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How One 58-Year-Old Added $14,000 in Social Security Benefits Through Self-Employment
Key takeaways
- How One 58-Year-Old Added $14,000 in Social Security Benefits Through Self-Employment 24/7 Wall St.
- Paying the 12.4% self-employment Social Security tax builds permanent, inflation-adjusted income, so aggressively reducing the wage base through deductions can prove a costly long-term mistake.
- A Solo 401(k) lets consultants contribute up to $72,000 in 2026 without reducing their Social Security wage base, stacking tax-deferred savings alongside benefit growth.
How One 58-Year-Old Added $14,000 in Social Security Benefits Through Self-Employment 24/7 Wall St. Gerelyn Terzo Fri, June 5, 2026 at 10:52 PM GMT+7 5 min read Quick Read Late-career consultants can replace low-earning years in their Social Security record, with five swapped years adding $275 monthly and nearly $99,000 in lifetime benefits.
Paying the 12.4% self-employment Social Security tax builds permanent, inflation-adjusted income, so aggressively reducing the wage base through deductions can prove a costly long-term mistake.
A Solo 401(k) lets consultants contribute up to $72,000 in 2026 without reducing their Social Security wage base, stacking tax-deferred savings alongside benefit growth.
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