| value |
{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq. {"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/are-you-getting-most-out-your-social-security-benefit-2026","as_of":"2026-04-10T14:13:04.518445+00:00","canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/10/are-you-getting-the-most-out-of-your-social-securi/","enrichment":{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/are-you-getting-most-out-your-social-security-benefit-2026","article_chars":5000,"article_truncated":true,"blocked_reason":null,"candidate_id":"sc_5d66a46f0806a131","canonical_host":"fool.com","canonical_is_aggregator":false,"canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/10/are-you-getting-the-most-out-of-your-social-securi/","content_type":"text/html; charset=utf-8","enriched_at":"2026-04-10T14:17:59.753169+00:00","extraction_method":"heuristic","fetched_description":"Key PointsCheck your earnings record to make sure your benefit is based on accurate information.","fetched_title":"Are You Getting the Most Out of Your Social Security Benefit in 2026? | Nasdaq","final_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/are-you-getting-most-out-your-social-security-benefit-2026","html_truncated":false,"paywall_likely":false,"publisher_domain":"fool.com","publisher_resolution":"canonical_url","requested_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/are-you-getting-most-out-your-social-security-benefit-2026","source_event_id":"evt_4f76d175370b","source_quality":"high","status_code":200,"version":"signal_enrichment_v2"},"fp":"d788c6e5295298a5","kind":"unusual_volume","published_at":"2026-04-10T13:20:00+00:00","publisher_domain":"fool.com","signal_understanding":{"analysis_basis":"article","claim_confidence":0.78,"dates_mentioned":["April 10, 2026"],"entities":[{"asset_class":"media","name":"The Motley Fool","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"publisher"},{"asset_class":"government","name":"Social Security Administration","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"government_agency"},{"asset_class":"government_service","name":"my Social Security account","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"service"},{"asset_class":"government","name":"IRS","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"government_agency"}],"event_type":"other","information_gaps":["The provided signal type is discovery_unusual_volume_delta, but the article text contains no explicit stock-volume metrics, no baseline/average volume, and no ticker-specific volume ratio information.","The headline and article content are about Social Security, not about market trading activity; therefore the unusual-volume catalyst hypothesis cannot be grounded in the provided text.","A list of tickers appears in the cleaned text (AAPL, TSLA, AMZN, META, AMD, NVDA, PEP, COST, ADBE, GOOG, AMGN, HON, INTC, INTU, NFLX, ADP, SBUX, MRNA), but there is no accompanying volume-delta data or confirmation context."],"key_facts":["The article says Social Security benefits are based on payroll taxes paid throughout a person\u2019s career and are tracked in an earnings record accessible via a \u201cmy Social Security account.\u201d","The article states earnings record information is usually accurate because it comes from the IRS, but errors can occur.","The article advises looking for years where income in the earnings record does not match what the reader believes they earned and contacting the Social Security Administration if discrepancies are found.","The article says the Social Security Administration may increase benefits if appropriate after reviewing documentation proving real income.","The article states married people may qualify for a spousal benefit based on a partner\u2019s record and that switching to a spousal benefit may increase checks if the spouse significantly outearned the reader.","The article states the maximum spousal benefit is one-half of the retirement benefit the spouse qualifies for at full retirement age (FRA), noted as 67 for most workers today.","The article says withdrawing an application is possible if it has been less than 12 months since claiming began, but requires paying back all money received by the claimant and any family members who claimed on the work record.","The article says if more than 12 months have passed, benefits can be suspended once the claimant reaches FRA, with benefits growing by 2/3 of 1% per month until age 70 or until benefits resume.","The article frames these strategies as only working if the reader is willing to skip benefits for a period."],"numeric_claims":[{"label":"spousal benefit maximum","value":"one-half of the retirement benefit (at FRA)"},{"label":"FRA example","value":"67 for most workers today"},{"label":"withdrawal timing","value":"less than 12 months since started claiming"},{"label":"benefit growth rate while suspended","value":"2/3 of 1% per month until age 70 or until benefits resume"}],"primary_claim":"Social Security benefits are based on a worker\u2019s payroll-tax earnings record, and errors in that record can be corrected with documentation to potentially increase benefits.","relevance_score":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","source_quality":"high","summary":"The Motley Fool article (Apr 10, 2026) discusses ways retirees can increase Social Security benefits, including checking earnings records for errors, evaluating spousal benefits, and withdrawing/suspending claims under certain timing rules.","topics":["social security","retirement benefits","earnings record","spousal benefits","benefit withdrawal","benefit suspension","FRA (full retirement age)"]},"source":"Nasdaq Markets","source_domain":"fool.com","summary":"Key PointsCheck your earnings record to make sure your benefit is based on accurate information.","tickers":[],"title":"Are You Getting the Most Out of Your Social Security Benefit in 2026?","url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/10/are-you-getting-the-most-out-of-your-social-securi/"}... |