanently, for both lifetimes.
Every couple’s earnings history, ages, and other income look different, and small details can shift the math. The underlying principle does not change: when there is a wide gap between two spouses’ benefits, ask the spousal question loud and clear.
Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement
Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.
And no, it’s got nothing to do with increasing your income, savings, clipping coupons, or even cutting back on your lifestyle. It’s much more straightforward (and powerful) than any of that. Frankly, it’s shocking more people don’t adopt the habit given how easy it is.

