Dear Rusty: I worked for 15 years in Canada and for 20 years in the USA and I live in the USA.
I will get Social Security from the US soon and I suspect that I can get a smaller (20% of US) pension from Canada as well. Does the US claw back (all or part) of a
Canadian pension from the US pension amount? Is it possible it’s a net loss to apply for Canadian pension? Signed: Dually Entitled
Dear Dually Entitled: The United States and Canada have a bilateral agreement which regulates benefits for people who have worked part of their career in both countries and are eligible for benefits from both. Under this agreement, your Canadian Pension
Plan (CPP) benefit, earned independently in Canada, will affect your U.S. Social Security (SS) benefit amount based upon a rule in
U.S. Social Security regulations known as the Windfall Elimination Provision (or “WEP”).
WEP will not take effect until you start your Canadian pension but will then affect your U.S. Social Security benefit by using a special formula to compute (or re-compute) your U.S. benefit amount. Your U.S. Social Security benefit amount will be based upon your “average indexed monthly earnings” (or “AIME”), which is the inflation-adjusted monthly average for your years of lifetime significant earnings in the U.S. The AIME actually uses 35 years of lifetime earnings, and if you don’t have a full 35 years of
U.S. earnings they add in zeros to make it 35 years.
To compute your SS benefit, your AIME is broken into three parts, each of which is multiplied by a different percentage to arrive at an amount, which will become part of your “primary insurance amount” (the “PIA” is the amount you get at your full retirement age). If you have 20 years or less of significant U.S. earnings, the
WEP formula will take 40% of first part of your AIME as the first of three numbers which will be added together to arrive at your
U.S. Social Security benefit (without WEP, the normal formula uses a 90% multiplier). What that would mean, if you first become eligible for U.S. Social Security in 2019, is that the first $926 of your AIME, rather than adding $833 to your SS benefit amount, would instead add $370 (a reduction of $463; thus, your total U.S.
Social Security benefit amount would be reduced by $463). But there are some additional things you should be aware of:
WEP ...