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Your Earnings Record


Years You
Worked

Your Taxed
Social Security
Earnings

Your Taxed
Medicare
Earnings

1983

560
560

1984

1,358
1,358

1985

2,312
2,312

1986

3,756
3,756

1987

5,241
5,241

1988

6,530
6,530

1989

8,074
8,074

1990

10,416
10,416

1991

12,665
12,665

1992

14,921
14,921

1993

16,448
16,448

1994

18,156
18,156

1995

20,054
20,054

1996

22,049
22,049

1997

24,213
24,213

1998

26,267
26,267

1999

28,452
28,452

2000

30,674
30,674

2001

31,991
31,991

2002

32,863
32,863

2003

34,191
34,191

2004

36,288
36,288

2005

38,097
38,097
2006
40,352
40,352
2007
Not yet recorded

You and your family may be eligible for valuable benefits:

When you die, your family may be eligible to receive survivors benefits.

Social Security may help you if you become disabled—even at a young age.

A young person who has worked and paid Social Security taxes in as few as two years can be eligible for disability benefits.

Social Security credits you earn move with you from job to job throughout your career.

Help Us Keep Your Earnings Record Accurate

You, your employer and Social Security share responsibility for the accuracy of your earnings record. Since you began working, we recorded your reported earnings under your name and Social Security number. We have updated your record each time your employer (or you, if you’re self-employed) reported your earnings.

   Remember, it’s your earnings, not the amount of taxes you paid or the number of credits you’ve earned, that determine your benefit amount. When we figure that amount, we base it on your average earnings over your lifetime. If our records are wrong, you may not receive all the benefits to which you’re entitled.

Review this chart carefully using your own records to make sure our information is correct and that we’ve recorded each year you worked. You’re the only person who can look at the earnings chart and know whether it is complete and correct.

   Some or all of your earnings from last year may not be shown on your Statement. It could be that we still were processing last year’s earnings reports when your

Statement was prepared. Your complete earnings for last year will be shown on next year’s Statement. Note: If you worked for more than one employer during any year, or if you had both earnings and self-employment income, we combined your earnings for the year.

There’s a limit on the amount of earnings on which you pay Social Security taxes each year. The limit increases yearly. Earnings above the limit will not appear on your earnings chart as Social Security earnings. (For Medicare taxes, the maximum earnings amount began rising in 1991. Since 1994, all of your earnings are taxed for Medicare.)

Call us right away at 1-800-772-1213 (7 a.m.–7 p.m. your local time) if any earnings for years before last year are shown incorrectly. Please have your W-2 or tax return for those years available. (If you live outside the U.S., follow the directions at the bottom of the last page .)


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Last reviewed or modified Monday Jan 14, 2008
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