To get the 30k backpay, one has to tell soc sec he wants the start date to be when he turned 70, correct?
Yes — structurally, that’s exactly how the Social Security system works, but with one important nuance that matters for you.
Here’s the clean version.
🧩 The Rule
For someone over full retirement age, Social Security allows up to 6 months of retroactive benefits — but never earlier than the month they turned 70.
So if one is 71:
The earliest possible start month he can claim retroactively is the month he turned 70.
That produces roughly 6 months of backpay, which in his case is about $30k (because his benefit is around $5k/month).
🎯 What One Must Actually Do
On the application, there’s a specific question:
“When do you want your benefits to start?”
To get the backpay, he must select:
Start month = the month he turned 70
SSA will then automatically:
Pay him retroactive benefits back to that month (up to 6 months)
Issue a lump‑sum payment for that period
Begin ongoing monthly payments the month after his chosen start month
🧠 Important Clarification
He does not need to write an essay or justify anything. He simply chooses the earlier month in the dropdown.
SSA’s system enforces the limits automatically — it won’t let him pick a date earlier than allowed.
If you want, we can map out:
The exact month he turned 70
The exact number of months of backpay
The expected dollar amount
The timing of the lump sum vs. the first regular check
Just tell me his birth month and I’ll run the numbers.
Right — and here’s the key structural point:
⭐ He turned 70 nine months ago… but SSA only allows 6 months of retroactive benefits
Even if he’s 9 months past 70, Social Security will not pay 9 months of back benefits. The legal maximum is 6 months, no matter how long ago he turned 70.
So the system works like this:
✔️ What one must do
He should still choose:
“Start benefits as of the month I turned 70.”
But SSA will automatically cap the retroactive payment at 6 months.
✔️ What he will actually receive
6 months of backpay (≈ $30k)
Full monthly benefit going forward at the age‑70 rate
✔️ Why the 9 months doesn’t matter
The rule is:
Retroactive benefits cannot exceed 6 months and cannot start before age 70.
So even if he’s 12 months past 70, he still only gets 6 months.
If you want, tell me his birth month, and I’ll map out:
the exact retroactive window
the exact payment month-by-month
when the lump sum will hit
I can lay it out cleanly.