The benefit amount can be up to half of the parent’s primary insurance amount (his or her monthly benefit at full retirement age) per child, although there is a cap on the amount of benefits Social Security will pay to a family based on a single family member’s earnings record.
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The family maximum, as it is called, is calculated by a complicated formula that produces a monthly payment of 150 percent to 188 percent of the relevant wage earner’s primary insurance amount. If the sum of the benefits to which family members are entitled exceeds the cap, some of the individual payments are reduced.
You’ll find more information in the Social Security publication “Benefits for Children.”
Andy Markowitz is a writer and editor for AARP, covering Social Security and fraud. He is a former editor of The Prague Post and Baltimore City Paper.
Tracy Thompson is a journalist and editor who has worked for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the Washington Post. She is the author of three books and lives with her family in the Washington, D.C., suburbs.
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