Benefits Under Railroad Retirement and Social Security
Employers and employees covered by the Railroad Retirement Act pay higher retirement
taxes than those covered by the Social Security Act, so that railroad retirement benefits remain higher than social security
benefits, especially for career employees.
The following questions and
answers show the differences in railroad retirement and social security benefits payable at the close of the fiscal year ending
September 30, 2007. It also shows the differences in age requirements and payroll taxes under the two systems.
1. How do the average monthly railroad retirement and social
security benefits paid to retired employees and spouses compare?
The average
age annuity being paid by the Railroad Retirement Board (RRB) at the end of fiscal year 2007 to career rail
employees was $2,405 a month, and for all retired rail employees the average was $1,890. The average age retirement
benefit being paid under social security was over $1,050 a month. Spouse benefits averaged $710 a month
under railroad retirement compared to $505 under social security.
The Railroad
Retirement Act also provides supplemental railroad retirement annuities of between $23 and $43 a month, which are payable
to employees who retire directly from the rail industry with 25 or more years of service.
2. Are the benefits awarded to recent retirees generally greater than the benefits payable
to those who retired years ago?
Yes, because recent awards are based
on higher average earnings. Age annuities awarded to career railroad employees retiring at the end
of fiscal year 2007 averaged over $3,005 a month while monthly benefits awarded to workers retiring at full
retirement age under social security averaged nearly $1,400. If spouse benefits are added, the combined benefits for
the employee and spouse would approximate $4,200 under railroad retirement coverage, compared to $2,100 under social security.
Adding a supplemental annuity to the railroad family’s benefit increases average total benefits for current career rail
retirees to over $4,235 a month.
3. How much are the disability benefits currently awarded?
Disabled railroad workers retiring directly from the railroad
industry at the end of fiscal year 2007 were awarded
$2,590 a month on the average while awards for disabled workers under social security averaged about $1,035.
While both the Railroad Retirement and Social Security Acts
provide benefits to workers who are totally disabled for any regular work, the Railroad Retirement Act also provides disability
benefits specifically for career employees who are disabled for work in their regular railroad occupation. Career employees
may be eligible for such an occupational disability annuity at age 60 with 10 years of service, or at any age with 20 years
of service.
4. Can railroaders receive benefits at earlier ages than workers
under social security?
Railroad employees with 30 or
more years of creditable service are eligible for regular annuities based on age and service the first full month they are
age 60, and rail employees with less than 30 years of creditable service are eligible for regular annuities based on age and
service the first full month they are age 62.
No early retirement reduction applies if a rail employee retires
at age 60 or older with 30 years of service and his or her retirement is after 2001, or if the employee retired before 2002
at age 62 or older with 30 years of service.
Early retirement reductions are otherwise applied to annuities
awarded before full retirement age—the age at which an employee can receive full benefits with no reduction for early
retirement. This ranges from age 65 for those born before 1938 to age 67 for those born in 1960 or later, the same as
under social security.
Under social security, a worker cannot begin receiving retirement
benefits based on age until age 62, regardless of how long he or she worked, and social security retirement benefits are reduced
for retirement prior to full retirement age regardless of years of coverage.
5.
Does social security
offer any benefits that are not available under railroad retirement?
Social
security does pay certain types of benefits that are not available under railroad retirement. For example, social security
provides children’s benefits when an employee is disabled, retired or deceased. Under current law, the Railroad
Retirement Act only provides children’s benefits if the employee is deceased.
However,
the Railroad Retirement Act includes a special minimum guaranty provision which ensures that railroad families will not receive
less in monthly benefits than they would have if railroad earnings were covered by social security rather than railroad retirement
laws. This guaranty is intended to cover situations in which one or more members of a family would otherwise be eligible
for a type of social security benefit that is not provided under the Railroad Retirement Act. Therefore, if a retired
rail employee has children who would otherwise be eligible for a benefit under social security, the employee’s annuity
can be increased to reflect what social security would pay the famil y.
6.
How much are monthly benefits for survivors under railroad retirement and social security?
Survivor
benefits are generally higher if payable by the RRB rather than social security. At the end of fiscal year 2007, the
average annuity being
paid to all aged and disabled widow(er)s averaged $1,165 a month, compared to $995 under social security.
Benefits awarded
by the RRB at the end of fiscal year 2007 to aged and disabled widow(er)s of railroaders averaged more than $1,545 a month,
compared to $820 under social security.
The
annuities being paid
at the end of fiscal year 2007 to widowed mothers/fathers averaged $1,470 a month and children’s annuities averaged
$855, compared to $760 and $685 a month for widowed mothers/fathers and children, respectively, under social security.
Those awarded at the end of fiscal year 2007 averaged $1,590 a month for widowed mothers/fathers
and $1,180 a month for children under railroad retirement, compared to $735 and $680 for widowed mothers/fathers and children,
respectively, under social security.
7. How do railroad
retirement and social security lump-sum death benefit provisions differ?
Both
the railroad retirement and social security systems provide a lump-sum death benefit. The railroad retirement lump-sum
benefit is generally payable only if survivor annuities are not immediately due upon an employee’s death. The
social security lump-sum benefit may be payable regardless of whether monthly benefits are also due. Both railroad retirement
and social security provide a lump-sum benefit of $255. However, if a railroad employee completed 10 years of creditable
railroad service before 1975, the average railroad retirement lump-sum benefit payable is $960. Also, if an employee
had less than 10 years of service, but had at least 5 years of such service af ter 1995, he or she would have to have had
an insured status under social security law (counting both railroad retirement and social security credits) in order
for the $255 lump-sum benefit to be payable.
The social security lump sum is generally only payable to the
widow or widower living with the employee at the time of death. Under railroad retirement, if the employee had 10 years
of service before 1975, and was not survived by a living-with widow or widower, the lump sum may be paid to the funeral home
or the payer of the funeral expenses.
The railroad retirement system also provides, under certain
conditions, a residual lump-sum death benefit which ensures that a railroad family receives at least as much in benefits as
the employee paid in railroad retirement taxes before 1975. This benefit is, in effect, a refund of an employee’s
pre-1975 railroad retirement taxes, after subtraction of any benefits previously paid on the basis of the employee’s
service. This death benefit is seldom payable.
8. How do railroad retirement and social
security payroll taxes compare?
Railroad retirement payroll taxes, like railroad retirement
benefits, are calculated on a two-tier basis. Rail employees and employers pay tier I taxes at the same rate as social
security taxes,
7.65 percent, consisting of 6.20 percent for retirement on earnings up to $102,000 in 2008 and
1.45
percent for Medicare hospital insurance on all earnings.
In addition, rail employees and employers both pay tier II
taxes which are used to finance railroad retirement benefit payments over and above social security levels.
In
2008, the tier II tax rate on employees is 3.90 percent and on rail employers it is 12.10 percent on employee earnings up
to $75,900.
9. How much are
regular railroad retirement taxes for an employee earning $102,000 in 2008 compared to social security taxes?
The maximum amount of regular railroad retirement taxes that an employee earning
$102,000 can pay in 2008 is $10,763.10, compared to $7,803 under social security. For railroad employers, the maximum
annual regular retirement taxes on an employee earning $102,000 are $16,986.90 compared to $7,803 under social security.
Employees earning over $102,000, and their employers, will pay more in retirement taxes than the above amounts because the
Medicare hospital insurance tax of
1.45 percent is applied to all earnings.