Mar 27
What is pension maximization?
Good question! If you have a pension, you will be faced with two common options when you start to collect your pension:
· The Single Life Option allows you to receive the highest possible monthly income throughout your life. The only problem is that your benefits will be paid ONLY as long as YOU live. At your death, your pension benefits die with you. That’s fine if your single, but what if you’re married? If still living, your spouse will be left with no monthly income from your pension plan.
· The Joint & Survivor Option pays a reduced monthly pension (typically 50% to 85% of the single life benefit) for as long as either you or your spouse is alive. This option guarantees a payment for the surviving spouse. What happens if your spouse dies first? Unfortunately, you will continue to receive the reduced income and you lose the gamble.
Most people select the Joint & Survivor Option because they do not want to leave their spouse without income.
This is where Pension Maximization comes in to help maximize their benefits. The concept is fairly simple: you purchase a sufficient amount of life insurance on yourself, naming your spouse as the beneficiary. The death benefit will replace the lost pension benefit if you die first. At retirement, you and your spouse opt to take the single-life benefit option in order to receive the maximum benefit, using a portion of the additional pension funds – usually much less than the difference between the amount for a single versus a joint and survivor benefit – to pay for the life insurance premiums.
Makes sense, right?


