AARP Hearing Center
Nothing precludes you from getting both a pension and Social Security, and the pension will not affect the amount of your Social Security payment.
This wasn’t always the case. Until recently, if you got a pension from a job where FICA taxes were not withheld — what Social Security calls “non-covered” employment — and you qualified for Social Security retirement benefits due to other work in covered jobs, you would have been subject to a rule called the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP).
Under the WEP, the Social Security Administration (SSA) used a formula that could lower your monthly benefit payment by up to half of the amount of your pension (but could not reduce it to $0).
This pension-related reduction ended in December 2024 when Congress passed the Social Security Fairness Act, which repealed the WEP. The new law was retroactive to benefits paid in 2024, meaning affected beneficiaries would receive a lump-sum repayment for that year’s withholding.
The SSA says it adjusted monthly payment amounts for WEP-affected beneficiaries in February 2025 and completed sending retroactive payments in July to all those whose benefits were reduced by the provision in 2024. You can find more information on the act and its implementation on the Social Security website.
What was the WEP?
The Windfall Elimination Provision primarily affected retirees from state and local government agencies that do not participate in FICA withholding and federal workers hired before 1984, when the U.S. civil service was brought under the Social Security system. About 2.1 million people, or 3 percent of Social Security recipients, had their benefits reduced by the WEP, according to a February 2024 report from the Congressional Research Service.
The Social Security Fairness Act also repealed the Government Pension Offset (GPO), a similar rule that affected about 750,000 people who collected Social Security spousal or survivor benefits and also received a pension from federal, state or local government jobs that did not withhold Social Security taxes. Their benefits could be reduced by up to two-thirds of their pension amount and would have been eliminated if that two-thirds exceeded the Social Security payment.
Keep in mind
- Pension income does not count toward the Social Security earnings test, which can reduce your Social Security payments if you continue to work after claiming benefits.
- Pensions do count toward income for the purpose of determining whether you pay taxes on your Social Security benefits.
Andy Markowitz is an AARP senior writer and editor covering Social Security and retirement. He is a former editor of the Prague Post and Baltimore City Paper.
Phil Pruitt is an AARP writer and editor focusing on Social Security. He is a former editor at Scripps News and Yahoo News and was on the start-up staff at USA Today, where he held numerous editing positions.
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