Carol Martinez from Phoenix thought she was smart claiming Social Security at 62. Two years later, she discovered her husband’s benefit could have boosted their monthly income by $127 — money they’ve been leaving on the table for 24 months straight. She’s not alone: millions of American couples are missing out on spousal benefits that could add $100 or more to their monthly retirement checks.
The math is startling. With 2025’s 2.5% cost-of-living adjustment, the average couple now receives $3,089 monthly from Social Security. But couples who understand spousal benefits can claim up to 50% of the higher earner’s full retirement benefit — potentially adding $6,000 annually to household income.
The spousal benefit most couples completely miss
Here’s what Social Security doesn’t advertise: if your own retirement benefit is low, you can claim a spousal benefit worth up to half of your partner’s full retirement amount. This isn’t additional money on top of your spouse’s benefit — it’s a separate entitlement many couples never claim.
“The biggest mistake I see is couples assuming they automatically get the best deal,” explains Dr. Ed Weir, former Social Security insider. “You must actively apply for spousal benefits. The system won’t automatically give you the higher amount.”
The process works like this: you first claim your own Social Security benefit, then Social Security calculates whether spousal benefits would pay more. If your spousal benefit exceeds your personal benefit, they pay the difference. For someone with a $800 monthly personal benefit married to someone earning $2,000 monthly, spousal benefits could boost total income to $1,000 monthly — a $200 increase.
Unlike expensive vacation experiences that cost $150 for a single day, this financial strategy costs nothing to implement but delivers monthly returns for decades.
Why timing your claim saves thousands
The Social Security Administration’s Deputy Associate Commissioner warns that claiming spousal benefits before full retirement age permanently reduces monthly payments by up to 35%. For someone with full retirement age of 67, claiming spousal benefits at 62 means accepting 32.5% less money every month for life.
Consider Janet and Robert from suburban Dallas. Janet worked part-time raising their kids and qualified for $600 monthly at full retirement. Robert’s benefit at full retirement age is $2,400 monthly. If Janet claims spousal benefits at full retirement age, she’d receive $1,200 monthly — doubling her Social Security income.
But here’s the catch: spousal benefits don’t increase with delayed retirement credits. Even if Robert waits until 70 to claim his $3,000 monthly maximum benefit, Janet’s spousal benefit stays capped at 50% of his full retirement amount, not his delayed amount.
“Timing coordination between spouses can literally make or break retirement security,” notes Hartford Funds financial planner Sarah Chen. “We’ve seen couples lose $100 to $400 monthly simply by claiming in the wrong order.”
The 2025 policy change nobody’s talking about
Starting January 2024, the Social Security Fairness Act eliminated two provisions that previously reduced spousal benefits for government retirees. The Windfall Elimination Provision and Government Pension Offset no longer slash benefits for teachers, firefighters, and other public servants.
This change particularly helps couples where one spouse receives a government pension. Previously, these pensions could reduce spousal Social Security benefits by up to two-thirds. Now these couples can claim full spousal benefits, potentially restoring $200 to $500 monthly.
Many retirees assume they need expensive retirement destinations to stretch fixed incomes, when maximizing Social Security provides more reliable long-term value.
How to claim your spousal benefit this month
Checking your spousal benefit eligibility takes less than 10 minutes online at ssa.gov. You’ll need your Social Security statement and your spouse’s earnings record. The website calculator shows exactly how much you’d receive with spousal benefits versus your own benefit.
Application requires minimal paperwork and can be completed online, by phone, or at any Social Security office nationwide. Processing typically takes 2-4 weeks for approval, with back payments calculated to your application date.
Like finding authentic experiences that cost 70% less than tourist traps, spousal benefits offer genuine value hidden in plain sight.
Don’t let another month pass leaving money on the table. Log into ssa.gov tonight, run the spousal benefit calculator, and see if you’re missing $100 or more monthly. With 2025’s increased benefits now in effect, there’s never been a better time to claim what you’ve already earned. Your future self will thank you for those extra dollars every single month.