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  <FDSYS>
    <CFRTITLE>20</CFRTITLE>
    <CFRTITLETEXT>Employees' Benefits</CFRTITLETEXT>
    <VOL>2</VOL>
    <DATE>1998-04-01</DATE>
    <ORIGINALDATE>1998-04-01</ORIGINALDATE>
    <COVERONLY>false</COVERONLY>
    <TITLE>FEDERAL OLD-AGE, SURVIVORS AND DISABILITY INSURANCE (1950- )</TITLE>
    <GRANULENUM>404</GRANULENUM>
    <HEADING>PART 404</HEADING>
    <ANCESTORS>
      <PARENT HEADING="" SEQ="1"/>
    </ANCESTORS>
  </FDSYS>
  <PART>
    <EAR>Pt. 404</EAR>
    <HD SOURCE="HED">PART 404—FEDERAL OLD-AGE, SURVIVORS AND DISABILITY INSURANCE (1950-)</HD>
    <CONTENTS>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart A—Introduction, General Provisions and Definitions</HD>
        <SECHD>Sec.</SECHD>
        <SECTNO>404.1</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>General definitions and use of terms.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.3</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>General provisions.</SUBJECT>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart B—Insured Status and Quarters of Coverage</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.101</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.102</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Fully Insured Status</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.110</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine fully insured status.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.111</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we consider a person fully insured based on World War II active military or naval service.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.112</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we consider certain employees of private nonprofit organizations to be fully insured.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.115</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Table for determining the quarters of coverage you need to be fully insured.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Currently Insured Status</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.120</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine currently insured status.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Disability Insured Status</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.130</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine disability insured status.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.131</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you must have disability insured status.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.132</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine fully insured status for a period of disability or disability insurance benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.133</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we give you quarters of coverage based on military service to establish a period of disability.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Quarters of Coverage</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.140</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What is a quarter of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.141</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we credit quarters of coverage for calendar years before 1978.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.142</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we credit self-employment income to calendar quarters for taxable years beginning before 1978.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.143</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we credit quarters of coverage for calendar years after 1977.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.144</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we credit self-employment income to calendar years for taxable years beginning after 1977.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.145</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you acquire a quarter of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.146</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a calendar quarter cannot be a quarter of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <APP>
            <E T="05">Appendix to Subpart B—Quarter of Coverage Amounts for Calendar Years After 1978</E>
          </APP>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart C—Computing Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.201</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.202</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Other regulations related to this subpart.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.203</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.204</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Methods of computing primary insurance amounts—general.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Average-Indexed-Monthly Earnings Method of Computing Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.210</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Average-indexed-monthly-earnings method.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.211</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your average indexed monthly earnings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.212</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your primary insurance amount from your average indexed monthly earnings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.213</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computation where you are eligible for a pension based on your noncovered employment.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <PRTPAGE P="41"/>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Average-Monthly-Wage Method of Computing Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.220</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Average-monthly-wage method.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.221</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your average monthly wage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.222</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Use of benefit table in finding your primary insurance amount from your average monthly wage.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">Guaranteed Alternative for People Reaching Age 62 After 1978 but Before 1984</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.230</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Guaranteed alternative.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.231</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Steps in computing your primary insurance amount under the guaranteed alternative—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.232</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your average monthly wage under the guaranteed alternative.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.233</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Adjustment of your guaranteed alternative when you become entitled after age 62.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Old-Start Method of Computing Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.240</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Old-start method—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.241</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>1977 simplified old-start method.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.242</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Use of old-start primary insurance amount as guaranteed alternative.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.243</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computation where you are eligible for a pension based on noncovered employment.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Special Computation Rules for People Who Had a Period of Disability</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.250</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Special computation rules for people who had a period of disability.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.251</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Subsequent entitlement to benefits less than 12 months after entitlement to disability benefits ended.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.252</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Subsequent entitlement to benefits 12 months or more after entitlement to disability benefits ended.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Special Minimum Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.260</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Special minimum primary insurance amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.261</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your special minimum primary insurance amount.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Cost-of-Living Increases</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.270</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Cost-of-living increases.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.271</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When automatic cost-of-living increases apply.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.272</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Indexes we use to measure the rise in the cost-of-living.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.273</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When automatic cost-of-living increases are to be made.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.274</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Measuring the increase in the indexes.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.275</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Amount of automatic cost-of-living increases.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.276</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Publication of notice of increase.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.277</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Automatic increases of “frozen” minimum primary insurance amount.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.278</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Additional cost-of-living increase.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Recomputing Your Primary Insurance Amount</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.280</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.281</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Why your primary insurance amount may be recomputed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.282</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effective date of recomputations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.283</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputation under method other than that used to find your primary insurance amount.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.284</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputations for people who reach age 62, or become disabled, or die before age 62 after 1978.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.285</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputations performed automatically.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.286</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to request an immediate recomputation.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.287</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Waiver of recomputation.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.288</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputing when you are entitled to a monthly pension based on noncovered employment.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Recalculations of Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.290</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recalculations.</SUBJECT>
          <APP>
            <E T="05">Appendix I to Subpart C—Average of the Total Wages for Years After 1950</E>
          </APP>
          <APP>
            <E T="04">Appendix II to Subpart C—Benefit Formulas Used with Average Indexed Monthly Earnings</E>
          </APP>
          <APP>
            <E T="04">Appendix III to Subpart C—Benefit Table</E>
          </APP>
          <APP>
            <E T="05">Appendix IV to Subpart C—Earnings Needed for a Year of Coverage After 1950</E>
          </APP>
          <APP>
            <E T="04">Appendix V to Subpart C—Computing the Special Minimum Primary Insurance Amount and Related Maximum Family Benefits</E>
          </APP>
          <APP>
            <E T="05">Appendix VI to Subpart C—Percentage of Automatic Increases in Primary Insurance Amounts Since 1978</E>
          </APP>
          <APP>
            <E T="04">Appendix VII to Subpart C—“Old-Law” Contribution and Benefit Base</E>
          </APP>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart D—Old-Age, Disability, Dependents' and Survivors' Insurance Benefits; Period of Disability</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.301</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.302</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Other regulations related to this subpart.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.303</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.304</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General rules on benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.305</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you may not be entitled to benefits.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Old-Age and Disability Benefits</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.310</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to old-age benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.311</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When entitlement to old-age benefits begins and ends.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.312</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Old-age benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.313</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Using delayed retirement credit to increase old-age benefit amount.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.315</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to disability benefits.<PRTPAGE P="42"/>
          </SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.316</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When entitlement to disability benefits begins and ends.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.317</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.320</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to a period of disability.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.321</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a period of disability begins and ends.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.322</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you may apply for a period of disability after a delay due to a physical or mental condition.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.325</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The termination month.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Benefits for Spouses and Divorced Spouses</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.330</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to wife's or husband's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.331</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to wife's or husband's benefits as a divorced spouse.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.332</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When wife's and husband's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.333</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Wife's and husband's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.335</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to widow's or widower's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.336</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to widow's or widower's benefits as a surviving divorced spouse.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.337</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When widow's and widower's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.338</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Widow's and widower's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.339</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to mother's or father's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.340</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to mother's or father's benefits as a surviving divorced spouse.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.341</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When mother's and father's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.342</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Mother's and father's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.344</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your relationship by marriage to the insured.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.345</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your relationship as wife, husband, widow, or widower under State law.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.346</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your relationship as wife, husband, widow, or widower based upon a deemed valid marriage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.347</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>“Living in the same household” defined.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.348</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a child living with you is “in your care.”</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.349</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a child living apart from you is “in your care.”</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Child's Benefits</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.350</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to child's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.351</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who may be reentitled to child's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.352</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When child's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.353</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Child's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.354</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your relationship to the insured.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.355</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's natural child.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.356</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's legally adopted child.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.357</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's stepchild.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.358</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's grandchild or stepgrandchild.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.359</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's equitably adopted child.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.360</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a child is dependent upon the insured person.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.361</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a natural child is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.362</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a legally adopted child is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.363</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a stepchild is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.364</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a grandchild or stepgrandchild is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.365</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When an equitably adopted child is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.366</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>“Contributions for support,” “one-half support,” and “living with” the insured defined—determining first month of entitlement.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.367</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you are a “full-time elementary or secondary school student”.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.368</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you are considered a full-time student during a period of nonattendance.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Parent's Benefits</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.370</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to parent's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.371</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When parent's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.373</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Parent's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.374</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Parent's relationship to the insured.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">Special Payments at Age 72</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.380</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.381</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to special age 72 payments.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.382</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When special age 72 payments begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.383</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Special age 72 payment amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.384</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reductions, suspensions, and nonpayments of special age 72 payments.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Lump-Sum Death Payment</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.390</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.391</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to the lump-sum death payment as a widow or widower who was living in the same household.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.392</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to the lump-sum death payment when there is no widow(er) who was living in the same household.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart E—Deductions; Reductions; and Nonpayments of Benefits</HD>
        <SECTNO>404.401</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deduction, reduction, and nonpayment of monthly benefits or lump-sum death payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.401a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When we do not pay benefits because of a disability beneficiary's work activity.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.402</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Interrelationship of deductions, reductions, adjustments, and nonpayment of benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.403</SECTNO>

        <SUBJECT>Reduction where total monthly benefits exceed maximum family benefits payable.<PRTPAGE P="43"/>
        </SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.404</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>How reduction for maximum affects insured individual and other persons entitled on his earnings record.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.405</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Situations where total benefits can exceed maximum because of “savings clause.”</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.406</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction for maximum because of retroactive effect of application for monthly benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.407</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction because of entitlement to other benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.408</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction of benefits based on disability on account of receipt of certain other disability benefits provided under Federal, State, or local laws or plans.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.408a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction where spouse is receiving a Government pension.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.408b</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction of retroactive monthly social security benefits where supplemental security income (SSI) payments were received for the same period.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.409</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.410</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction in benefits for age—general.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.411</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Special reduction in benefits for age involving entitlement to two or more benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.412</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Adjustments in benefit reductions for age.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.413</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction in benefits for age following an increase in primary insurance amounts.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.415</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions because of excess earnings; annual earnings test.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.416</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Amount of deduction because of excess earnings.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.417</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions because of noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States; 45 hour and 7-day work test.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.418</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>“Noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States,” defined.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.420</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Persons deemed entitled to benefits based on an individual's earnings record.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.421</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions because beneficiary failed to have a child in his or her care.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.422</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions because of refusal to accept rehabilitation services.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.423</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Manner of making deductions.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.424</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Total amount of deductions where more than one deduction event occurs in a month.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.425</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Total amount of deductions where deduction events occur in more than 1 month.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.428</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Earnings in a taxable year.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.429</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Earnings; defined.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.430</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings defined for taxable years ending after December 1972; monthly exempt amount defined.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.434</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings; method of charging.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.435</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings; months to which excess earnings cannot be charged.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.436</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings; months to which excess earnings cannot be charged because individual is deemed not entitled to benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.437</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings; benefit rate subject to deductions because of excess earnings.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.439</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Partial monthly benefits; excess earnings of the individual charged against his benefits and the benefits of persons entitled (or deemed entitled) to benefits on his earnings record.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.440</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Partial monthly benefits; prorated share of partial payment exceeds the benefit before deduction for excess earnings.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.441</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Partial monthly benefits; insured individual and another person entitled (or deemed entitled) on the same earnings record both have excess earnings.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.446</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Definition of “substantial services” and “services”.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.447</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Evaluation of factors involved in substantial services test.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.450</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Required reports of work outside the United States or failure to have care of a child.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.451</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Penalty deductions for failure to report within prescribed time limit noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States or not having care of a child.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.452</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reports to Social Security Administration of earnings; wages; net earnings from self-employment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.453</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Penalty deductions for failure to report earnings timely.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.454</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Good cause for failure to make required reports.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.455</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Request by Social Security Administration for reports of earnings and estimated earnings; effect of failure to comply with request.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.456</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Current suspension of benefits because an individual works or engages in self-employment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.457</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions where taxes neither deducted from wages of certain maritime employees nor paid.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.458</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Limiting deductions where total family benefits payable would not be affected or would be only partly affected.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.460</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of monthly benefits of aliens outside the United States.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.461</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of lump sum after death of alien outside United States for more than 6 months.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.462</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of hospital and medical insurance benefits of alien outside United States for more than 6 months.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.463</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits of aliens outside the United States; “foreign social insurance system,” and “treaty obligation” exceptions defined.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.464</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits where individual is deported; prohibition against payment of lump sum based on deported individual's earnings records.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.465</SECTNO>

        <SUBJECT>Conviction for subversive activities; effect on monthly benefits and entitlement to hospital insurance benefits.<PRTPAGE P="44"/>
        </SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.466</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Conviction for subversive activities; effect on enrollment for supplementary medical insurance benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.467</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits; individual entitled to disability insurance benefits or childhood disability benefits based on statutory blindness is engaging in substantial gainful activity.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.468</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits to prisoners.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.469</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits where individual has not furnished or applied for a Social Security number.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.470</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of disability benefits due to noncompliance with rules regarding treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.480</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Paying benefits in installments: Drug addiction or alcoholism.</SUBJECT>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart F—Overpayments, Underpayments, Waiver of Adjustment or Recovery of Overpayments, and Liability of a Certifying Officer</HD>
        <SECTNO>404.501</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>General applicability of section 204 of the Act.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.502</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Overpayments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.502a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Notice of right to waiver consideration.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.503</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Underpayments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.504</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Relation to provisions for reductions and increases.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.505</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Relationship to provisions requiring deductions.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.506</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When waiver may be applied and how to process the request.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.507</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Fault.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.508</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Defeat the purpose of Title II.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.509</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Against equity and good conscience; defined.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.510</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When an individual is “without fault” in a deduction overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.510a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When an individual is “without fault” in an entitlement overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.511</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When an individual is at “fault” in a deduction overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.512</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When adjustment or recovery of an overpayment will be waived.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.513</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Liability of a certifying officer.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.515</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Collection and compromise of claims for overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.520</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Referral of overpayments to the Department of the Treasury for tax refund offset—General.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.521</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Notice to overpaid individual.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.522</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Review within SSA that an overpayment is past due and legally enforceable.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.523</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Findings by SSA.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.524</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Review of our records related to the overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.525</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Suspension of offset.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.526</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Tax refund insufficient to cover amount of overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.527</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Additional methods for recovery of title II benefit overpayments.</SUBJECT>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart G—Filing of Applications and Other Forms</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.601</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.602</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.603</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>You must file an application to receive benefits.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Applications</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.610</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What makes an application a claim for benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.611</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing of application with Social Security Administration.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.612</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who may sign an application.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.613</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of authority to sign an application for another.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.614</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When an application or other form is considered filed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.615</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Claimant must be alive when an application is filed.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Effective Filing Period of Application</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.620</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing before the first month you meet the requirements for benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.621</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing after the first month you meet the requirements for benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.622</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limiting an application.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.623</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing by person eligible for old-age and husband's or wife's benefits.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Filing Date Based on Written Statement</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.630</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Use of date of written statement as filing date.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.631</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Statements filed with the Railroad Retirement Board.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.632</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Statements filed with a hospital.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Deemed Filing Date Based on Misinformation</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.633</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Deemed filing date in a case of misinformation.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Withdrawal of Application</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.640</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Withdrawal of an application.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.641</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Cancellation of a request to withdraw.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart H—Evidence</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.701</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.702</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.703</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When evidence is needed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.704</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your responsibility for giving evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.705</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Failure to give requested evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.706</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Where to give evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.707</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Original records or copies as evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.708</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we decide what is enough evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.709</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Preferred evidence and other evidence.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <PRTPAGE P="45"/>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Evidence of Age, Marriage, and Death</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.715</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When evidence of age is needed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.716</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Type of evidence of age to be given.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.720</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a person's death.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.721</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence to presume a person is dead.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.722</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rebuttal of a presumption of death.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.723</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When evidence of marriage is required.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.725</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a valid ceremonial marriage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.726</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of common-law marriage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.727</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a deemed valid marriage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.728</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence a marriage has ended.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Evidence for Child's and Parent's Benefits</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.730</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When evidence of a parent or child relationship is needed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.731</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are a natural parent or child.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.732</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are a stepparent or stepchild.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.733</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are the legally adopting parent or legally adopted child.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.734</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are an equitably adopted child.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.735</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are the grandchild or stepgrandchild.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.736</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a child's dependency.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.745</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of school attendance for child age 18 or older.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.750</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a parent's support.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Other Evidence Requirements</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.760</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of living in the same household with insured person.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.762</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of having a child in your care.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.770</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of where the insured person had a permanent home.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.780</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of “good cause” for exceeding time limits on accepting proof of support or application for a lump-sum death payment.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart I—Records of Earnings</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.801</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.802</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.803</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conclusiveness of the record of your earnings.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Obtaining Earnings Information</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.810</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to obtain a statement of earnings and a benefit estimate statement.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.811</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The statement of earnings and benefit estimates you requested.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.812</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Statement of earnings and benefit estimates sent without request.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Correcting the Earnings Record</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.820</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing a request for correction of the record of your earnings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.821</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Correction of the record of your earnings before the time limit ends.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.822</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Correction of the record of your earnings after the time limit ends.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.823</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Correction of the record of your earnings for work in the employ of the United States.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Notice of Removal or Reduction of an Entry of Earnings</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.830</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of removal or reduction of your wages.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.831</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of removal or reduction of your self-employment income.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart J—Determinations, Administrative Review Process, and Reopening of Determinations and Decisions</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Introduction, Definitions, and Initial Determinations</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.900</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.901</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.902</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Administrative actions that are initial determinations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.903</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Administrative actions that are not initial determinations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.904</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of the initial determination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.905</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of an initial determination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.906</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Testing modifications to the disability determination procedures.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Reconsideration</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.907</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reconsideration—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.908</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Parties to a reconsideration.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.909</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to request reconsideration.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.911</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Good cause for missing the deadline to request review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.913</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reconsideration procedures.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.914</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability hearing—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.915</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability hearing—disability hearing officers.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.916</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability hearing—procedures.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.917</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability hearing—disability hearing officer's reconsidered determination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.918</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability hearing—review of the disability hearing officer's reconsidered determination before it is issued.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.919</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of another person's request for reconsideration.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.920</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reconsidered determination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.921</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of a reconsidered determination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.922</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of a reconsidered determination.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Expedited Appeals Process</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.923</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Expedited appeals process—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.924</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When the expedited appeals process may be used.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.925</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to request expedited appeals process.<PRTPAGE P="46"/>
          </SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.926</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Agreement in expedited appeals process.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.927</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of expedited appeals process agreement.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.928</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Expedited appeals process request that does not result in agreement.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Hearing Before an Administrative Law Judge</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.929</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Hearing before an administrative law judge—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.930</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Availability of a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.932</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Parties to a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.933</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to request a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.935</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Submitting evidence prior to a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.936</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Time and place for a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.938</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.939</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Objections to the issues.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.940</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disqualification of the administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.941</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Prehearing case review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.942</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Prehearing proceedings and decisions by attorney advisors.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.943</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Responsibilities of the adjudication officer.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Administrative Law Judge Hearing Procedures</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.944</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Administrative law judge hearing procedures—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.946</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Issues before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.948</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Deciding a case without an oral hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.949</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Presenting written statements and oral arguments.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.950</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Presenting evidence at a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.951</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a record of a hearing before an administrative law judge is made.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.952</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Consolidated hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.953</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The decision of an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.955</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The effect of an administrative law judge's decision.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.956</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Removal of a hearing request from an administrative law judge to the Appeals Council.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.957</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Dismissal of a request for a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.958</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of dismissal of a request for a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.959</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of dismissal of a request for a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.960</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Vacating a dismissal of a request for a hearing before an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.961</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Prehearing and posthearing conferences.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.965</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Appeals Council Review</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.966</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Testing elimination of the request for Appeals Council review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.967</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeals Council review—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.968</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to request Appeals Council review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.969</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeals Council initiates review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.970</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Cases the Appeals Council will review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.971</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Dismissal by Appeals Council.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.972</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of dismissal of request for Appeals Council review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.973</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of Appeals Council review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.974</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Obtaining evidence from Appeals Council.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.975</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing briefs with the Appeals Council.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.976</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Procedures before Appeals Council on review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.977</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Case remanded by Appeals Council.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.979</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decision of Appeals Council.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.981</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of Appeals Council's decision or denial of review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.982</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Extension of time to file action in Federal district court.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Court Remand Cases</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.983</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Case remanded by a Federal court.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.984</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeals Council review of administrative law judge decision in a case remanded by a Federal court.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.985</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Application of circuit court law.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Reopening and Revising Determinations and Decisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.987</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reopening and revising determinations and decisions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.988</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conditions for reopening.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.989</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Good cause for reopening.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.990</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Finality of determinations and decisions on revision of an earnings record.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.991</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Finality of determinations and decisions to suspend benefit payments for entire taxable year because of earnings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.991a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Late completion of timely investigation.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.992</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of revised determination or decision.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.993</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of revised determination or decision.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.994</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Time and place to request a hearing on revised determination or decision.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.995</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Finality of findings when later claim is filed on same earnings record.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.996</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Increase in future benefits where time period for reopening expires.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Payment of Certain Travel Expenses</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.999a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payment of certain travel expenses—general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.999b</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who may be reimbursed.<PRTPAGE P="47"/>
          </SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.999c</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What travel expenses are reimbursable.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.999d</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When and how to claim reimbursement.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart K—Employment, Wages, Self-Employment, and Self-Employment Income</HD>
        <SECTNO>404.1001</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1002</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Employment</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1003</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1004</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What work is covered as employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1005</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is an employee.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1006</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Corporation officer.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1007</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Common-law employee.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1008</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Agent-driver or commission-driver, full-time life insurance salesman, home worker, or traveling or city salesman.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1009</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is an employer.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1010</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Farm crew leader as employer.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Work Excluded From Employment</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1012</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work excluded from employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1013</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Included-excluded rule.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1014</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Domestic service by a student for a local college club, fraternity or sorority.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1015</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Family services.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1016</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Foreign agricultural workers.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1017</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Sharefarmers.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1018</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work by civilians for the United States Government or its instrumentalities—wages paid after 1983.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1018a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work by civilians for the United States Government or its instrumentalities—remuneration paid prior to 1984.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1018b</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Medicare qualified government employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1019</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work as a member of a uniformed service of the United States.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1020</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work for States and their political subdivisions and instrumentalities.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1021</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work for the District of Columbia.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1022</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>American Samoa or Guam.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1023</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Ministers of churches and members of religious orders.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1024</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Election of coverage by religious orders.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1025</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work for religious, charitable, educational, or certain other organizations exempt from income tax.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1026</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work for a church or qualified church-controlled organization.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1027</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Railroad work.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1028</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Student working for a school, college, or university.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1029</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Student nurses.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1030</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Delivery and distribution or sale of newspapers, shopping news, and magazines.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1031</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Fishing.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1032</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work for a foreign government.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1033</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work for a wholly owned instrumentality of a foreign government.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1034</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work for an international organization.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1035</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work for a communist organization.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1036</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Certain nonresident aliens.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1037</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work on or in connection with a non-American vessel or aircraft.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1038</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Domestic employees under age 18.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Exemption From Social Security By Reason of Religous Belief</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1039</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Employers (including partnerships) and employees who are both members of certain religious groups opposed to insurance.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Wages</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1041</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Wages.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1042</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Wages when paid and received.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1043</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Facilities or privileges—meals and lodging.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1044</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Vacation pay.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1045</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Employee expenses.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1046</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Pay for work by certain members of religious orders.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1047</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Annual wage limitation.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1048</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Contribution and benefit base after 1992.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1049</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payments under an employer plan or system.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1050</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Retirement payments.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1051</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payments on account of sickness or accident disability, or related medical or hospitalization expenses.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1052</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payments from or to certain tax-exempt trusts or payments under or into certain annuity plans.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1053</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>“Qualified benefits” under a cafeteria plan.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1054</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payments by an employer of employee's tax or employee's contribution under State law.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1055</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payments for agricultural labor.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1056</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Explanation of agricultural labor.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1057</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Domestic service in the employer's home.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1058</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Special situations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1059</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Deemed wages for certain individuals interned during World War II.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1060</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Self-Employment</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1065</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Self-employment coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1066</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Trade or business in general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1068</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Employees who are considered self-employed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1069</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Real estate agents and direct sellers.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1070</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Christian Science practitioners.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1071</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Ministers and members of religious orders.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1073</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Public office.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1074</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Farm crew leader who is self-employed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1075</SECTNO>

          <SUBJECT>Members of certain religious groups opposed to insurance.<PRTPAGE P="48"/>
          </SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1077</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Individuals under railroad retirement system.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Self-Employment Income</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1080</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Net earnings from self-employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1081</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General rules for figuring net earnings from self-employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1082</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rentals from real estate; material participation.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1083</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Dividends and interest.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1084</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Gain or loss from disposition of property; capital assets; timber, coal, and iron ore; involuntary conversion.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1085</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Net operating loss deduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1086</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Community income.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1087</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Figuring partner's net earnings from self-employment for taxable year which ends as a result of death.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1088</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Retirement payment to retired partners.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1089</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Figuring net earnings for residents and nonresidents of Puerto Rico.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1090</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Personal exemption deduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1091</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Figuring net earnings for ministers and members of religious orders.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1092</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Figuring net earnings for U.S. citizens or residents living outside the United States.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1093</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Possession of the United States.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1094</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Options available for figuring net earnings from self-employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1095</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Agricultural trade or business.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1096</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Self-employment income.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart L[Reserved]</HD>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart M—Coverage of Employees of State and Local Governments</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1200</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1201</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Scope of this subpart regarding coverage and wage reports and adjustments.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1202</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1203</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1204</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Designating officials to act on behalf of the State.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">What Groups of Employees May Be Covered</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1205</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Absolute coverage groups.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1206</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Retirement system coverage groups.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1207</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Divided retirement system coverage groups.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1208</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Ineligible employees.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1209</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT> Mandatorily excluded services.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1210</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT> Optionally excluded services.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1211</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Interstate instrumentalities.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1212</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Police officers and firefighters.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">How Coverage Under Agreements Is Obtained and Continues</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1214</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Agreement for coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1215</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Modification of agreement.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1216</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Modification of agreement to correct an error.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1217</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Continuation of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1218</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Resumption of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1219</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Dissolution of political subdivision.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">How to Identify Covered Employees</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1220</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Identification numbers.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">What Records of Coverage Must Be Kept</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1225</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Records—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Review of Compliance By State With Its Agreement</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1230</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Onsite review program.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1231</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Scope of review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1232</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conduct of review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1234</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reports of review's findings.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">How to Report Wages and Contributions—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1237</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Wage reports and contribution returns—general—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1239</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Wage reports for employees performing services in more than one coverage group—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1242</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Back pay.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1243</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Use of reporting forms—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1247</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When to report wages—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1249</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When and where to make deposits of contributions and to file contribution returns and wage reports—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1251</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Final reports—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">What Is a State's Liability for Contributions—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1255</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>State's liability for contributions—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1256</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limitation on State's liability for contributions for multiple employment situations—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">Figuring the Amount of the State's Contributions—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1260</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Amount of contributions—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1262</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Manner of payment of contributions by State—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1263</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When fractional part of a cent may be disregarded—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">If a State Fails to Make Timely Payments—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1265</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Addition of interest to contributions—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1267</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Failure to make timely payments—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <PRTPAGE P="49"/>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">How Errors in Reports and Contributions Are Adjusted—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1270</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Adjustments in general—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1271</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Adjustment of overpayment of contributions—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1272</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Refund or recomputation of overpayments which are not adjustable—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1275</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Adjustment of employee contributions—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1276</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reports and payments erroneously made to Internal Revenue Service-transfer of funds—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">How Overpayments of Contributions Are Credited or Refunded—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1280</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Allowance of credits or refunds—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1281</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Credits or refunds for periods of time during which no liability exists—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1282</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Time limitations on credits or refunds—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1283</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Exceptions to the time limitations on credits or refunds—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1284</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Offsetting underpayments against overpayments—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">How Assessments for Underpayments of Contributions Are Made—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1285</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Assessments of amounts due—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1286</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Time limitations on assessments—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1287</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Exceptions to the time limitations on assessments—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1289</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payment after expiration of time limitation for assessment—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">Secretary's Review of Decisions on Credits, Refunds, or Assessments—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1290</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Review of decisions by the Secretary—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1291</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reconsideration—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1292</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to request review—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1293</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Time for filing request for review—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1294</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notification to State after reconsideration—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1295</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Commissioner's review—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1296</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Commissioner's notification to the State—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">
            <E T="05">How a State May Seek Court Review of Secretary's Decision—for Wages Paid Prior to 1987</E>
          </HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1297</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Review by court—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1298</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Time for filing civil action—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1299</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Final judgments—for wages paid prior to 1987.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart N—Wage Credits for Veterans and Members of the Uniformed Services</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1301</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1302</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">World War II Veterans</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1310</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is a World War II veteran.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1311</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Ninety-day active service requirement for World War II veterans.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1312</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>World War II service included.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1313</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>World War II service excluded.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Post-World War II Veterans</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1320</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is a post-World War II veteran.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1321</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Ninety-day active service requirement for post-World War II veterans.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1322</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Post-World War II service included.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1323</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Post-World War II service excluded.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Separation From Active Service</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1325</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Separation from active service under conditions other than dishonorable.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Members of the Uniformed Services</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1330</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is a member of a uniformed service.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Amounts of Wage Credits and Limits on Their Use</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1340</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Wage credits for World War II and post-World War II veterans.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1341</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Wage credits for a member of a uniformed service.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1342</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limits on granting World War II and post-World War II wage credits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1343</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When the limits on granting World War II and post-World War II wage credits do not apply.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Deemed Insured Status for World War II Veterans</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1350</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Deemed insured status.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1351</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When deemed insured status does not apply.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1352</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Benefits and payments based on deemed insured status.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Effect of Other Benefits on Payment of Social Security Benefits and Payments</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1360</SECTNO>

          <SUBJECT>Veterans Administration pension or compensation payable.<PRTPAGE P="50"/>
          </SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1361</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Federal benefit payable other than by Veterans Administration.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1362</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Treatment of social security benefits or payments where Veterans Administration pension or compensation payable.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1363</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Treatment of social security benefits or payments where Federal benefit payable other than by Veterans Administration.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Evidence of Active Service and Membership in Uniformed Service</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1370</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of active service and separation from active service.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1371</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of membership in a uniformed service during the years 1957 through 1967.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart O—Interrelationship of Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance Program With the Railroad Retirement Program</HD>
        <SECTNO>404.1401</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>General relationship of Railroad Retirement Act with the old-age, survivors and disability insurance program of the Social Security Act.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1402</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When services in the railroad industry are covered.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1403</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Definition of “years of service”.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1404</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Effective date of coverage of railroad services under the act.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1405</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When the provisions of § 404.1402 do not apply.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1406</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Eligibility to railroad retirement benefits as a bar to payment of social security benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1407</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When railroad retirement benefits do not bar payment of social security benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1408</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Compensation to be treated as wages.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1409</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Purposes of using compensation.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1410</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Presumption on basis of certified compensation record.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1412</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Compensation quarters of coverage.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1413</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Certification of payment to Railroad Retirement Board.</SUBJECT>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart P—Determining Disability and Blindness</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1501</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Scope of subpart.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1502</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General definitions and terms for this subpart.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Determinations</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1503</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who makes disability and blindness determinations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1503a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Program integrity.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1504</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Determinations by other organizations and agencies.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Definition of Disability</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1505</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Basic definition of disability.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1506</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we will not consider your impairment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1508</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What is needed to show an impairment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1509</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How long the impairment must last.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1510</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Meaning of substantial gainful activity.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1511</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definition of disabling impairment.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Evidence</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1512</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of your impairment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1513</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Medical evidence of your impairment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1514</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we will purchase existing evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1515</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Where and how to submit evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1516</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>If you fail to submit medical and other evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1517</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Consultative examination at our expense.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1518</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>If you do not appear at a consultative examination.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Standards To Be Used in Determining When a Consultative Examination Will Be Obtained in Connection With Disability Determinations</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1519</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The consultative examination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we will purchase a consultative examination and how we will use it.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519b</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we will not purchase a consultative examination.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Standards for the Type of Referral and for Report Content</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1519f</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Type of purchased examinations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519g</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who we will select to perform a consultative examination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519h</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your treating physician or psychologist.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519i</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Other sources for consultative examinations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519j</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Objections to the designated physician or psychologist.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519k</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Purchase of medical examinations, laboratory tests, and other services.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519m</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Diagnostic tests or procedures.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519n</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Informing the examining physician or psychologist of examination scheduling, report content, and signature requirements.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519o</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a properly signed consultative examination report has not been received.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519p</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reviewing reports of consultative examinations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1519q</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conflict of interest.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <PRTPAGE P="51"/>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Authorizing and Monitoring the Referral Process</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1519s</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Authorizing and monitoring the consultative examination.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Procedures To Monitor the Consultative Examination</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1519t</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Consultative examination oversight.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Evaluation of Disability</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1520</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evaluation of disability in general.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1520a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evaluation of mental impairments.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1521</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What we mean by an impairment(s) that is not severe.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1522</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you have two or more unrelated impairments—initial claims.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1523</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Multiple impairments.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Medical Considerations</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1525</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Listing of Impairments in appendix 1.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1526</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Medical equivalence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1527</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evaluating medical opinions about your impairment(s) or disability.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1528</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Symptoms, signs, and laboratory findings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1529</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we evaluate symptoms, including pain.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1530</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Need to follow prescribed treatment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1535</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we will determine whether your drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1536</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Treatment required for individuals whose drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1537</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What we mean by appropriate treatment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1538</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What we mean by approved institutions or facilities.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1539</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we consider whether treatment is available.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1540</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evaluating compliance with the treatment requirements.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1541</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Establishment and use of referral and monitoring agencies.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Residual Functional Capacity</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1545</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your residual functional capacity.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1546</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Responsibility for assessing and determining residual functional capacity.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Vocational Considerations</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1560</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When your vocational background will be considered.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1561</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your ability to do work depends upon your residual functional capacity.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1562</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>If you have done only arduous unskilled physical labor.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1563</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your age as a vocational factor.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1564</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your education as a vocational factor.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1565</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your work experience as a vocational factor.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1566</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work which exists in the national economy.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1567</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Physical exertion requirements.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1568</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Skill requirements.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1569</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Listing of Medical-Vocational Guidelines in appendix 2.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1569a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Exertional and nonexertional limitations.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Substantial Gainful Activity</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1571</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1572</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What we mean by substantial gainful activity.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1573</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General information about work activity.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1574</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evaluation guides if you are an employee.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1575</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evaluation guides if you are self-employed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1576</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Impairment-related work expenses.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Widows, Widowers, and Surviving Divorced Spouses</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1577</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability defined for widows, widowers, and surviving divorced spouses for monthly benefits payable for months prior to January 1991.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1578</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine disability for widows, widowers, and surviving divorced spouses for monthly benefits payable for months prior to January 1991.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1579</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we will determine whether your disability continues or ends.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Blindness</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1581</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Meaning of blindness as defined in the law.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1582</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>A period of disability based on blindness.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1583</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine disability for blind persons who are age 55 or older.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1584</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evaluation of work activity of blind people.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1585</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Trial work period for persons age 55 or older who are blind.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1586</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Why and when we will stop your cash benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1587</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Circumstances under which we may suspend your benefits before we make a determination.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Continuing or Stopping Disability</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1588</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your responsibility to tell us of events that may change your disability status.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1589</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>We may conduct a review to find out whether you continue to be disabled.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1590</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When and how often we will conduct a continuing disability review.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1591</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>If your medical recovery was expected and you returned to work.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1592</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The trial work period.<PRTPAGE P="52"/>
          </SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1592a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The reentitlement period.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1593</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Medical evidence in continuing disability review cases.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1594</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we will determine whether your disability continues or ends.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1595</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we determine that you are not now disabled.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1596</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Circumstances under which we may suspend your benefits before we make a determination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1597</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>After we make a determination that you are not now disabled.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1597a</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Continued benefits pending appeal of a medical cessation determination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1598</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>If you become disabled by another impairment(s).</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1599</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Work incentive experiments and rehabilitation demonstration projects in the disability program.</SUBJECT>
          <APP>
            <E T="05">Appendix 1 to Subpart P—Listing of Impairments</E>
          </APP>
          <APP>
            <E T="05">Appendix 2 to Subpart P—Medical-Vocational Guidelines</E>
          </APP>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart Q—Determinations of Disability</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1601</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Purpose and scope.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1602</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1603</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Basic responsibilities for us and the State.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Responsibilities for Performing the Disability Determination Function</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1610</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How a State notifies us that it wishes to perform the disability determination function.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1611</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we notify a State whether it may perform the disability determination function.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1613</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability determinations the State makes.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1614</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Responsibilities for obtaining evidence to make disability determinations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1615</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Making disability determinations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1616</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Medical or psychological consultant.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1617</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reasonable efforts to obtain review by a qualified psychiatrist or psychologist.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1618</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notifying claimants of the disability determination.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Administrative Responsibilities and Requirements</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1620</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General administrative requirements.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1621</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Personnel.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1622</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Training.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1623</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Facilities.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1624</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Medical and other purchased services.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1625</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Records and reports.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1626</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Fiscal.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1627</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Audits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1628</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Property.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1629</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Participation in research and demonstration projects.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1630</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Coordination with other agencies.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1631</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Confidentiality of information and records.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1632</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Other Federal laws and regulations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1633</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Policies and operating instructions.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Performance Standards</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1640</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1641</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Standards of performance.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1642</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Processing time standards.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1643</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Performance accuracy standard.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1644</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How and when we determine whether the processing time standards are met.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1645</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How and when we determine whether the performance accuracy standard is met.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1650</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action we will take if a State agency does not meet the standards.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Performance Monitoring and Support</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1660</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we will monitor.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1661</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we will provide performance support.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1662</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What support we will provide.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Substantial Failure</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1670</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1671</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Good cause for not following the Act, our regulations, or other written guidelines.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1675</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Finding of substantial failure.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Hearings and Appeals</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1680</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of right to hearing on proposed finding of substantial failure.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1681</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disputes on matters other than substantial failure.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1682</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who conducts the hearings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1683</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Hearings and appeals process.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Assumption of Disability Determination Function</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1690</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Assumption when we make a finding of substantial failure.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1691</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Assumption when State no longer wishes to perform the disability determination function.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1692</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Protection of State employees.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1693</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limitation on State expenditures after notice.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1694</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Final accounting by the State.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart R—Representation of Parties</HD>
        <SECTNO>404.1700</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1703</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1705</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Who may be your representative.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1706</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Notification of options for obtaining attorney representation.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1707</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Appointing a representative.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1710</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Authority of a representative.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1715</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Notice or request to a representative.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1720</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Fee for a representative's services.<PRTPAGE P="53"/>
        </SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1725</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Request for approval of a fee.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1728</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Proceedings before a State or Federal court.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1730</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Payment of fees.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1735</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Services in a proceeding under title II of the Act.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1740</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Rules governing representatives.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1745</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>What happens to a representative who breaks the rules.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1750</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Notice of charges against a representative.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1755</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Withdrawing charges against a representative.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1765</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Hearing on charges.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1770</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Decision by hearing officer.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1775</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Requesting review of the hearing officer's decision.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1776</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Assignment of request for review of the hearing officer's decision.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1780</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Appeals Council's review of hearing officer's decision.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1785</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Evidence permitted on review.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1790</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Appeals Council's decision.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1795</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When the Appeals Council will dismiss a request for review.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1797</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reinstatement after suspension—period of suspension expired.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1799</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reinstatement after suspension or disqualification—period of suspension not expired.</SUBJECT>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart S—Payment Procedures</HD>
        <SECTNO>404.1800</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1805</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Paying benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1807</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Monthly payment day.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1810</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Expediting benefit payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1815</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Withholding certification or payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1820</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Transfer or assignment of payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.1825</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Joint payments to a family.</SUBJECT>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart T—Totalization Agreements</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1901</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1902</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1903</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Negotiating totalization agreements.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1904</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effective date of a totalization agreement.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1905</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Termination of agreements.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Benefit Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1908</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Crediting foreign periods of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1910</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Person qualifies under more than one totalization agreement.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1911</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effects of a totalization agreement on entitlement to hospital insurance benefits.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Coverage Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1913</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Precluding dual coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1914</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Certificate of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1915</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payment of contributions.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Computation Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1918</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How benefits are computed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1919</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How benefits are recomputed.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1920</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Supplementing the U.S. benefit if the total amount of the combined benefits is less than the U.S. minimum benefit.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1921</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Benefits of less than $1 due.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Other Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.1925</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Applications.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1926</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1927</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeals.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1928</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of the alien non-payment provision.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1929</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Overpayments.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.1930</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disclosure of information.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart U—Representative Payment</HD>
        <SECTNO>404.2001</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2010</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When payment will be made to a representative payee.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2015</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Information considered in determining whether to make representative payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2020</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Information considered in selecting a representative payee.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2021</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Order of preference in selecting a representative payee.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2025</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Information to be submitted by a representative payee.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2030</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Advance notice of the determination to make representative payment.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2035</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Responsibilities of a representative payee.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2040</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Use of benefit payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2040a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Compensation for qualified organizations serving as representative payees.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2041</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Liability for misuse of benefit payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2045</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Conservation and investment of benefit payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2050</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When a new representative payee will be selected.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2055</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When representative payment will be stopped.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2060</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Transfer of accumulated benefit payments.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>404.2065</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Accounting for benefit payments.</SUBJECT>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart V—Payments for Vocational Rehabilitation Services</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.2101</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2102</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Purpose and scope.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2103</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2104</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Participation by State VR agencies or alternate participants.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2106</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Basic qualifications for alternate participants.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <PRTPAGE P="54"/>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Payment Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.2108</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Requirements for payment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2109</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Responsibility for making payment decisions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2110</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What we mean by “SGA” and by “a continuous period of 9 months”.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2111</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Criteria for determining when VR services will be considered to have contributed to a continuous period of 9 months.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2112</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payment for VR services in a case where an individual continues to receive disability payments based on participation in an approved VR program.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2113</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Payment for VR services in a case of VR refusal.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2114</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Services for which payment may be made.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2115</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When services must have been provided.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2116</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When claims for payment for VR services must be made (filing deadlines).</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2117</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What costs will be paid.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Administrative Provisions</HD>
          <SECTNO>404.2118</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Applicability of these provisions to alternate participants.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2119</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Method of payment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2120</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Audits.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2121</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Validation reviews.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2122</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Confidentiality of information and records.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2123</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Other Federal laws and regulations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>404.2127</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Resolution of disputes.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
    </CONTENTS>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart A—Introduction, General Provisions and Definitions</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 203, 205(a), 216(j), and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 403, 405(a), 416(j), and 902(a)(5)).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.1</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
        <P>The regulations in this part 404 (Regulations No. 4 of the Social Security Administration) relate to the provisions of title II of the Social Security Act as amended on August 28, 1950, and as further amended thereafter. The regulations in this part are divided into 22 subparts:</P>
        <P>(a) Subpart A contains provisions relating to general definitions and use of terms.</P>
        <P>(b) Subpart B relates to quarters of coverage and insured status requirements.</P>
        <P>(c) Subpart C relates to the computation and recomputation of the primary insurance amount.</P>
        <P>(d) Subpart D relates to the requirements for entitlement to monthly benefits and to the lump-sum death payment duration of entitlement and benefit rates.</P>
        <P>(e) Subpart E contains provisions relating to the reduction and increase of insurance benefits and to deductions from benefits and lump-sum death payments.</P>
        <P>(f) Subpart F relates to overpayments, underpayments, waiver of adjustment or recovery of overpayments and liability of certifying officers.</P>
        <P>(g) Subpart G relates to filing of applications and other forms.</P>
        <P>(h) Subpart H relates to evidentiary requirements for establishing an initial and continuing right to monthly benefits and for establishing a right to lump-sum death payment. (Evidentiary requirements relating to disability are contained in subpart P.)</P>
        <P>(i) Subpart I relates to maintenance and revision of records of wages and self-employment income.</P>
        <P>(j) Subpart J relates to initial determinations, the administrative review process, and reopening of determinations and decisions.</P>
        <P>(k) Subpart K relates to employment, wages, self-employment and self-employment income.</P>
        <P>(l) Subpart L is reserved.</P>
        <P>(m) Subpart M relates to coverage of employees of State and local Governments.</P>
        <P>(n) Subpart N relates to benefits in cases involving veterans.</P>
        <P>(o) Subpart O relates to the interrelationship of the old-age, survivors and disability insurance program with the railroad retirement program.</P>
        <P>(p) Subpart P relates to the determination of disability or blindness.</P>
        <P>(q) Subpart Q relates to standards, requirements and procedures for States making determinations of disability for the Commissioner. It also sets out the Commissioner's responsibilities in carrying out the disability determination function.</P>
        <P>(r) Subpart R relates to the provisions applicable to attorneys and other individuals who represent applicants in connection with claims for benefits.</P>
        <P>(s) Subpart S relates to the payment of benefits to individuals who are entitled to benefits.</P>

        <P>(t) Subpart T relates to the negotiation and administration of totalization <PRTPAGE P="55"/>agreements between the United States and foreign countries.</P>
        <P>(u) Subpart U relates to the selection of a representative payee to receive benefits on behalf of a beneficiary and to the duties and responsibilities of a representative payee.</P>
        <P>(v) Subpart V relates to payments to State vocational rehabilitative agencies (or alternate participants) for vocational rehabilitation services.</P>
        <CITA>[26 FR 7054, Aug. 5, 1961; 26 FR 7760, Aug. 19, 1961, as amended at 27 FR 4513, May 11, 1962; 28 FR 14492, Dec. 31, 1963; 51 FR 11718, Apr. 7, 1986; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.2</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>General definitions and use of terms.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Terms relating to the Act and regulations.</E> (1) <E T="03">The Act</E> means the Social Security Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. Chapter 7).</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Section</E> means a section of the regulations in part 404 of this chapter unless the context indicates otherwise.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Commissioner; Appeals Council; Administrative Law Judge defined.</E> (1) <E T="03">Secretary</E> means the Secretary of Health and Human Services.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Appeals Council</E> means the Appeals Council of the Office of Hearings and Appeals in the Social Security Administration or such member or members thereof as may be designated by the Chairman.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Administrative Law Judge</E> means an Administrative Law Judge in the Office of Hearings and Appeals in the Social Security Administration.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Miscellaneous.</E> (1) <E T="03">Certify,</E> when used in connection with the duty imposed on the Commissioner by section 205(i) of the act, means that action taken by the Administration in the form of a written statement addressed to the Managing Trustee, setting forth the name and address of the person to whom payment of a benefit or lump sum, or any part thereof, is to be made, the amount to be paid, and the time at which payment should be made.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Benefit</E> means an old-age insurance benefit, disability insurance benefit, wife's insurance benefit, husband's insurance benefit, child's insurance benefit, widow's insurance benefit, widower's insurance benefit, mother's insurance benefit, father's insurance benefit, parent's insurance benefit, or special payment at age 72 under title II of the Act. (Lump sums, which are death payments under title II of the Act, are excluded from the term <E T="03">benefit</E> as defined in this part to permit greater clarity in the regulations.)</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Lump sum</E> means a lump-sum death payment under title II of the act or any person's share of such a payment.</P>
        <P>(4) <E T="03">Attainment of age.</E> An individual attains a given age on the first moment of the day preceding the anniversary of his birth corresponding to such age.</P>
        <P>(5) <E T="03">State,</E> unless otherwise indicated, includes (i) the District of Columbia, (ii) the Virgin Islands, (iii) the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico effective January 1, 1951, (iv) Guam and American Samoa, effective September 13, 1960, generally, and for purposes of sections 210(a) and 211 of the act effective after 1960 with respect to service performed after 1960, and effective for taxable years beginning after 1960 with respect to crediting net earnings from self-employment and self-employment income, and (v) the Territories of Alaska and Hawaii prior to January 3, 1959, and August 21, 1959, respectively when those territories acquired statehood.</P>
        <P>(6) <E T="03">United States,</E> when used in a geographical sense, includes, unless otherwise indicated, (i) the States, (ii) the Territories of Alaska and Hawaii prior to January 3, 1959, and August 21, 1959, respectively, when they acquired statehood, (iii) the District of Columbia, (iv) the Virgin Islands, (v) the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico effective January 1, 1951, and (vi) Guam and American Samoa, effective September 13, 1960, generally, and for purposes of sections 210(a) and 211 of the act, effective after 1960 with respect to service performed after 1960, and effective for taxable years beginning after 1960 with respect to crediting net earnings from self-employment and self-employment income.</P>

        <P>(7) Masculine gender includes the feminine, unless otherwise indicated.<PRTPAGE P="56"/>
        </P>
        <P>(8) The terms defined in sections 209, 210, and 211 of the act shall have the meanings therein assigned to them.</P>
        <CITA>[26 FR 7055, Aug. 5, 1961; 26 FR 7760, Aug. 19, 1961, as amended at 28 FR 1037, Feb. 2, 1963; 28 FR 14492, Dec. 31, 1963; 29 FR 15509, Nov. 19, 1964; 41 FR 32886, Aug. 6, 1976; 51 FR 11718, Apr. 7, 1986; 61 FR 41330, Aug. 8, 1996; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.3</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>General provisions.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Effect of cross references.</E> The cross references in the regulations in this part 404 to other portions of the regulations, when the word <E T="03">see</E> is used, are made only for convenience and shall be given no legal effect.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Periods of limitation ending on nonwork days.</E> Pursuant to the provisions of section 216(j) of the act, effective September 13, 1960, where any provision of title II, or any provision of another law of the United States (other than the Internal Revenue Code of 1954) relating to or changing the effect of title II, or any regulation of the Commissioner issued under title II, provides for a period within which an act is required to be done which affects eligibility for or the amount of any benefit or payment under this title or is necessary to establish or protect any rights under this title, and such period ends on a Saturday, Sunday or Federal legal holiday or on any other day all or part of which is declared to be a nonwork day for Federal employees by statute or Executive Order, then such act shall be considered as done within such period if it is done on the first day thereafter which is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday or any other day all or part of which is declared to be a nonwork day for Federal employees either by statute or Executive Order. For purposes of this paragraph, the day on which a period ends shall include the final day of any extended period where such extension is authorized by law or by the Commissioner pursuant to law. Such extension of any period of limitation does not apply to periods during which benefits may be paid for months prior to the month an application for such benefits is filed pursuant to § 404.621, or to periods during which an application for benefits may be accepted as such pursuant to § 404.620.</P>
        <CITA>[26 FR 7055, Aug. 5, 1961, as amended at 29 FR 15509, Nov. 19, 1964; 51 FR 11718, Apr. 7, 1986; 61 FR 41330, Aug. 8, 1996; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart B—Insured Status and Quarters of Coverage</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 205(a), 212, 213, 214, 216, 217, 223, and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 405(a), 412, 413, 414, 416, 417, 423, and 902(a)(5)).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>45 FR 25384, Apr. 15, 1980, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.101</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Insured status.</E> This subpart explains what we mean when we say that a person has insured status under the social security program. It also describes how a person may become fully insured, currently insured or insured for disability benefits. Your insured status is a basic factor in determining if you are entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits or to a period of disability. It is also a basic factor in determining if dependents' or survivors' insurance benefits or a lump-sum death payment are payable based on your earnings record. If you are neither fully nor currently insured, no benefits are payable based on your earnings. (Subpart D of this part describes these benefits and the kind of insured status required for each.) In §§ 404.110 through 404.120 we tell how we determine if you are fully or currently insured. The rules for determining if you are insured for purposes of establishing a period of disability or becoming entitled to disability insurance benefits are in §§ 404.130 through 404.133. Whether you have the required insured status depends on the number of quarters of coverage (QCs) you have acquired.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">QCs.</E> This subpart also sets out our rules on crediting you with QCs. QCs are used in determining insured status. In general, you are credited with QCs based on the wages you are paid and the self-employment income you derive during certain periods. (See subpart K of this part for a definition <PRTPAGE P="57"/>of <E T="03">wages</E> and <E T="03">self-employment income.</E>) Our rules on how and when you acquire a QC are contained in §§ 404.140 through 404.146.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.102</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>For the purpose of this subpart—</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Act</E> means the Social Security Act, as amended.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Age</E> means how many years old you are. You reach a particular age on the day before your birthday. For example, if your sixty-second birthday is on July 1, 1979, you became age 62 on June 30, 1979.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Quarter</E> or <E T="03">calendar quarter</E> means a period of three calendar months ending March 31, June 30, September 30, or December 31 of any year.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">We, our,</E> or <E T="03">us</E> means the Social Security Administration.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">You</E> or <E T="03">your</E> means the worker whose insured status is being considered.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Fully Insured Status</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.110</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine fully insured status.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> We describe how we determine the number of quarters of coverage (QCs) you need to be fully insured in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section. The table in § 404.115 may be used to determine the number of QCs you need to be fully insured under paragraph (b) of this section. We consider certain World War II veterans to have died fully insured (see § 404.111). We also consider certain employees of private nonprofit organizations to be fully insured if they meet special requirements (see § 404.112).</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">How many QCs you need to be fully insured.</E> (1) You need at least 6 QCs but not more than 40 QCs to be fully insured. A person who died before 1951 with at least 6 QCs is fully insured.</P>
          <P>(2) You are fully insured for old-age insurance benefits if you have one QC (whenever acquired) for each calendar year elapsing after 1950 or, if later, after the year in which you became age 21, and before the year you reach retirement age, that is, before—</P>
          <P>(i) The year you become age 62, if you are a woman;</P>
          <P>(ii) The year you become age 62, if you are a man who becomes age 62 after 1974;</P>
          <P>(iii) The year 1975, if you are a man who became age 62 in 1973 or 1974; or</P>
          <P>(iv) The year you became age 65, if you are a man who became age 62 before 1973.</P>
          <P>(3) A person who is otherwise eligible for survivor's benefits and who files an application will be entitled to benefits based on your earnings if you die fully insured. You will be fully insured if you had one QC (whenever acquired) for each calendar year elapsing after 1950 or, if later, after the year you became age 21, and before the earlier of the following years:</P>
          <P>(i) The year you die; or</P>
          <P>(ii) The year you reach retirement age as shown in paragraph (b)(2) of this section.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">How a period of disability affects the number of QCs you need.</E> In determining the number of elapsed years under paragraph (b) of this section, we do not count as an elapsed year any year which is wholly or partly in a period of disability we established for you. For example, if we established a period of disability for you from December 5, 1975 through January 31, 1977, the three years, 1975, 1976 and 1977, would not be counted as elapsed years.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">How we credit QCs for fully insured status based on your total wages before 1951</E>—(1) <E T="03">General.</E> For purposes of paragraph (b) of this section, we may use the following rules in crediting QCs based on your wages before 1951 instead of the rule in § 404.141(b)(1).</P>
          <P>(i) We may consider you to have one QC for each $400 of your total wages before 1951, as defined in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, if you have at least 7 elapsed years as determined under paragraph (b)(2) or (b)(3) of this section; and the number of QCs determined under this paragraph plus the number of QCs credited to you for periods after 1950 make you fully insured.</P>

          <P>(ii) If you file an application in June 1992 or later and you are not entitled to a benefit under § 404.380 or section 227 of the Act in the month the application is made, we may consider you to have at least one QC before 1951 if you have $400 or more total wages before 1951, as defined in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, provided that the number of QCs credited to you under this paragraph plus the number of QCs credited to you <PRTPAGE P="58"/>for periods after 1950 make you fully insured.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">What are total wages before 1951.</E> For purposes of paragraph (d)(1) of this section, your total wages before 1951 include—</P>
          <P>(i) Remuneration credited to you before 1951 on the records of the Secretary;</P>
          <P>(ii) Wages considered paid to you before 1951 under section 217 of the Act (relating to benefits in case of veterans);</P>
          <P>(iii) Compensation under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 before 1951 that can be credited to you under title II of the Social Security Act; and</P>
          <P>(iv) Wages considered paid to you before 1951 under section 231 of the Act (relating to benefits in case of certain persons interned in the United States during World War II).</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">When your fully insured status begins.</E> You are fully insured as of the first day of the calendar quarter in which you acquire the last needed QC (see § 404.145).</P>
          <CITA>[45 FR 25384, Apr. 15, 1980, as amended at 50 FR 36573, Sept. 9, 1985; 57 FR 23156, June 2, 1992]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.111</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we consider a person fully insured based on World War II active military or naval service.</SUBJECT>
          <P>We consider that a person, who was not otherwise fully insured, died fully insured if—</P>
          <P>(a) The person was in the active military or naval service of the United States during World War II;</P>
          <P>(b) The person died within three years after separation from service and before July 27, 1954; and</P>
          <P>(c) The conditions in § 404.1350 that permit us to consider the person fully insured are met.</P>
          <P>(d) The provisions of this section do not apply to persons filing applications after May 31, 1992, unless a survivor is entitled to benefits under section 202 of the Act based on the primary insurance amount of the fully insured person for the month preceding the month in which the application is made.</P>
          <CITA>[45 FR 25384, Apr. 15, 1980, as amended at 57 FR 23157, June 2, 1992]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.112</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we consider certain employees of private nonprofit organizations to be fully insured.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are age 55 or over on January 1, 1984, and are on that date an employee of an organization described in § 404.1025(a) which does not have in effect a waiver certificate under section 3121(k) of the Code on that date and whose employees are mandatorily covered as a result of section 102 of Pub. L. 98-21, we consider you to be fully insured if you meet the following requirements:</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L2,i1">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1">Your age on January 1, 1984 is—</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">QC's acquired after Dec. 31, 1983</CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">60 or over</ENT>
              <ENT>6</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">59 or over but less than age 60</ENT>
              <ENT>8</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">58 or over but less than age 59</ENT>
              <ENT>12</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">57 or over but less than age 58</ENT>
              <ENT>16</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">55 or over but less than age 57</ENT>
              <ENT>20</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <CITA>[50 FR 36573, Sept. 9, 1985]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.115</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Table for determining the quarters of coverage you need to be fully insured.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> You may use the following table to determine the number of quarters of coverage (QCs) you need to be fully insured under § 404.110. Paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section tell you how to use this table.</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s110,11,11,11,11,11" COLS="6" OPTS="L2">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1">Worker who reaches retirement age as described in § 404.110(b)(2)</CHED>
              <CHED H="2">Col. I—Date of birth</CHED>
              <CHED H="2">Col. II <SU>1</SU>
              </CHED>
              <CHED H="3">Men</CHED>
              <CHED H="3">Women</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Worker who dies before reaching retirement age as described in § 404.110(b)(2)</CHED>
              <CHED H="2">Col. III <SU>2</SU>—Year of death</CHED>
              <CHED H="2">Col. IV <SU>3</SU>
              </CHED>
              <CHED H="2">Col. V <SU>4</SU>—Age in year of death</CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 1, 1893 or earlier</ENT>
              <ENT>6</ENT>
              <ENT>6</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <SU>5</SU> 1957</ENT>
              <ENT>6</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <SU>6</SU> 28</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1893 to Jan. 1, 1894</ENT>
              <ENT>7</ENT>
              <ENT>6</ENT>
              <ENT>1958</ENT>
              <ENT>7</ENT>
              <ENT>29</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1894 to Jan. 1, 1895</ENT>
              <ENT>8</ENT>
              <ENT>6</ENT>
              <ENT>1959</ENT>
              <ENT>8</ENT>
              <ENT>30</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1895 to Jan. 1, 1896</ENT>
              <ENT>9</ENT>
              <ENT>6</ENT>
              <ENT>1960</ENT>
              <ENT>9</ENT>
              <ENT>31</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1896 to Jan. 1, 1897</ENT>
              <ENT>10</ENT>
              <ENT>7</ENT>
              <ENT>1961</ENT>
              <ENT>10</ENT>
              <ENT>32</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1897 to Jan. 1, 1898</ENT>
              <ENT>11</ENT>
              <ENT>8</ENT>
              <ENT>1962</ENT>
              <ENT>11</ENT>
              <ENT>33</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1898 to Jan. 1, 1899</ENT>
              <ENT>12</ENT>
              <ENT>9</ENT>
              <ENT>1963</ENT>
              <ENT>12</ENT>
              <ENT>34</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1899 to Jan. 1, 1900</ENT>
              <ENT>13</ENT>
              <ENT>10</ENT>
              <ENT>1964</ENT>
              <ENT>13</ENT>
              <ENT>35</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1900 to Jan. 1, 1901</ENT>
              <ENT>14</ENT>
              <ENT>11</ENT>
              <ENT>1965</ENT>
              <ENT>14</ENT>
              <ENT>36</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1901 to Jan. 1, 1902</ENT>
              <ENT>15</ENT>
              <ENT>12</ENT>
              <ENT>1966</ENT>
              <ENT>15</ENT>
              <ENT>37</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <PRTPAGE P="59"/>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1902 to Jan. 1, 1903</ENT>
              <ENT>16</ENT>
              <ENT>13</ENT>
              <ENT>1967</ENT>
              <ENT>16</ENT>
              <ENT>38</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1903 to Jan. 1, 1904</ENT>
              <ENT>17</ENT>
              <ENT>14</ENT>
              <ENT>1968</ENT>
              <ENT>17</ENT>
              <ENT>39</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1904 to Jan. 1, 1905</ENT>
              <ENT>18</ENT>
              <ENT>15</ENT>
              <ENT>1969</ENT>
              <ENT>18</ENT>
              <ENT>40</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1905 to Jan. 1, 1906</ENT>
              <ENT>19</ENT>
              <ENT>16</ENT>
              <ENT>1970</ENT>
              <ENT>19</ENT>
              <ENT>41</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1906 to Jan. 1, 1907</ENT>
              <ENT>20</ENT>
              <ENT>17</ENT>
              <ENT>1971</ENT>
              <ENT>20</ENT>
              <ENT>42</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1907 to Jan. 1, 1908</ENT>
              <ENT>21</ENT>
              <ENT>18</ENT>
              <ENT>1972</ENT>
              <ENT>21</ENT>
              <ENT>43</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1908 to Jan. 1, 1909</ENT>
              <ENT>22</ENT>
              <ENT>19</ENT>
              <ENT>1973</ENT>
              <ENT>22</ENT>
              <ENT>44</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1909 to Jan. 1, 1910</ENT>
              <ENT>23</ENT>
              <ENT>20</ENT>
              <ENT>1974</ENT>
              <ENT>23</ENT>
              <ENT>45</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1910 to Jan. 1, 1911</ENT>
              <ENT>24</ENT>
              <ENT>21</ENT>
              <ENT>1975</ENT>
              <ENT>24</ENT>
              <ENT>46</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1911 to Jan. 1, 1912</ENT>
              <ENT>24</ENT>
              <ENT>22</ENT>
              <ENT>1976</ENT>
              <ENT>25</ENT>
              <ENT>47</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1912 to Jan. 1, 1913</ENT>
              <ENT>24</ENT>
              <ENT>23</ENT>
              <ENT>1977</ENT>
              <ENT>26</ENT>
              <ENT>48</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1913 to Jan. 1, 1914</ENT>
              <ENT>24</ENT>
              <ENT>24</ENT>
              <ENT>1978</ENT>
              <ENT>27</ENT>
              <ENT>49</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1914 to Jan. 1, 1915</ENT>
              <ENT>25</ENT>
              <ENT>25</ENT>
              <ENT>1979</ENT>
              <ENT>28</ENT>
              <ENT>50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1915 to Jan. 1, 1916</ENT>
              <ENT>26</ENT>
              <ENT>26</ENT>
              <ENT>1980</ENT>
              <ENT>29</ENT>
              <ENT>51</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1916 to Jan. 1, 1917</ENT>
              <ENT>27</ENT>
              <ENT>27</ENT>
              <ENT>1981</ENT>
              <ENT>30</ENT>
              <ENT>52</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1917 to Jan. 1, 1918</ENT>
              <ENT>28</ENT>
              <ENT>28</ENT>
              <ENT>1982</ENT>
              <ENT>31</ENT>
              <ENT>53</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1918 to Jan. 1, 1919</ENT>
              <ENT>29</ENT>
              <ENT>29</ENT>
              <ENT>1983</ENT>
              <ENT>32</ENT>
              <ENT>54</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1919 to Jan. 1, 1920</ENT>
              <ENT>30</ENT>
              <ENT>30</ENT>
              <ENT>1984</ENT>
              <ENT>33</ENT>
              <ENT>55</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1920 to Jan. 1, 1921</ENT>
              <ENT>31</ENT>
              <ENT>31</ENT>
              <ENT>1985</ENT>
              <ENT>34</ENT>
              <ENT>56</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1921 to Jan. 1, 1922</ENT>
              <ENT>32</ENT>
              <ENT>32</ENT>
              <ENT>1986</ENT>
              <ENT>35</ENT>
              <ENT>57</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1922 to Jan. 1, 1923</ENT>
              <ENT>33</ENT>
              <ENT>33</ENT>
              <ENT>1987</ENT>
              <ENT>36</ENT>
              <ENT>58</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1923 to Jan. 1, 1924</ENT>
              <ENT>34</ENT>
              <ENT>34</ENT>
              <ENT>1988</ENT>
              <ENT>37</ENT>
              <ENT>59</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1924 to Jan. 1, 1925</ENT>
              <ENT>35</ENT>
              <ENT>35</ENT>
              <ENT>1989</ENT>
              <ENT>38</ENT>
              <ENT>60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1925 to Jan. 1, 1926</ENT>
              <ENT>36</ENT>
              <ENT>36</ENT>
              <ENT>1990</ENT>
              <ENT>39</ENT>
              <ENT>61</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1926 to Jan. 1, 1927</ENT>
              <ENT>37</ENT>
              <ENT>37</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <SU>7</SU> 1991</ENT>
              <ENT>40</ENT>
              <ENT>62</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1927 to Jan. 1, 1928</ENT>
              <ENT>38</ENT>
              <ENT>38</ENT>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT/>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1928 to Jan. 1, 1929</ENT>
              <ENT>39</ENT>
              <ENT>39</ENT>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT/>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Jan. 2, 1929 or later</ENT>
              <ENT>40</ENT>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT/>
            </ROW>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>1</SU> Number of QCs required for fully insured status; living worker or worker who dies after reaching retirement age.</TNOTE>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>2</SU> Worker born before Jan. 2, 1930 who dies before reaching retirement age.</TNOTE>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>3</SU> Number of QCs required for fully insured status.</TNOTE>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>4</SU> Worker born Jan. 2, 1930 or later, who dies before reaching retirement age.</TNOTE>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>5</SU> Or earlier.</TNOTE>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>6</SU> Or younger.</TNOTE>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>7</SU> Or later.</TNOTE>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Number of QCs you need.</E> The QCs you need for fully insured status are in column II opposite your date of birth in column I. If a worker dies before reaching retirement age as described in § 404.110(b)(2), the QCs needed for fully insured status are shown in column IV opposite—</P>
          <P>(1) The year of death in column III, if the worker was born before January 2, 1930; or</P>
          <P>(2) The age in the year of death in column V, if the worker was born after January 1, 1930.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">How a period of disability affects the number of QCs you need.</E> If you had a period of disability established for you, it affects the number of QCs you need to be fully insured (see § 404.110(c)). For each year which is wholly or partly in a period of disability, subtract one QC from the number of QCs shown in the appropriate line and column of the table as explained in paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Currently Insured Status</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.120</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine currently insured status.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">What the period is for determining currently insured status.</E> You are currently insured if you have at least 6 quarters of coverage (QCs) during the 13-quarter period ending with the quarter in which you—</P>
          <P>(1) Die;</P>
          <P>(2) Most recently became entitled to disability insurance benefits; or</P>
          <P>(3) Became entitled to old-age insurance benefits.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">What quarters are not counted as part of the 13-quarter period.</E> We do not count as part of the 13-quarter period any quarter all or part of which is included in a period of disability established for you, except that the first and last quarters of the period of disability may be counted if they are QCs (see § 404.146(d)).</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <PRTPAGE P="60"/>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Disability Insured Status</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.130</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine disability insured status.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> We have four different rules for determining if you are insured for purposes of establishing a period of disability or becoming entitled to disability insurance benefits. To have disability insured status, you must meet one of these rules and you must be fully insured (see § 404.132 which tells when the period ends for determining the number of quarters of coverage (QCs) you need to be fully insured).</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Rule I—You must meet the 20/40 requirement.</E> You are insured in a quarter for purposes of establishing a period of disability or becoming entitled to disability insurance benefits if in that quarter—</P>
          <P>(1) You are fully insured; and</P>
          <P>(2) You have at least 20 QCs in the 40-quarter period (see paragraph (f) of this section) ending with that quarter.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Rule II—You become disabled before age 31.</E> You are insured in a quarter for purposes of establishing a period of disability or becoming entitled to disability insurance benefits if in that quarter—</P>
          <P>(1) You have not become (or would not become) age 31;</P>
          <P>(2) You are fully insured; and</P>
          <P>(3) You have QCs in at least one-half of the quarters during the period ending with that quarter and beginning with the quarter after the quarter you became age 21; however—</P>
          <P>(i) If the number of quarters during this period is an odd number, we reduce the number by one; and</P>
          <P>(ii) If the period has less than 12 quarters, you must have at least 6 QCs in the 12-quarter period ending with that quarter.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Rule III—You had a period of disability before age 31.</E> You are insured in a quarter for purposes of establishing a period of disability or becoming entitled to disability insurance benefits if in that quarter—</P>
          <P>(1) You are disabled again at age 31 or later after having had a prior period of disability established which began before age 31 and for which you were only insured under paragraph (c) of this section; and</P>
          <P>(2) You are fully insured and have QCs in at least one-half the calendar quarters in the period beginning with the quarter after the quarter you became age 21 and through the quarter in which the later period of disability begins, up to a maximum of 20 QCs out of 40 calendar quarters; however—</P>
          <P>(i) If the number of quarters during this period is an odd number, we reduce the number by one;</P>
          <P>(ii) If the period has less than 12 quarters, you must have at least 6 QCs in the 12-quarter period ending with that quarter; and</P>
          <P>(iii) No monthly benefits may be paid or increased under Rule III before May 1983.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Rule IV—You are statutorily blind.</E> You are insured in a quarter for purposes of establishing a period of disability or becoming entitled to disability insurance benefits if in that quarter—</P>
          <P>(1) You are disabled by blindness as defined in § 404.1581; and</P>
          <P>(2) You are fully insured.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">How we determine the 40-quarter or other period.</E> In determining the 40-quarter period or other period in paragraph (b), (c), or (d) of this section, we do not count any quarter all or part of which is in a prior period of disability established for you, unless the quarter is the first or last quarter of this period and the quarter is a QC. However, we will count all the quarters in the prior period of disability established for you if by doing so you would be entitled to benefits or the amount of the benefit would be larger.</P>
          <CITA>[49 FR 28547, July 13, 1984, as amended at 55 FR 7313, Mar. 1, 1990]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.131</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you must have disability insured status.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">For a period of disability.</E> To establish a period of disability, you must have disability insured status in the quarter in which you become disabled or in a later quarter in which you are disabled.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">For disability insurance benefits.</E> (1) To become entitled to disability insurance benefits, you must have disability insured status in the first full month that you are disabled as described in § 404.1501(a), or if later—<PRTPAGE P="61"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) The 17th month (if you have to serve a waiting period described in § 404.315(d)) before the month in which you file an application for disability insurance benefits; or</P>
          <P>(ii) The 12th month (if you do not have to serve a waiting period) before the month in which you file an application for disability insurance benefits.</P>
          <P>(2) If you do not have disability insured status in a month specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, you will be insured for disability insurance benefits beginning with the first month after that month in which you do meet the insured status requirement and you also meet all other requirements for disability insurance benefits described in § 404.315.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.132</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we determine fully insured status for a period of disability or disability insurance benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In determining if you are fully insured for purposes of paragraph (b), (c), (d), or (e) of § 404.130 on disability insured status, we use the fully insured status requirements in § 404.110, but apply the following rules in determining when the period of elasped years ends:</P>
          <P>(a) If you are a woman, or a man born after January 1, 1913, the period of elapsed years in § 404.110(b) used in determining the number of quarters of coverage (QCs) you need to be fully insured ends as of the earlier of—</P>
          <P>(1) The year you become age 62; or</P>
          <P>(2) The year in which—</P>
          <P>(i) Your period of disability begins;</P>
          <P>(ii) Your waiting period begins (see § 404.315(d)); or</P>
          <P>(iii) You become entitled to disability insurance benefits (if you do not have to serve a waiting period).</P>
          <P>(b) If you are a man born before January 2, 1913, the period of elapsed years in § 404.110(b) used in determining the number of QCs you need to be fully insured ends as of the earlier of—</P>
          <P>(1) The year 1975; or</P>
          <P>(2) The year specified in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.</P>
          <CITA>[45 FR 25384, Apr. 15, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28547, July 13, 1984]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.133</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When we give you quarters of coverage based on military service to establish a period of disability.</SUBJECT>
          <P>For purposes of establishing a period of disability only, we give you quarters of coverage (QCs) for your military service before 1957 (see subpart N of this part). We do this even though we may not use that military service for other purposes of title II of the Act because a periodic benefit is payable from another Federal agency based in whole or in part on the same period of military service.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Quarters of Coverage</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.140</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What is a quarter of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> A quarter of coverage (QC) is the basic unit of social security coverage used in determining a worker's insured status. We credit you with QCs based on your earnings covered under social security.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">How we credit QCs based on earnings before 1978 (General).</E> Before 1978, wages were generally reported on a quarterly basis and self-employment income was reported on an annual basis. For the most part, we credit QCs for calendar years before 1978 based on your quarterly earnings. For these years, as explained in § 404.141, we generally credit you with a QC for each calendar quarter in which you were paid at least $50 in wages or were credited with at least $100 of self-employment income. Section 404.142 tells how self-employment income derived in a taxable year beginning before 1978 is credited to specific calendar quarters for purposes of § 404.141.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">How we credit QCs based on earnings after 1977 (General).</E> After 1977, both wages and self-employment income are generally reported on an annual basis. For calendar years after 1977, as explained in § 404.143, we generally credit you with a QC for each part of your total covered earnings in a calendar year that equals the amount required for a QC in that year. Section 404.143 also tells how the amount required for a QC will be increased in the future as average wages increase. Section 404.144 tells how self-employment income derived in a taxable year beginning after <PRTPAGE P="62"/>1977 is credited to specific calendar years for purposes of § 404.143.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">When a QC is acquired and when a calendar quarter is not a QC (general).</E> Section 404.145 tells when a QC is acquired and § 404.146 tells when a calendar quarter cannot be a QC. These rules apply when we credit QCs under § 404.141 or § 404.143.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.141</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we credit quarters of coverage for calendar years before 1978.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> The rules in this section tell how we credit calendar quarters as quarters of coverage (QCs) for calendar years before 1978. We credit you with a QC for a calendar quarter based on the amount of wages you were paid and self-employment income you derived during certain periods. The rules in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section are subject to the limitations in § 404.146, which tells when a calendar quarter cannot be a QC.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">How we credit QCs based on wages paid in, or self-employment income credited to, a calendar quarter.</E> We credit you with a QC for a calendar quarter in which—</P>
          <P>(1) You were paid wages of $50 or more (see paragraph (c) of this section for an exception relating to wages paid for agricultural labor); or</P>
          <P>(2) You were credited (under § 404.142) with self-employment income of $100 or more.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">How we credit QCs based on wages paid for agricultural labor in a calendar year after 1954.</E> (1) We credit QCs based on wages for agricultural labor depending on the amount of wages paid during a calendar year for that work. If you were paid wages for agricultural labor in a calendar year after 1954 and before 1978, we credit you with QCs for calendar quarters in that year which are not otherwise QCs according to the following table.</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s70,r30,r30" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1">If the wages paid to you in a calendar year for agricultural labor were</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">We credit you with</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">And assign: <SU>1</SU>
              </CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">$400 or more</ENT>
              <ENT>4 QCs</ENT>
              <ENT>All.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">At least $300 but less than $400</ENT>
              <ENT>3 QCs</ENT>
              <ENT>Last 3.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">At least $200 but less than $300</ENT>
              <ENT>2 QCs</ENT>
              <ENT>Last 2.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">At least $100 but less than $200</ENT>
              <ENT>1 QC</ENT>
              <ENT>Last.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Less than $100</ENT>
              <ENT>No QCs</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>1</SU> One QC to each of the following calendar quarters in that year.</TNOTE>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>(2) When we assign QCs to calendar quarters in a year as shown in the table in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, you might not meet (or might not meet as early in the year as otherwise possible) the requirements to be fully or currently insured, to be entitled to a computation or recomputation of your primary insurance amount, or to establish a period of disability. If this happens, we assign the QCs to different quarters in that year than those shown in the table if this assignment permits you to meet these requirements (or meet them earlier in the year). We can only reassign QCs for purposes of meeting these requirements.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">How we credit QCs based on wages paid or self-employment income derived in a year.</E> (1) If you were paid wages in a calendar year after 1950 and before 1978 at least equal to the annual wage limitation in effect for that year as described in § 404.1027(a), we credit you with a QC for each quarter in that calendar year. If you were paid at least $3,000 wages in a calendar year before 1951, we credit you with a QC for each quarter in that calendar year.</P>
          <P>(2) If you derived self-employment income (or derived self-employment income and also were paid wages) during a taxable year beginning after 1950 and before 1978 at least equal to the self-employment income and wage limitation in effect for that year as described in § 404.1068(b), we credit you with a QC for each calendar quarter wholly or partly in that taxable year.</P>
          <CITA>[45 FR 25384, Apr. 15, 1980; 45 FR 41931, June 23, 1980]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.142</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we credit self-employment income to calendar quarters for taxable years beginning before 1978.</SUBJECT>

          <P>In crediting quarters of coverage under § 404.141(b)(2), we credit any self-employment income you derived during a taxable year that began before 1978 to calendar quarters as follows:<PRTPAGE P="63"/>
          </P>
          <P>(a) If your taxable year was a calendar year, we credit your self-employment income equally to each quarter of that calendar year.</P>
          <P>(b) If your taxable year was not a calendar year (that is, it began on a date other than January 1, or was less than a calendar year), we credit your self-employment income equally—</P>
          <P>(1) To the calendar quarter in which your taxable year ended; and</P>
          <P>(2) To each of the next three or fewer preceding quarters that were wholly or partly in your taxable year.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.143</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we credit quarters of coverage for calendar years after 1977.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Crediting quarters of coverage (QCs).</E> For calendar years after 1977, we credit you with a QC for each part of the total wages paid and self-employment income credited (under § 404.144) to you in a calendar year that equals the amount required for a QC in that year. For example, if the total of your wages and self-employment income for a calendar year is more than twice, but less than 3 times, the amount required for a QC in that year, we credit you with only 2 QCs for the year. The rules for crediting QCs in this section are subject to the limitations in § 404.146, which tells when a calendar quarter cannot be a QC. In addition, we cannot credit you with more than four QCs for any calendar year. The amount of wages and self-employment income that you must have for each QC is—</P>
          <P>(1) $250 for calendar year 1978; and</P>

          <P>(2) For each calendar year after 1978, an amount determined by the Commissioner for that year (on the basis of a formula in section 213(d)(2) of the Act which reflects national increases in average wages). The amount determined by the Commissioner is published in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> on or before November 1 of the preceding year and included in the appendix to this subpart.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Assigning QCs.</E> We assign a QC credited under paragraph (a) of this section to a specific calendar quarter in the calendar year only if the assignment is necessary to—</P>
          <P>(1) Give you fully or currently insured status;</P>
          <P>(2) Entitle you to a computation or recomputation of your primary insurance amount; or</P>
          <P>(3) Permit you to establish a period of disability.</P>
          <CITA>[45 FR 25834, Apr. 15, 1980, as amended at 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.144</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we credit self-employment income to calendar years for taxable years beginning after 1977.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In crediting quarters of coverage under § 404.143(a), we credit self-employment income you derived during a taxable year that begins after 1977 to calendar years as follows:</P>
          <P>(a) If your taxable year is a calendar year or begins and ends within the same calendar year, we credit your self-employment income to that calendar year.</P>

          <P>(b) If your taxable year begins in one calendar year and ends in the following calendar year, we allocate proportionately your self-employment income to the two calendar years on the basis of the number of months in each calendar year which are included completely within your taxable year. We consider the calendar month in which your taxable year ends as included completely within your taxable year.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example.</HD>
            <P>For the taxable year beginning May 15, 1978, and ending May 14, 1979, your self-employment income is $1200. We credit 7/12 ($700) of your self-employment income to calendar year 1978 and 5/12 ($500) of your self-employment income to calendar year 1979.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.145</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you acquire a quarter of coverage.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If we credit you with a quarter of coverage (QC) for a calendar quarter under paragraph (b), (c), or (d) of § 404.141 for calendar years before 1978 or assign it to a specific calendar quarter under paragraph (b) of § 404.143 for calendar years after 1977, you acquire the QC as of the first day of the calendar quarter.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.146</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a calendar quarter cannot be a quarter of coverage.</SUBJECT>

          <P>This section applies when we credit you with quarters of coverage (QCs) under § 404.141 for calendar years before 1978 and under § 404.143 for calendar years after 1977. We cannot credit you with a QC for—<PRTPAGE P="64"/>
          </P>
          <P>(a) A calendar quarter that has not begun;</P>
          <P>(b) A calendar quarter that begins after the quarter of your death;</P>
          <P>(c) A calendar quarter that has already been counted as a QC; or</P>
          <P>(d) A calendar quarter that is included in a period of disability established for you, unless—</P>
          <P>(1) The quarter is the first or the last quarter of this period; or</P>
          <P>(2) The period of disability is not taken into consideration (see § 404.320(a)).</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <APPENDIX>
        <EAR>Pt. 404, Subpt. B, App.</EAR>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Appendix to Subpart B of Part 404—Quarter of Coverage Amounts for Calendar Years After 1978</E>
        </HD>

        <P>This appendix shows the amount determined by the Commissioner that is needed for a quarter of coverage for each year after 1978 as explained in § 404.143. We publish the amount as a Notice in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> on or before November 1 of the preceding year. The amounts determined by the Commissioner are as follows:</P>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,7" COLS="2" OPTS="L2">
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">Calendar year</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">Amount needed</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1979</ENT>
            <ENT>$260</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1980</ENT>
            <ENT>290</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1981</ENT>
            <ENT>310</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1982</ENT>
            <ENT>340</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1983</ENT>
            <ENT>370</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1984</ENT>
            <ENT>390</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1985</ENT>
            <ENT>410</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1986</ENT>
            <ENT>440</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1987</ENT>
            <ENT>460</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1988</ENT>
            <ENT>470</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1989</ENT>
            <ENT>500</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1990</ENT>
            <ENT>520</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1991</ENT>
            <ENT>540</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1992</ENT>
            <ENT>570</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <CITA>[45 FR 25384, Apr. 15, 1980, as amended at 52 FR 8247, Mar. 17, 1987; 57 FR 44096, Sept 24, 1992; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart C—Computing Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 202(a), 205(a), 215, and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 402(a), 405(a), 415, and 902(a)(5)).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="04">General</E>
        </HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.201</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In this subpart we describe how we compute your primary insurance amount, which is the first step in finding your monthly social security benefit amount. Your primary insurance amount is the basic figure we use in finding the monthly benefit actually payable to you and to members of your family. For example, if you retire at age 65 or become disabled, your monthly benefit is equal to your primary insurance amount. In other situations, your benefit does not equal your primary insurance amount. For example, if you become entitled to old-age benefits before you reach age 65, your benefit is less than your primary insurance amount, as described in §§ 404.410 through 404.413. Benefits payable to members of your family are a specified percentage of your primary insurance amount. (See subpart D.) We explain how we automatically increase your primary insurance amount to keep it up to date with rises in the cost of living. We also explain how and when we recompute your primary insurance amount and how and when we recalculate your primary insurance amount. We have organized this subpart as follows:</P>
          <P>(a) In §§ 404.210 through 404.212, we describe the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method we use for computing primary insurance amounts of workers who after 1978 reach age 62, or become disabled or die before age 62;</P>
          <P>(b) In §§ 404.220 through 404.222, we describe the average-monthly-wage method we use for computing primary insurance amounts of workers who reach age 62, become disabled, or die before 1979;</P>
          <P>(c) In §§ 404.230 through 404.233, we describe the guaranteed alternative method of computing primary insurance amounts that applies to people who reach age 62 after 1978 but before 1984;</P>
          <P>(d) In §§ 404.240 through 404.242, we describe a method of computing primary insurance amounts (called the old-start method) for people who had all or substantially all their social security earnings before 1951;</P>
          <P>(e) In §§ 404.250 through 404.252, we describe special rules we apply in computing primary insurance amounts of people who had a period of disability at some time in their lives;</P>

          <P>(f) In §§ 404.260 through 404.261, we describe how we compute the special <PRTPAGE P="65"/>minimum primary insurance amount for long-term, low-paid workers;</P>
          <P>(g) In §§ 404.270 through 404.277, we describe how we automatically adjust primary insurance amounts to take account of rises in the cost of living;</P>
          <P>(h) In §§ 404.280 through 404.287, we describe how and when we recompute primary insurance amounts to take into account additional earnings;</P>
          <P>(i) In § 404.290, we describe how and when we recalculate primary insurance amounts; and</P>
          <P>(j) Appendices I-VI contain material such as figures and formulas that we use in finding a primary insurance amount under various circumstances.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.202</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Other regulations related to this subpart.</SUBJECT>
          <P>This subpart is related to several others. In subpart B of this part, we describe how you become insured for social security benefits as a result of your work in covered employment. In subpart D, we discuss the different kinds of social security benefits available—old-age and disability benefits for you and benefits for your dependents and survivors—the amount of the benefits, and the requirements you and your family must meet to qualify for them; your work status, your age, the size of your family, and other factors may affect the amount of the benefits for you and your family. Rules relating to deductions, reductions, and nonpayment of benefits we describe in subpart E. In subpart F of this part, we describe what we do when a recalculation or recomputation of your primary insurance amount (as described in this subpart) results in our finding that you and your family have been overpaid or underpaid. In subparts G and H of this part, we tell how to apply for benefits and what evidence is needed to establish entitlement to them. In subpart J of this part, we describe how benefits are paid. Then in subparts I, K, N, and O of this part, we discuss your earnings that are taxable and creditable for social security purposes (and how we keep records of them), and deemed military wage credits which may be used in finding your primary insurance amount.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.203</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General definitions.</E> As used in this subpart—</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Ad hoc increase in primary insurance amounts</E> means an increase in primary insurance amounts enacted by the Congress and signed into law by the President.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Entitled</E> means that a person has applied for benefits and has proven his or her right to them for a given period of time.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">We, us,</E> or <E T="03">our</E> means the Social Security Administration.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">You</E> or <E T="03">your</E> means the insured worker who has applied for benefits or a deceased insured worker on whose social security earnings record someone else has applied.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Other definitions.</E> To make it easier to find them, we have placed other definitions in the sections of this subpart in which they are used.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.204</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Methods of computing primary insurance amounts—general.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> We compute most workers' primary insurance amounts under one of two major methods. There are, in addition, several special methods of computing primary insurance amounts which we apply to some workers. Your primary insurance amount is the highest of all those computed under the methods for which you are eligible.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Major methods.</E> (1) If after 1978 you reach age 62, or become disabled or die before age 62, we compute your primary insurance amount under what we call the <E T="03">average-indexed-monthly-earnings</E> method, which is described in §§ 404.210 through 404.212. The earliest of the three dates determines the computation method we use.</P>

          <P>(2) If before 1979 you reached age 62, became disabled, or died, we compute your primary insurance amount under what we call the <E T="03">average-monthly-wage</E> method, described in §§ 404.220 through 404.222.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Special methods.</E> (1) Your primary insurance amount, computed under any of the special methods for which you are eligible as described in this paragraph, may be substituted for your primary insurance amount computed <PRTPAGE P="66"/>under either major method described in paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
          <P>(2) If you reach age 62 during the period 1979-1983, your primary insurance amount is guaranteed to be the highest of—</P>
          <P>(i) The primary insurance amount we compute for you under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method;</P>
          <P>(ii) The primary insurance amount we compute for you under the average-monthly-wage method, as modified by the rules described in §§ 404.230 through 404.233; or</P>

          <P>(iii) The primary insurance amount computed under what we call the <E T="03">old-start</E> method; as described in §§ 404.240 through 404.242.</P>

          <P>(3) If you had all or substantially all of your social security earnings before 1951, we will also compute your primary insurance amount under what we call the <E T="03">old-start</E> method.</P>
          <P>(4) We compute your primary insurance amount under the rules in §§ 404.250 through 404.252, if—</P>
          <P>(i) You were disabled and received social security disability insurance benefits sometime in your life;</P>
          <P>(ii) Your disability insurance benefits were terminated because of your recovery or because you engaged in substantial gainful activity; and</P>
          <P>(iii) You are, after 1978, re-entitled to disability insurance benefits, or entitled to old-age insurance benefits, or have died.</P>
          <P>(5) In some situations, we use what we call a <E T="03">special minimum</E> computation, described in §§ 404.260 through 404.261, to find your primary insurance amount. Computations under this method reflect long-term, low-wage attachment to covered work.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Average-Indexed-Monthly Earnings Method of Computing Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.210</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Average-indexed-monthly-earnings method.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Who is eligible for this method.</E> If after 1978, you reach age 62, or become disabled or die before age 62, we will compute your primary insurance amount under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Steps in computing your primary insurance amount under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method.</E> We follow these three major steps in computing your primary insurance amount:</P>
          <P>(1) First, we find your <E T="03">average indexed monthly earnings,</E> as described in § 404.211;</P>
          <P>(2) Second, we find the <E T="03">benefit formula</E> in effect for the year you reach age 62, or become disabled or die before age 62, as described in § 404.212; and</P>
          <P>(3) Then, we apply that benefit formula to your average indexed monthly earnings to find your primary insurance amount, as described in § 404.212.</P>
          <P>(4) Next, we apply any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amounts that became effective in or after the year you reached age 62, unless you are receiving benefits based on the minimum primary insurance amount, in which case not all the increases may be applied, as described in § 404.277.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.211</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your average indexed monthly earnings.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> In this method, your social security earnings after 1950 are <E T="03">indexed,</E> as described in paragraph (d) of this section, then averaged over the period of time you can reasonably have been expected to have worked in employment or self-employment covered by social security. (Your earnings before 1951 are not used in finding your average indexed monthly earnings.)</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Which earnings may be used in computing your average indexed monthly earnings</E>—(1) <E T="03">Earnings.</E> In computing your average indexed monthly earnings, we use wages, compensation, self-employment income, and deemed military wage credits (see §§ 404.1340 through 404.1343) that are creditable to you for social security purposes for years after 1950.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Computation base years.</E> We use your earnings in your <E T="03">computation base years</E> in finding your average indexed monthly earnings. All years after 1950 up to (but not including) the year you become entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits, and through the year you die if you had not been entitled to old-age or disability benefits, are computation base years for you. The year you become entitled to benefits and following years may be used as computation base years in a recomputation if their use would result in a <PRTPAGE P="67"/>higher primary insurance amount. (See §§ 404.280 through 404.287.) However, years after the year you die may not be used as computation base years even if you have earnings credited to you in those years. Computation base years do not include years wholly within a period of disability unless your primary insurance amount would be higher by using the disability years. In such situations, we count all the years during the period of disability, even if you had no earnings in some of them.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Average of the total wages.</E> Before we compute your average indexed monthly earnings, we must first know the “average of the total wages” of all workers for each year from 1951 until the second year before you become eligible. The average of the total wages for years after 1950 are shown in appendix I. Corresponding figures for more recent years which have not yet been incorporated into this appendix are published in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> on or before November 1 of the succeeding year. “Average of the total wages” (or “average wage”) means:</P>
          <P>(1) For the years 1951 through 1977, four times the amount of average taxable wages that were reported to the Social Security Administration for the first calendar quarter of each year for social security tax purposes. For years prior to 1973, these average wages were determined from a sampling of these reports.</P>
          <P>(2) For the years 1978 through 1990, all remuneration reported as wages on Form W-2 to the Internal Revenue Service for all employees for income tax purposes, divided by the number of wage earners. We adjusted those averages to make them comparable to the averages for 1951-1977. For years after 1977, the term includes remuneration for services not covered by social security and remuneration for covered employment in excess of that which is subject to FICA contributions.</P>
          <P>(3) For years after 1990, all remuneration reported as wages on Form W-2 to the Internal Revenue Service for all employees for income tax purposes, including remuneration described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, plus contributions to certain deferred compensation plans described in section 209(k) of the Social Security Act (also reported on Form W-2), divided by the number of wage earners. If both distributions from and contributions to any such deferred compensation plan are reported on Form W-2, we will include only the contributions in the calculation of the average of the total wages. We will adjust those averages to make them comparable to the averages for 1951-1990.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Indexing your earnings.</E> (1) The first step in indexing your social security earnings is to find the relationship (under paragraph (d)(2) of this section) between—</P>
          <P>(i) The average wage of all workers in your computation base years; and</P>
          <P>(ii) The average wage of all workers in your <E T="03">indexing year.</E> As a general rule, your indexing year is the second year before the earliest of the year you reach age 62, or become disabled or die before age 62. However, your indexing year is determined under paragraph (d)(4) of this section if you die before age 62, your surviving spouse or surviving divorced spouse is first eligible for benefits after 1984, and the indexing year explained in paragraph (d)(4) results in a higher widow(er)'s benefit than results from determining the indexing year under the general rule.</P>
          <P>(2) To find the relationship, we divide the average wages for your indexing year, in turn, by the average wages for each year beginning with 1951 and ending with your indexing year. We use the quotients found in these divisions to index your earnings as described in paragraph (d)(3) of this section.</P>

          <P>(3) The second step in indexing your social security earnings is to multiply the actual year-by-year dollar amounts of your earnings (up to the maximum amounts creditable, as explained in §§ 404.1047 and 404.1096 of this part) by the quotients found in paragraph (d)(2) of this section for each of those years. We round the results to the nearer penny. (The quotient for your indexing year is 1.0; this means that your earnings in that year are used in their actual dollar amount; any earnings after your indexing year that may be used in computing your average indexed monthly earnings are also used in their actual dollar amount.)
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <PRTPAGE P="68"/>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
            <P>Ms. A reaches age 62 in July 1979. Her year-by-year social security earnings since 1950 are as follows:</P>
            <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L2">
              <BOXHD>
                <CHED H="1">Year</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">Earnings</CHED>
              </BOXHD>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1951</ENT>
                <ENT>$3,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1952</ENT>
                <ENT>3,400</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1953</ENT>
                <ENT>3,300</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1954</ENT>
                <ENT>3,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1955</ENT>
                <ENT>3,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1956</ENT>
                <ENT>3,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1957</ENT>
                <ENT>4,000</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1958</ENT>
                <ENT>4,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1959</ENT>
                <ENT>4,400</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1960</ENT>
                <ENT>4,500</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1961</ENT>
                <ENT>2,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1962</ENT>
                <ENT>2,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1963</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1964</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1965</ENT>
                <ENT>3,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1966</ENT>
                <ENT>4,500</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1967</ENT>
                <ENT>5,400</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1968</ENT>
                <ENT>6,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1969</ENT>
                <ENT>6,900</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1970</ENT>
                <ENT>7,300</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1971</ENT>
                <ENT>7,500</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1972</ENT>
                <ENT>7,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1973</ENT>
                <ENT>8,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1974</ENT>
                <ENT>9,000</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1975</ENT>
                <ENT>9,900</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1976</ENT>
                <ENT>11,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1977</ENT>
                <ENT>9,900</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1978</ENT>
                <ENT>11,000<E T="05">Step 1</E>
                </ENT>
              </ROW>
            </GPOTABLE>
            <P>The first step in indexing Ms. A's earnings is to find the relationship between the general wage level in Ms. A's indexing year (1977) and the general wage level in each of the years 1951-1976. We refer to appendix I for average wage figures, and perform the following computations:</P>
            <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,9,9,9" COLS="4" OPTS="L2">
              <BOXHD>
                <CHED H="1">Year</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">I. 1977 general wage level</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">II. Nationwide average of the total wages</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">III. Column I divided by column II equals relationship</CHED>
              </BOXHD>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1951</ENT>
                <ENT>$9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>$2,799.16</ENT>
                <ENT>3.4937053</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1952</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>2,973.32</ENT>
                <ENT>3.2890641</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1953</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>3,139.44</ENT>
                <ENT>3.1150269</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1954</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>3,155.64</ENT>
                <ENT>3.0990354</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1955</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>3,301.44</ENT>
                <ENT>2.9621741</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1956</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>3,532.36</ENT>
                <ENT>2.7685287</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1957</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>3,641.72</ENT>
                <ENT>2.6853904</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1958</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>3,673.80</ENT>
                <ENT>2.6619413</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1959</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>3,855.80</ENT>
                <ENT>2.5362934</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1960</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>4,007.12</ENT>
                <ENT>2.4405159</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1961</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>4,086.76</ENT>
                <ENT>2.3929568</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1962</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>4,291.40</ENT>
                <ENT>2.2788461</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1963</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>4,396.64</ENT>
                <ENT>2.2242986</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1964</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>4,576.32</ENT>
                <ENT>2.1369659</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1965</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>4,658.72</ENT>
                <ENT>2.0991689</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1966</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>4,938.36</ENT>
                <ENT>1.9803012</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1967</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>5,213.44</ENT>
                <ENT>1.8758133</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1968</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>5,571.76</ENT>
                <ENT>1.7551797</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1969</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>5,893.76</ENT>
                <ENT>1.6592871</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1970</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>6,186.24</ENT>
                <ENT>1.5808375</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1971</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>6,497.08</ENT>
                <ENT>1.5052054</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1972</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>7,133.80</ENT>
                <ENT>1.3708599</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1973</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>7,580.16</ENT>
                <ENT>1.2901364</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1974</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>8,030.76</ENT>
                <ENT>1.2177478</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1975</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>8,630.92</ENT>
                <ENT>1.1330704</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1976</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>9,226.48</ENT>
                <ENT>1.0599318</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1977</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
                <ENT>1.0000000<E T="05">Step 2</E>
                </ENT>
              </ROW>
            </GPOTABLE>
            <P>After we have found these indexing quotients, we multiply Ms. A's actual year-by-year earnings by them to find her indexed earnings, as shown below:</P>
            <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,9,9,9" COLS="4" OPTS="L2">
              <BOXHD>
                <CHED H="1">Year</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">I. Actual earnings</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">II. Indexing quotient</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">III. Column I multiplied by column II equals indexed earnings</CHED>
              </BOXHD>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1951</ENT>
                <ENT>$3,200</ENT>
                <ENT>3.4937053</ENT>
                <ENT>$11,179.86</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1952</ENT>
                <ENT>3,400</ENT>
                <ENT>3.2890641</ENT>
                <ENT>11,182.82</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1953</ENT>
                <ENT>3,300</ENT>
                <ENT>3.1150269</ENT>
                <ENT>10,279.59</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1954</ENT>
                <ENT>3,600</ENT>
                <ENT>3.0990354</ENT>
                <ENT>11,156.53</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1955</ENT>
                <ENT>3,700</ENT>
                <ENT>2.9621741</ENT>
                <ENT>10,960.04</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1956</ENT>
                <ENT>3,700</ENT>
                <ENT>2.7685287</ENT>
                <ENT>10,243.56</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1957</ENT>
                <ENT>4,000</ENT>
                <ENT>2.6853904</ENT>
                <ENT>10,741.56</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1958</ENT>
                <ENT>4,200</ENT>
                <ENT>2.6619413</ENT>
                <ENT>11,180.15</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1959</ENT>
                <ENT>4,400</ENT>
                <ENT>2.5362934</ENT>
                <ENT>11,159.69</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1960</ENT>
                <ENT>4,500</ENT>
                <ENT>2.4405159</ENT>
                <ENT>10,982.32</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1961</ENT>
                <ENT>2,800</ENT>
                <ENT>2.3929568</ENT>
                <ENT>6,700.28</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1962</ENT>
                <ENT>2,200</ENT>
                <ENT>2.2788461</ENT>
                <ENT>5,013.46</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1963</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
                <ENT>2.2242986</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1964</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
                <ENT>2.1369659</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1965</ENT>
                <ENT>3,700</ENT>
                <ENT>2.0991689</ENT>
                <ENT>7,766.92</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1966</ENT>
                <ENT>4,500</ENT>
                <ENT>1.9803012</ENT>
                <ENT>8,911.36</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1967</ENT>
                <ENT>5,400</ENT>
                <ENT>1.8758133</ENT>
                <ENT>10,129.39</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1968</ENT>
                <ENT>6,200</ENT>
                <ENT>1.7551797</ENT>
                <ENT>10,882.11</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1969</ENT>
                <ENT>6,900</ENT>
                <ENT>1.6592871</ENT>
                <ENT>11,449.08</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1970</ENT>
                <ENT>7,300</ENT>
                <ENT>1.5808375</ENT>
                <ENT>11,540.11</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1971</ENT>
                <ENT>7,500</ENT>
                <ENT>1.5052054</ENT>
                <ENT>11,289.04</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1972</ENT>
                <ENT>7,800</ENT>
                <ENT>1.3708599</ENT>
                <ENT>10,692.71</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1973</ENT>
                <ENT>8,200</ENT>
                <ENT>1.2901364</ENT>
                <ENT>10,579.12</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1974</ENT>
                <ENT>9,000</ENT>
                <ENT>1.2177478</ENT>
                <ENT>10,959.73</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1975</ENT>
                <ENT>9,900</ENT>
                <ENT>1.1330704</ENT>
                <ENT>11,217.40</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1976</ENT>
                <ENT>11,100</ENT>
                <ENT>1.0599318</ENT>
                <ENT>11,765.24</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1977</ENT>
                <ENT>9,900</ENT>
                <ENT>1.0000000</ENT>
                <ENT>9,900.00</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1978</ENT>
                <ENT>11,000</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
                <ENT>11,000.00</ENT>
              </ROW>
            </GPOTABLE>
          </EXAMPLE>

          <P>(4) We calculate your indexing year under this paragraph if you, the insured worker, die before reaching age 62, your surviving spouse or surviving divorced spouse is first eligible after 1984, and the indexing year calculated under this paragraph results in a higher widow(er)'s benefit than results from the indexing year calculated under the general rule explained in paragraph (d)(1)(ii). For purposes of this paragraph, the indexing year is never earlier than the second year before the year of your death. Except for this limitation, the indexing year is the earlier of—<PRTPAGE P="69"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) The year in which you, the insured worker, attained age 60, or would have attained age 60 if you had lived, and</P>
          <P>(ii) The second year before the year in which the surviving spouse or the surviving divorced spouse becomes eligible for widow(er)'s benefits, i.e. has attained age 60, or is age 50-59 and disabled.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Number of years to be considered in finding your average indexed monthly earnings.</E> To find the number of years to be used in computing your average indexed monthly earnings—</P>

          <P>(1) We count the years beginning with 1951, or (if later) the year you reach age 22, and ending with the earliest of the year before you reach age 62, become disabled, or die. Years wholly or partially within a period of disability (as defined in § 404.1501(b) of subpart P of this part) are not counted unless your primary insurance amount would be higher. In that case, we count all the years during the period of disability, even though you had no earnings in some of those years. These are your <E T="03">elapsed years.</E> From your elapsed years, we then subtract up to 5 years, the exact number depending on the kind of benefits to which you are entitled. You cannot, under this procedure, have fewer than 2 benefit computation years.</P>

          <P>(2) For computing old-age insurance benefits and survivors insurance benefits, we subtract 5 from the number of your elapsed years. See paragraphs (e) (3) and (4) of this section for the dropout as applied to disability benefits. This is the number of your <E T="03">benefit computation years;</E> we use the same number of your computation base years (see paragraph (b)(2) of this section) in computing your average indexed monthly earnings. For benefit computation years, we use the years with the highest amounts of earnings after indexing. They may include earnings from years that were not indexed, and must include years of no earnings if you do not have sufficient years with earnings. You cannot have fewer than 2 benefit computation years.</P>

          <P>(3) Where the worker is first entitled to disability insurance benefits (DIB) after June 1980, there is an exception to the usual 5 year dropout provision explained in paragraph (e)(2) of this section. (For entitlement before July 1980, we use the usual dropout.) We call this exception the <E T="03">disability dropout.</E> We divide the elapsed years by 5 and disregard any fraction. The result, which may not exceed 5, is the number of dropout years. We subtract that number from the number of elapsed years to get the number of benefit computation years, which may not be fewer than 2. After the worker dies, the disability dropout no longer applies and we use the basic 5 dropout years to compute benefits for survivors. We continue to apply the disability dropout when a person becomes entitled to old-age insurance benefits (OAIB), unless his or her entitlement to DIB ended at least 12 months before he or she became eligible for OAIB. For first DIB entitlement before July 1980, we use the rule in paragraph (e)(2) of this section.</P>

          <P>(4) For benefits payable after June 1981, the disability dropout might be increased by the <E T="03">child care dropout.</E> If the number of disability dropout years is fewer than 3, we will drop out a benefit computation year for each benefit computation year that the worker meets the child care requirement and had no earnings, until the total of all dropout years is 3. The child care requirement for any year is that the worker must have been living with his or her child (or his or her spouse's child) substantially throughout any part of any calendar year that the child was alive and under age 3. In actual practice, no more than 2 child care years may be dropped, because of the combined effect of the number of elapsed years, 1-for-5 dropout years (if any), and the computation years required for the computation.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
            <P>Ms. M., born August 4, 1953, became entitled to disability insurance benefits (DIB) beginning in July 1980 based on a disability which began January 15, 1980. In computing the DIB, we determined that the elapsed years are 1975 through 1979, the number of dropout years is 1 (5 elapsed years divided by 5), and the number of computation years is 4. Since Ms. M. had no earnings in 1975 and 1976, we drop out 1975 and use her earnings for the years 1977 through 1979.</P>

            <P>Ms. M. lived with her child, who was born in 1972, in all months of 1973 and 1974 and did not have any earnings in those years. We, therefore, recompute Ms. M.'s DIB beginning <PRTPAGE P="70"/>with July 1981 to give her the advantage of the child care dropout. To do this, we reduce the 4 computation years by 1 child care year to get 3 computation years. Because the child care dropout cannot be applied to computation years in which the worker had earnings, we can drop only one of Ms. M.'s computation years, i.e., 1976, in addition to the year 1975 which we dropped in the initial computation.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          
          <P>(i) <E T="03">Living with</E> means that you and the child ordinarily live in the same home and you exercise, or have the right to exercise, parental control. See § 404.366(c) for a further explanation.</P>
          <P>(ii) <E T="03">Substantially throughout any part of any calendar year</E> means that any period you were not living with the child during a calendar year did not exceed 3 months. If the child was either born or attained age 3 during the calendar year, the period of absence in the year cannot have exceeded the smaller period of 3 months, or one-half the time after the child's birth or before the child attained age 3.</P>
          <P>(iii) <E T="03">Earnings</E> means wages for services rendered and net earnings from self-employment minus any net loss for a taxable year. See § 404.429 for a further explanation.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Your average indexed monthly earnings.</E> After we have indexed your earnings and found your benefit computation years, we compute your average indexed monthly earnings by—</P>
          <P>(1) Totalling your indexed earnings in your benefit computation years;</P>
          <P>(2) Dividing the total by the number of months in your benefit computation years; and</P>

          <P>(3) Rounding the quotient to the next lower whole dollar. if not already a multiple of $1.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example.</HD>
            <P>From the example in paragraph (d) of this section, we see that Ms. A reaches age 62 in 1979. Her elapsed years are 1951-1978 (28 years). We subtract 5 from her 28 elapsed years to find that we must use 23 benefit computation years. This means that we will use her 23 highest computation base years to find her average indexed monthly earnings. We exclude the 5 years 1961-1965 and total her indexed earnings for the remaining years, i.e., the benefit computation years (including her unindexed earnings in 1977 and 1978) and get $249,381.41. We then divide that amount by the 276 months in her 23 benefit computation years and find her average indexed monthly earnings to be $903.56, which is rounded down to $903.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982; 47 FR 35479, Aug. 13, 1982, as amended at 48 FR 11695, Mar. 21, 1983; 51 FR 4482, Feb. 5, 1986; 57 FR 1381, Jan. 14, 1992]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.212</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your primary insurance amount from your average indexed monthly earnings.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> We compute your primary insurance amount under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method by applying a <E T="03">benefit formula</E> to your average indexed monthly earnings.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Benefit formula.</E> (1) We use the applicable benefit formula in appendix II for the year you reach age 62, become disabled, or die whichever occurs first. If you die before age 62, and your surviving spouse or surviving divorced spouse is first eligible after 1984, we may compute the primary insurance amount, for the purpose of paying benefits to your widow(er), as if you had not died but reached age 62 in the second year after the indexing year that we computed under the provisions of § 404.211(d)(4). We will not use this primary insurance amount for computing benefit amounts for your other survivors or for computing the maximum family benefits payable on your earnings record. Further, we will only use this primary insurance amount if it results in a higher widow(er)'s benefit than would result if we did not use this special computation.</P>
          <P>(2) The dollar amounts in the benefit formula are automatically increased each year for persons who attain age 62, or who become disabled or die before age 62 in that year, by the same percentage as the increase in the average of the total wages (see appendix I).</P>

          <P>(3) We will publish benefit formulas for years after 1979 in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> at the same time we publish the average of the total wage figures. We begin to use a new benefit formula as soon as it is applicable, even before we periodically update appendix II.</P>
          <P>(4) We may use a modified formula, as explained in § 404.213, if you are entitled to a pension based on your employment which was not covered by Social Security.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Computing your primary insurance amount from the benefit formula.</E> We compute your primary insurance <PRTPAGE P="71"/>amount by applying the benefit formula to your average indexed monthly earnings and adding the results for each step of the formula. For computations using the benefit formulas in effect for 1979 through 1982, we round the total amount to the next higher multiple of $0.10 if it is not a multiple of $0.10 and for computations using the benefit formulas effective for 1983 and later years, we round to the next lower multiple of $0.10. (See paragraph (e) of this section for a discussion of the minimum primary insurance amount.)</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Adjustment of your primary insurance amount when entitlement to benefits occurs in a year after attainment of age 62, disability or death.</E> If you (or your survivors) do not become entitled to benefits in the same year you reach age 62, become disabled, or die before age 62, we compute your primary insurance amount by—</P>
          <P>(1) Computing your average indexed monthly earnings as described in § 404.211;</P>
          <P>(2) Applying to your average indexed monthly earnings the benefit formula for the year in which you reach age 62, or become disabled or die before age 62; and </P>

          <P>(3) Applying to the primary insurance amount all automatic cost-of-living and <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amounts that have gone into effect in or after the year you reached age 62, became disabled, or died before age 62. (See § 404.277 for special rules on minimum benefits, and appendix VI for a table of percentage increases in primary insurance amounts since December 1978. Increases in primary insurance amounts are published in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> and we periodically update appendix VI.)</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Minimum primary insurance amount.</E> If you were eligible for benefits, or died without having been eligible, before 1982, your primary insurance amount computed under this method cannot be less than $122. This minimum benefit provision has been repealed effective with January 1982 for most workers and their families where the worker initially becomes eligible for benefits in that or a later month, or dies in January 1982 or a later month without having been eligible before January 1982. For members of a religious order who are required to take a vow of poverty, as explained in 20 CFR 404.1024, and which religious order elected Social Security coverage before December 29, 1981, the repeal is effective with January 1992 based on first eligibility or death in that month or later.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 48 FR 46142, Oct. 11, 1983; 51 FR 4482, Feb. 5, 1986; 52 FR 47916, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.213</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computation where you are eligible for a pension based on your noncovered employment.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When applicable.</E> Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, we will modify the formula prescribed in § 404.212 and in appendix II of this subpart in the following situations:</P>
          <P>(1) You become eligible for old-age insurance benefits after 1985; or</P>
          <P>(2) You become eligible for disability insurance benefits after 1985; and</P>

          <P>(3) For the same months after 1985 that you are entitled to old-age or disability benefits, you are also entitled to a monthly pension(s) for which you first became eligible after 1985 based in whole or part on your earnings in employment which was not covered under Social Security. We consider you to first become eligible for a monthly pension in the first month for which you met all requirements for the pension except that you were working or had not yet applied. In determining whether you are eligible for a pension before 1986, we consider all applicable service used by the pension-paying agency. (Noncovered employment includes employment outside the United States which is not covered under the United States Social Security system. Pensions from noncovered employment outside the United States include both pensions from social insurance systems that base benefits on earnings but not on residence or citizenship, and those from private employers. However, for benefits payable for months prior to January 1995, we will not modify the computation of a totalization benefit (see §§ 404.1908 and 404.1918) as a result of your entitlement to another pension <PRTPAGE P="72"/>based on employment covered by a totalization agreement. Beginning January 1995, we will not modify the computation of a totalization benefit in any case (see § 404.213(e)(8)).</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Amount of your monthly pension that we use.</E> For purposes of computing your primary insurance amount, we consider the amount of your monthly pension(s) (or the amount prorated on a monthly basis) which is attributable to your noncovered work after 1956 that you are entitled to for the first month in which you are concurrently entitled to Social Security benefits. For applications filed before December 1988, we will use the month of earliest concurrent eligibility. In determining the amount of your monthly pension we will use, we will consider the following:</P>
          <P>(1) If your pension is not paid on a monthly basis or is paid in a lump-sum, we will allocate it proportionately as if it were paid monthly. We will allocate this the same way we allocate lump-sum payments for a spouse or surviving spouse whose benefits are reduced because of entitlement to a Government pension. (See § 404.408a.)</P>
          <P>(2) If your monthly pension is reduced to provide a survivor's benefit, we will use the unreduced amount.</P>
          <P>(3) If the monthly pension amount which we will use in computing your primary insurance amount is not a multiple of $0.10, we will round it to the next lower multiple of $0.10.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">How we compute your primary insurance amount.</E> When you become entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits and to a monthly pension, we will compute your primary insurance amount under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method (§ 404.212) as modified by paragraph (c) (1) and (2) of this section. Where applicable, we will also consider the 1977 simplified old-start method (§ 404.241) as modified by § 404.243 and a special minimum primary insurance amount as explained in §§ 404.260 and 404.261. We will use the highest result from these three methods as your primary insurance amount. We compute under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method, and use the higher primary insurance amount resulting from the application of paragraphs (c) (1) and (2) of this section, as follows:</P>
          <P>(1) The formula in appendix II, except that instead of the first percentage figure (i.e., 90 percent), we use—</P>
          <P>(i) 80 percent if you initially become eligible for old-age or disability insurance benefits in 1986;</P>
          <P>(ii) 70 percent for initial eligibility in 1987;</P>
          <P>(iii) 60 percent for initial eligibility in 1988;</P>
          <P>(iv) 50 percent for initial eligibility in 1989;</P>
          <P>(v) 40 percent for initial eligibility in 1990 and later years, or</P>
          <P>(2) The formula in appendix II minus one-half the portion of your monthly pension which is due to noncovered work after 1956 and for which you were entitled in the first month you were entitled to both Social Security benefits and the monthly pension. If the monthly pension amount is not a multiple of $0.10, we will round to the next lower multiple of $0.10. To determine the portion of your pension which is due to noncovered work after 1956, we consider the total number of years of work used to compute your pension and the percentage of those years which are after 1956, and in which your employment was not covered. We take that percentage of your total pension as the amount which is due to your noncovered work after 1956.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Alternate computation.</E> (1) If you have more than 20 but less than 30 years of coverage as defined in the column headed “Alternate Computation Under § 404.213(d)” in appendix IV of this subpart, we will compute your primary insurance amount using the applicable percentage given below instead of the first percentage in appendix II of this subpart if the applicable percentage below is larger than the percentage specified in paragraph (c) of this section:</P>
          <P>(i) For benefits payable for months before January 1989—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,7" COLS="2" OPTS="L2,i1">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1">Years of coverage</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Percent</CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
              <ENT>80</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
              <ENT>70</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
              <ENT>60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
              <ENT>50</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>

          <P>(ii) For benefits payable for months after December 1988—<PRTPAGE P="73"/>
          </P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,7" COLS="2" OPTS="L2,i1">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1">Years of coverage</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Percent</CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
              <ENT>85</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
              <ENT>80</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
              <ENT>75</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
              <ENT>70</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
              <ENT>65</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
              <ENT>60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
              <ENT>55</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
              <ENT>50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
              <ENT>45</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>(2) If you later earn additional year(s) of coverage, we will recompute your primary insurance amount, effective with January of the following year.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Exceptions.</E> The computations in paragraph (c) of this section do not apply in the following situations:</P>
          <P>(1) Payments made under the Railroad Retirement Act are not considered to be a pension from noncovered employment for the purposes of this section. See subpart O of this part for a discussion of railroad retirement benefits.</P>
          <P>(2) You were entitled before 1986 to disability insurance benefits in any of the 12 months before you reach age 62 or again become disabled. (See § 404.251 for the appropriate computation.)</P>
          <P>(3) You were a Federal employee performing service on January 1, 1984 to which Social Security coverage was extended on that date solely by reason of the amendments made by section 101 of the Social Security Amendments of 1983.</P>
          <P>(4) You were an employee of a nonprofit organization who was exempt from Social Security coverage on December 31, 1983 unless you were previously covered under a waiver certificate which was terminated prior to that date..</P>
          <P>(5) You have 30 years of coverage as defined in the column headed “Alternate Computation Under § 404.213(d)” in appendix IV of this subpart.</P>
          <P>(6) Your survivors are entitled to benefits on your record of earnings. (After your death, we will recompute the primary insurance amount to nullify the effect of any monthly pension, based in whole or in part on noncovered employment, to which you had been entitled.)</P>
          <P>(7) For benefits payable for months after December 1994, payments by the social security system of a foreign country which are based on a totalization agreement between the United States and that country are not considered to be a pension from noncovered employment for purposes of this section. See subpart T of this part for a discussion of totalization agreements.</P>
          <P>(8) For benefits payable for months after December 1994, the computations in paragraph (c) do not apply in the case of an individual whose entitlement to U.S. social security benefits results from a totalization agreement between the United States and a foreign country.</P>
          <P>(9) For benefits payable for months after December 1994, you are eligible after 1985 for monthly periodic benefits based wholly on service as a member of a uniformed service, including inactive duty training.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Entitlement to a totalization benefit and a pension based on noncovered employment.</E> If, before January 1995, you are entitled to a totalization benefit and to a pension based on noncovered employment that is not covered by a totalization agreement, we count your coverage from a foreign country with which the United States (U.S.) has a totalization agreement and your U.S. coverage to determine if you meet the requirements for the modified computation in paragraph (d) of this section or the exception in paragraph (e)(5) of this section.</P>
          <P>(1) Where the amount of your totalization benefit will be determined using a computation method that does not consider foreign earnings (see § 404.1918), we will find your total years of coverage by adding your—</P>
          <P>(i) Years of coverage from the agreement country (quarters of coverage credited under § 404.1908 divided by four) and</P>
          <P>(ii) Years of U.S. coverage as defined for the purpose of computing the special minimum primary insurance amount under § 404.261.</P>

          <P>(2) Where the amount of your totalization benefit will be determined using a computation method that does consider foreign earnings, we will credit your foreign earnings to your U.S. earnings record and then find your <PRTPAGE P="74"/>total years of coverage using the method described in § 404.261.</P>
          <CITA>[52 FR 47916, Dec. 17, 1987, as amended at 55 FR 21382, May 24, 1990; 57 FR 22429, May 28, 1992; 60 FR 17444, Apr. 6, 1995; 60 FR 56513, Nov. 9, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Average-Monthly-Wage Method of Computing Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.220</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Average-monthly-wage method.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Who is eligible for this method.</E> You must before 1979, reach age 62, become disabled or die to be eligible for us to compute your primary insurance amount under the average-monthly-wage method. Also, as explained in § 404.230, if you reach age 62 after 1978 but before 1984, you are eligible to have your primary insurance amount computed under a modified average-monthly-wage method if it is to your advantage. Being eligible for either the average-monthly-wage method or the modified average-monthly-wage method does not preclude your eligibility under the <E T="03">old-start</E> method described in §§ 404.240 through 404.242.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Steps in computing your primary insurance amount under the average-monthly-wage method.</E> We follow these three major steps in computing your primary insurance amount under the average-monthly-wage method:</P>
          <P>(1) First, we find your average monthly wage, as described in § 404.221;</P>
          <P>(2) Second, we look at the <E T="03">benefit table</E> in appendix III; and</P>
          <P>(3) Then we find your primary insurance amount in the benefit table, as described in § 404.222.</P>
          <P>(4) Finally, we apply any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases that became effective in or after the year you reached age 62, or became disabled, or died before age 62, as explained in §§ 404.270 through 404.277.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.221</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your average monthly wage.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> Under the average-monthly-wage method, your social security earnings are averaged over the length of time you can reasonably have been expected to have worked under social security after 1950 (or after you reached age 21, if later).</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Which of your earnings may be used in computing your average monthly wage.</E> (1) In computing your average monthly wage, we consider all the wages, compensation, self-employment income, and deemed military wage credits that are creditable to you for social security purposes. (The maximum amounts creditable are explained in §§ 404.1047 and 404.1096 of this part.)</P>
          <P>(2) We use your earnings in your <E T="03">computation base years</E> in computing your average monthly wage. All years after 1950 up to (but not including) the year you become entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits, or through the year you die if you had not been entitled to old-age or disability benefits, are computation base years for you. Years after the year you die may not be used as computation base years even if you have earnings credited to you in them. However, years beginning with the year you become entitled to benefits may be used for benefits beginning with the following year if using them would give you a higher primary insurance amount. Years wholly within a period of disability are not computation base years unless your primary insurance amount would be higher if they were. In such situations, we count all the years during the period of disability, even if you had no earnings in some of them.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Number of years to be considered in computing your average monthly wage.</E> To find the number of years to be used in computing your average monthly wage—</P>

          <P>(1) We count the years beginning with 1951 or (if later) the year you reached age 22 and ending with the year before you reached age 62, or became disabled, or died before age 62. Any part of a year—or years—in which you were disabled, as defined in § 404.1505, is not counted unless doing so would give you a higher average monthly wage. In that case, we count all the years during the period of disability, even if you had no earnings in some of those years. These are your <E T="03">elapsed years.</E> (If you are a male and you reached age 62 before 1975, see paragraph (c)(2) of this section for the rules on finding your elapsed years.)</P>
          <P>(2) If you are a male and you reached age 62 in—<PRTPAGE P="75"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) 1972 or earlier, we count the years beginning with 1951 and ending with the year before you reached age 65, or became disabled or died before age 65 to find your elapsed years;</P>
          <P>(ii) 1973, we count the years beginning with 1951 and ending with the year before you reached age 64, or became disabled or died before age 64 to find your elapsed years; or</P>
          <P>(iii) 1974, we count the years beginning with 1951 and ending with the year before you reached age 63, became disabled, or died before age 63 to find your elapsed years.</P>

          <P>(3) Then we subtract 5 from the number of your elapsed years. This is the number of your <E T="03">benefit computation years</E>; we use the same number of your computation base years in computing your average monthly wage. For benefit computation years, we use the years with the highest amounts of earnings, but they may include years of no earnings. You cannot have fewer than 2 benefit computation years.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Your average monthly wage.</E> After we find your benefit computation years, we compute your average monthly wage by—</P>
          <P>(1) Totalling your creditable earnings in your benefit computation years;</P>
          <P>(2) Dividing the total by the number of months in your benefit computation years; and</P>

          <P>(3) Rounding the quotient to the next lower whole dollar if not already a multiple of $1.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
            <P>Mr. B reaches age 62 and becomes entitled to old-age insurance benefits in August 1978. He had no social security earnings before 1951 and his year-by-year social security earnings after 1950 are as follows:</P>
            <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L2">
              <BOXHD>
                <CHED H="1">Year</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">Earnings</CHED>
              </BOXHD>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1951</ENT>
                <ENT>$2,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1952</ENT>
                <ENT>2,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1953</ENT>
                <ENT>3,400</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1954</ENT>
                <ENT>3,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1955</ENT>
                <ENT>4,000</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1956</ENT>
                <ENT>4,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1957</ENT>
                <ENT>4,000</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1958</ENT>
                <ENT>4,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1959</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1960</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1961</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1962</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1963</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1964</ENT>
                <ENT>1,500</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1965</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1966</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1967</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1968</ENT>
                <ENT>3,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1969</ENT>
                <ENT>5,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1970</ENT>
                <ENT>7,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1971</ENT>
                <ENT>7,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1972</ENT>
                <ENT>8,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1973</ENT>
                <ENT>8,900</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1974</ENT>
                <ENT>9,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1975</ENT>
                <ENT>10,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1976</ENT>
                <ENT>10,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1977</ENT>
                <ENT>11,900</ENT>
              </ROW>
            </GPOTABLE>
            <P>We first find Mr. B's elapsed years, which are the 27 years 1951-1977. We subtract 5 from his 27 elapsed years to find that we must use 22 benefit computation years in computing his average monthly wage. His computation base years are 1951-1977, which are the years after 1950 and prior to the year he became entitled. This means that we will use his 22 computation base years with the highest earnings to compute his average monthly wage. Thus, we exclude the years 1964-1967 and 1951.</P>
            <P>We total his earnings in his benefit computation years and get $132,700. We then divide that amount by the 264 months in his 22 benefit computation years and find his average monthly wage to be $502.65, which is rounded down to $502.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          
          <P>(e) <E T="03">“Deemed” average monthly wage for certain deceased veterans of World War II.</E> Certain deceased veterans of World War II are “deemed” to have an average monthly wage of $160 (see §§ 404.1340 through 404.1343 of this part) unless their actual average monthly wage, as found in the method described in paragraphs (a) through (d) of this section is higher.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.222</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Use of benefit table in finding your primary insurance amount from your average monthly wage.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> We find your primary insurance amount under the average-monthly-wage method in the benefit table in appendix III.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Finding your primary insurance amount from benefit table.</E> We find your average monthly wage in column III of the table. Your primary insurance amount appears on the same line in column IV (column II if you are entitled to benefits for any of the 12 months preceding the effective month in column IV). As explained in § 404.212(e), there is a minimum primary insurance amount of $122 payable for persons who became eligible or died after 1978 and before January 1982. There is also an alternative minimum of $121.80 (before the application of <PRTPAGE P="76"/>cost-of-living increases) for members of this group whose benefits were computed from the benefit table in effect in December 1978 on the basis of either the old-start computation method in §§ 404.240 through 404.242 or the guaranteed alternative computation method explained in §§ 404.230 through 404.233. However, as can be seen from the extended table in appendix III, the lowest primary insurance amount under this method is now $1.70 for individuals for whom the minimum benefit has been repealed.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
            <P> In the example in § 404.221(d), we computed Mr. B's average monthly wage to be $502. We refer to the December 1978 benefit table in appendix III. Then we find his average monthly wage in column III of the table. Reading across, his primary insurance amount is on the same line in column IV and is $390.50. A 9.9 percent automatic cost-of-living benefit increase was effective for June 1979, increasing Mr. B's primary insurance amount to $429.20, as explained in §§ 404.270 through 404.277. Then, we increase the $429.20 by the 14.3 percent June 1980 cost-of-living benefit increase and get $490.60, and by the 11.2 percent June 1981 increase to get $545.60.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 48 FR 46142, Oct. 11, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Guaranteed Alternative for People Reaching Age 62 After 1978 but Before 1984</E>
        </HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.230</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Guaranteed alternative.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> If you reach age 62 after 1978 but before 1984, we compute your primary insurance amount under a modified average-monthly-wage method as a <E T="03">guaranteed alternative</E> to your primary insurance amount computed under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method. We also compute your primary insurance amount under the old-start method (§§ 404.240 through 404.242) and under the special rules for a person who had a period of disability (§§ 404.250 through 404.252), if you are eligible. In §§ 404.231 through 404.233, we explain the average-monthly-wage method as the alternative to the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Restrictions.</E> (1) To qualify for this guaranteed-alternative computation, you must have some creditable earnings before 1979.</P>
          <P>(2) You or your survivors do not qualify for a guaranteed-alternative computation if you were eligible (you attained age 62, became disabled, or died before age 62) for social security benefits based on your own earnings at any time before 1979 unless—</P>
          <P>(i) Those benefits were disability insurance benefits which were terminated because you recovered from your disability or you engaged in substantial gainful activity; and </P>
          <P>(ii) You spent at least 12 months without being eligible for disability benefits again.</P>
          <P>(3) This guaranteed alternative method applies only to old-age insurance benefits and to survivor benefits where the deceased worker reached the month of his or her 62nd birthday after 1978 but before 1984 and died after reaching age 62.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.231</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Steps in computing your primary insurance amount under the guaranteed alternative—general.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you reach age 62 after 1978 but before 1984, we follow three major steps in finding your guaranteed alternative:</P>
          <P>(a) First, we compute your average monthly wage, as described in § 404.232;</P>
          <P>(b) Second, we find the primary insurance amount that corresponds to your average monthly wage in the benefit table in appendix III.</P>
          <P>(c) Then we apply any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amounts that have become effective in or after the year you reached age 62.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.232</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your average monthly wage under the guaranteed alternative.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> With the exception described in paragraph (b) of this section, we follow the rules in § 404.221 to compute your average monthly wage.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Exception.</E> We do not use any year after the year you reach age 61 as a computation base year in computing your average monthly wage for purposes of the guaranteed alternative.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.233</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Adjustment of your guaranteed alternative when you become entitled after age 62.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) If you do not become entitled to benefits at the time you reach age 62, we adjust the guaranteed alternative computed for you under § 404.232 as described in paragraph (b) of this section.<PRTPAGE P="77"/>
          </P>

          <P>(b) To the primary insurance amount computed under the guaranteed alternative, we apply any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amounts that go into effect in the year you reach age 62 and in years up through the year you become entitled to benefits. (See appendix VI for a list of the percentage increases in primary insurance amounts since December 1978.)
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
            <P>Mr. C reaches age 62 in January 1981 and becomes entitled to old-age insurance benefits in April 1981. He had no social security earnings before 1951 and his year-by-year social security earnings after 1950 are as follows:</P>
            <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L2">
              <BOXHD>
                <CHED H="1">Year</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">Earnings</CHED>
              </BOXHD>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1951</ENT>
                <ENT>$3,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1952</ENT>
                <ENT>3,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1953</ENT>
                <ENT>3,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1954</ENT>
                <ENT>3,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1955</ENT>
                <ENT>4,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1956</ENT>
                <ENT>4,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1957</ENT>
                <ENT>4,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1958</ENT>
                <ENT>4,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1959</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1960</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1961</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1962</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1963</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1964</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1965</ENT>
                <ENT>4,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1966</ENT>
                <ENT>6,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1967</ENT>
                <ENT>6,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1968</ENT>
                <ENT>7,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1969</ENT>
                <ENT>7,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1970</ENT>
                <ENT>7,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1971</ENT>
                <ENT>7,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1972</ENT>
                <ENT>9,000</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1973</ENT>
                <ENT>10,800</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1974</ENT>
                <ENT>13,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1975</ENT>
                <ENT>14,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1976</ENT>
                <ENT>15,300</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1977</ENT>
                <ENT>16,500</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1978</ENT>
                <ENT>17,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1979</ENT>
                <ENT>22,900</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1980</ENT>
                <ENT>25,900</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1981</ENT>
                <ENT>29,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
            </GPOTABLE>
            <P>Mr. C's elapsed years are the 30 years 1951 through 1980. We subtract 5 from his 30 elapsed years to find that we must use 25 benefit computation years in computing his average monthly wage. His computation base years are 1951 through 1980 which are years after 1950 up to the year he reached age 62. We will use his 25 computation base years with the highest earnings to compute his average monthly wage. Thus, we exclude the years 1951-1955. The year 1981 is not a base year for this computation.</P>
            <P>We total his earnings in his benefit computation years and get $236,000. We then divide by the 300 months in his 25 benefit computation years, and find his average monthly wage to be $786.66 which is rounded down to $786.</P>
            <P>The primary insurance amount in the benefit table in appendix III that corresponds to Mr. C's average monthly wage is $521.70. The 9.9 percent and 14.3 percent cost of living increase for 1979 and 1980, respectively, are not applicable because Mr. C reached age 62 in 1981.</P>
            <P>The average indexed monthly earnings method described in §§ 404.210 through 404.212 considers all of the earnings after 1950, including 1981 earnings which, in Mr. C's case cannot be used in the guaranteed alternative method. Mr. C's primary insurance amount under the average indexed earnings method is $548.40. Therefore, his benefit is based upon the $548.40 primary insurance amount. As in the guaranteed alternative method, Mr. C is not entitled to the cost of living increases for years before the year he reaches age 62.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Old-Start Method of Computing Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.240</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Old-start method—general.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you had all or substantially all your social security earnings before 1951, your primary insurance amount computed under the “1977 simplified old-start” method may be higher than any other primary insurance amount computed for you under any other method for which you are eligible. As explained in § 404.242, if you reach age 62 after 1978, your primary insurance amount computed under the old-start method is used, for purposes of the guaranteed alternative described in § 404.230, if the old-start primary insurance amount is higher than the one found under the average-monthly-wage method. We may use a modified computation, as explained in § 404.243, if you are entitled to a pension based on your employment which was not covered by Social Security.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 52 FR 47917, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.241</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>1977 simplified old-start method.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Who is qualified.</E> To qualify for the old-start computation, you must meet the conditions in paragraphs (a) (1), (2), or (3) of this section:</P>
          <P>(1) You must—</P>

          <P>(i) Have one “quarter of coverage” (see §§ 404.101 and 404.110 of this part) before 1951;<PRTPAGE P="78"/>
          </P>
          <P>(ii) Have attained age 21 after 1936 and before 1950, or attained age 22 after 1950 and earned fewer than 6 quarters of coverage after 1950;</P>
          <P>(iii) Have not had a period of disability which began before 1951, unless it can be disregarded, as explained in §404.320 of this part; and,</P>
          <P>(iv) Have attained age 62, become disabled, or died, after 1977.</P>
          <P>(2)(i) You or your survivor becomes entitled to benefits for June 1992 or later;</P>
          <P>(ii) You do not meet the conditions in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, and,</P>
          <P>(iii) No person is entitled to benefits on your earnings record in the month before the month you or your survivor becomes entitled to benefits.</P>
          <P>(3) A recomputation is first effective for June 1992 or later based on your earnings for 1992 or later.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Steps in old-start computation.</E> (1) First, we allocate your earnings during the period 1937-1950 as described in paragraph (c) of this section.</P>
          <P>(2) Next, we compute your average monthly wage, as described in paragraph (d) of this section.</P>
          <P>(3) Next, we apply the old-start formula to your average monthly wage, as described in paragraph (e)(1) of this section.</P>
          <P>(4) Next, we apply certain increments to the amount computed in step (3), as described in paragraph (e)(2) of this section.</P>
          <P>(5) Next, we find your primary insurance amount in the benefit table in appendix III, as described in paragraph (f)(1) of this section.</P>
          <P>(6) Then, we apply automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amounts to the primary insurance amount found in step (5), as described in paragraph (f)(2) of this section.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Finding your computation base years under the old-start method.</E> (1) Instead of using your actual year-by-year earnings before 1951, we find your computation base years for 1937-1950 (and the amount of earnings for each of them) by allocating your total 1937-1950 earnings among the years before 1951 under the following procedure:</P>

          <P>(i) If you reached age 21 before 1950 and your total 1937-1950 earnings <E T="03">are not</E> more than $3,000 times the number of years after the year you reached age 20 and before 1951 (a maximum of 14 years), we allocate your earnings equally among those years, and those years are your computation base years before 1951.</P>

          <P>(ii) If you reached age 21 before 1950 and your total 1937-1950 earnings <E T="03">are</E> more than $3,000 times the number of years after the year you reached age 20 and before 1951, we allocate your earnings at the rate of $3,000 per year for each year after you reached age 20 and before 1951 up to a maximum of 14 years. We credit any remainder in reverse order to years before age 21 in $3,000 increments and any amount left over of less than $3,000 to the year before the earliest year to which we credited $3,000. No more than $42,000 may be credited in this way and to no more than 14 years. Those years are your computation base years before 1951.</P>
          <P>(iii) If you reached age 21 in 1950 or later and your total pre-1951 earnings are $3,000 or less, we credit the total to the year you reached age 20 and that year is your pre-1951 computation base year.</P>
          <P>(iv) If you reached age 21 in 1950 or later and your total pre-1951 earnings are more than $3,000, we credit $3,000 to the year you reached age 20 and credit the remainder to earlier years (or year) in blocks of $3,000 in reverse order. We credit any remainder of less than $3,000 to the year before the earliest year to which we had credited $3,000. No more than $42,000 may be credited in this way and to no more than 14 years. Those years are your computation base years before 1951.</P>
          <P>(v) If you die before 1951, we allocate your 1937-1950 earnings under paragraphs (c)(1) (i) through (iv), except that in determining the number of years, we will use the year of death instead of 1951. If you die before you attain age 21, the number of years in the period is equal to 1.</P>
          <P>(vi) For purposes of paragraphs (c)(1) (i) through (v), if you had a period of disability which began before 1951, we will exclude the years wholly within a period of disability in determining the number of years.</P>

          <P>(2)(i) All years after 1950 up to (but not including) the year you become entitled to old-age insurance or disability <PRTPAGE P="79"/>insurance benefits (or through the year you die if you had not become entitled to old-age or disability benefits) are also computation base years for you.</P>

          <P>(ii) Years wholly within a period of disability are not computation base years unless your primary insurance amount would be higher if they were. In such situations, we count all the years during the period of disability, even if you had no earnings in some of them.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
            <P>Ms. D reaches age 62 in June 1979. Her total 1937-1950 social security earnings are $40,000 and she had social security earnings of $7,100 in 1976 and $6,300 in 1977. Since she reaches age 62 after 1978, we first compute her primary insurance amount under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method (§§ 404.210 through 404.212). As of June 1981, it is $170.50, which is the minimum primary insurance amount applicable, because her average indexed monthly earnings of $50 would yield only $56.50 under the benefit formula. Ms. D reached age 62 after 1978 but before 1984 and her guaranteed alternative under the average-monthly-wage method as of June 1981 is $170.30, which is the minimum primary insurance amount based on average monthly wages of $48. (These amounts include the 9.9, the 14.3, and the 11.2 percent cost-of-living increases effective June 1979, June 1980, and June 1981 respectively.)</P>
            <P>Ms. D is also eligible for the old-start method. We first allocate $3,000 of her 1937-1950 earnings to each of her 13 computation base years starting with the year she reached age 21 (1938) and ending with 1950. The remaining $1,000 is credited to the year she reached age 20. Ms. D, then, has 42 computation base years (14 before 1951 and 28 after 1950).</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Computing your average monthly wage under the old-start method.</E> (1) First, we count your elapsed years, which are the years beginning with 1937 (or the year you reach 22, if later) and ending with the year before you reach age 62, or become disabled or die before age 62. (See § 404.211(e)(1) for the rule on how we treat years wholly or partially within a period of disability.)</P>
          <P>(2) Next, we subtract 5 from the number of your elapsed years, and this is the number of computation years we must use. We then choose this number of your computation base years in which you had the highest earnings. These years are your benefit computation years. You must have at least 2 benefit computation years.</P>
          <P>(3) Then we compute your average monthly wage by dividing your total creditable earnings in your benefit computation years by the number of months in these years and rounding the quotient to the next lower dollar if not already a multiple of $1.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Old-start computation formula.</E> We use the following formula to compute your primary insurance benefit, which we will convert to your primary insurance amount:</P>
          <P>(1) We take 40 percent of the first $50 of your average monthly wage, plus 10 percent of the next $200 of your average monthly wage up to a total average monthly wage of $250. (We do not use more than $250 of your average monthly wage.)</P>
          <P>(2) We increase the amount found in paragraph (e)(1) of this section by 1 percent for each $1,650 in your pre-1951 earnings, disregarding any remainder less than $1,650. We always increase the amount by at least 4 of these 1 percent increments but may not increase it by more than 14 of them.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Finding your primary insurance amount under the old-start method.</E> (1) In column I of the benefit table in appendix III we locate the amount (the primary insurance benefit) computed in paragraph (e) of this section and find the corresponding primary insurance amount on the same line in column IV of the table.</P>

          <P>(2) We increase that amount by any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amounts effective since the beginning of the year in which you reached age 62, or became disabled or died before age 62. (See §§ 404.270 through 404.277.)
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
            <P>From the example in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, we see that Ms. D's elapsed years total 40 (number of years at ages 22 to 61, both inclusive). Her benefit computation years, therefore, must total 35. Since she has only 16 years of actual earnings, we must include 19 years of zero earnings in this old-start computation to reach the required 35 benefit computation years.</P>
            <P>We next divide her total social security earnings ($53,400) by the 420 months in her benefit computation years and find her average monthly wage to be $127.</P>

            <P>We apply the old-start computation formula to Ms. D's average monthly wage as follows: 40 percent of the first $50 of her average monthly wage ($20.00), plus 10 percent of <PRTPAGE P="80"/>the remaining $77 of her average monthly wage ($7.70), for a total of $27.70.</P>
            <P>We then apply 14 1-percent increments to that amount, increasing it by $3.88 to $31.58. We find $31.58 in column I of the December 1978 benefit table in appendix III and find her primary insurance amount of $195.90 on the same line in column IV. We apply the 9.9 percent automatic cost-of-living increase effective for June 1979 to $195.90 and get an old-start primary insurance amount of $215.30 which we then increase to $246.10 to reflect the 14.3 percent cost-of-living increase effective for June 1980, and to $273.70 to reflect the June 1981 increase. Since that primary insurance amount is higher than the $153.10 primary insurance amount computed under the average-monthly-wage method and the $153.30 primary insurance amount computed under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method, we base Ms. D's benefits (and those of her family) on $215.30 (plus later cost-of-living increases), which is the highest primary insurance amount.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 55 FR 21382, May 24, 1990; 57 FR 23157, June 2, 1992]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.242</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Use of old-start primary insurance amount as guaranteed alternative.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If your primary insurance amount as computed under the old-start method is higher than your primary insurance amount computed under the average-monthly-wage method, your old-start primary insurance amount will serve as the guaranteed alternative to your primary insurance amount computed under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method, as described in § 404.230. However, earnings that you have in or after the year you reach age 62, or become disabled or die before age 62 are not used in an old-start computation in this situation.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.243</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computation where you are eligible for a pension based on noncovered employment.</SUBJECT>
          <P>The provisions of § 404.213 are applicable to computations under the old-start method, except for paragraphs (c) (1) and (2) and (d) of that section. Your primary insurance amount will be whichever of the following two amounts is larger:</P>
          <P>(a) One-half the primary insurance amount computed according to § 404.241 (before application of the cost of living amount); or</P>
          <P>(b) The primary insurance amount computed according to § 404.241 (before application of the cost of living amount), minus one-half the portion of your monthly pension which is due to noncovered work after 1956 and for which you were eligible in the first month you became eligible for Social Security benefits. If the result is not a multiple of $0.10, we will round to the next lower multiple of $0.10. (See § 404.213 (b)(3) if you are not eligible for a monthly pension in the first month you are entitled to Social Security benefits.) To determine the portion of your pension which is due to noncovered work after 1956, we consider the total number of years of work used to compute your pension and the percentage of those years which are after 1956 and in which your employment was not covered. We take that percentage of your total pension as the amount which is due to your noncovered work after 1956.</P>
          <CITA>[52 FR 47918, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Special Computation Rules for People Who Had a Period of Disability</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.250</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Special computation rules for people who had a period of disability.</SUBJECT>

          <P>If you were disabled at some time in your life, received disability insurance benefits, and those benefits were terminated because you recovered from your disability or because you engaged in substantial gainful activity, special rules apply in computing your primary insurance amount when you become eligible after 1978 for old-age insurance benefits or if you become re-entitled to disability insurance benefits or die. (For purposes of §§ 404.250 through 404.252, we use the term <E T="03">second entitlement</E> to refer to this situation.) There are two sets of rules:</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Second entitlement within 12 months.</E> If 12 months or fewer pass between the last month for which you received a disability insurance benefit and your second entitlement, see the rules in § 404.251; and</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Second entitlement after more than 12 months.</E> If more than 12 months pass between the last month for which you received a disability insurance benefit <PRTPAGE P="81"/>and your second entitlement, see the rules in § 404.252.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.251</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Subsequent entitlement to benefits less than 12 months after entitlement to disability benefits ended.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Disability before 1979; second entitlement after 1978.</E> In this situation, we compute your second-entitlement primary insurance amount by selecting the highest of the following:</P>

          <P>(1) The primary insurance amount to which you were entitled when you last received a benefit, increased by any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amounts that took effect since then;</P>
          <P>(2) The primary insurance amount resulting from a recomputation of your primary insurance amount, if one is possible; or</P>
          <P>(3) The primary insurance amount computed for you as of the time of your second entitlement under any method for which you are qualified at that time, including the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method if the previous period of disability is disregarded.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Disability and second entitlement after 1978.</E> In this situation, we compute your second-entitlement primary insurance amount by selecting the highest of the following:</P>

          <P>(1) The primary insurance amount to which you were entitled when you last received a benefit, increased by any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amount that took effect since then;</P>
          <P>(2) The primary insurance amount resulting from a recomputation of your primary insurance amount, if one is possible (this recomputation may be under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method only); or</P>
          <P>(3) The primary insurance amount computed for you as of the time of your second entitlement under any method (including an old-start method) for which you are qualifed at that time.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Disability before 1986; second entitlement after 1985.</E> When applying the rule in paragraph (b)(3) of this section, we must consider your receipt of a monthly pension based on noncovered employment. (See § 404.213). However, we will disregard your monthly pension if you were previously entitled to disability benefits before 1986 and in any of the 12 months before your second entitlement.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 52 FR 47918, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.252</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Subsequent entitlement to benefits 12 months or more after entitlement to disability benefits ended.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In this situation, we compute your second-entitlement primary insurance amount by selecting the higher of the following:</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">New primary insurance amount.</E> The primary insurance amount computed as of the time of your second entitlement under any of the computation methods for which you qualify at the time of your second entitlement; or</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Previous primary insurance amount.</E> The primary insurance amount to which you were entitled in the last month for which you were entitled to a disability insurance benefit.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Special Minimum Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.260</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Special minimum primary insurance amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Regardless of the method we use to compute your primary insurance amount, if the special minimum primary insurance amount described in § 404.261 is higher, then your benefits (and those of your dependents or survivors) will be based on the special minimum primary insurance amount. Special minimum primary insurance amounts are not based on a worker's average earnings, as are primary insurance amounts computed under other methods. Rather, the special minimum primary insurance amount is designed to provide higher benefits to people who worked for long periods in low-paid jobs covered by social security.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.261</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Computing your special minimum primary insurance amount.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Years of coverage.</E> (1) The first step in computing your special minimum primary insurance amount is to find the number of your years of coverage, which is the sum of—<PRTPAGE P="82"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) The quotient found by dividing your total creditable social security earnings during the period 1937-1950 by $900, disregarding any fractional remainder; plus</P>

          <P>(ii) The number of your computation base years after 1950 in which your social security earnings were at least the amounts shown in appendix IV. (<E T="03">Computation base years</E> mean the same here as in other computation methods discussed in this subpart.)</P>
          <P>(2) You must have at least 11 years of coverage to qualify for a special minimum primary insurance amount computation. However, special minimum primary insurance amounts based on little more than 10 years of coverage are usually lower than the regular minimum benefit that was in effect before 1982 (see §§ 404.212(e) and 404.222(b) of this part). In any situation where your primary insurance amount computed under another method is higher, we use that higher amount.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Computing your special minimum primary insurance amount.</E> (1) First, we subtract 10 from your years of coverage and multiply the remainder (at least 1 and no more than 20) by $11.50;</P>

          <P>(2) Then we increase the amount found in paragraph (b)(1) of this section by any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases that have become effective since December 1978 to find your special minimum primary insurance amount. See appendix V for the applicable table, which includes the 9.9 percent cost-of-living increase that became effective June 1979, the 14.3 percent increase that became effective June 1980, and the 11.2 percent increase that became effective June 1981.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
            <P>Ms. F, who attained age 62 in January 1979, had $10,000 in total social security earnings before 1951 and her post-1950 earnings are as follows:</P>
            <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L2">
              <BOXHD>
                <CHED H="1">Year</CHED>
                <CHED H="1">Earnings</CHED>
              </BOXHD>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1951</ENT>
                <ENT>$1,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1952</ENT>
                <ENT>950</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1953</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1954</ENT>
                <ENT>1,000</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1955</ENT>
                <ENT>1,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1956</ENT>
                <ENT>1,200</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1957</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1958</ENT>
                <ENT>1,300</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1959</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1960</ENT>
                <ENT>1,300</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1961</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1962</ENT>
                <ENT>1,400</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1963</ENT>
                <ENT>1,300</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1964</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1965</ENT>
                <ENT>500</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1966</ENT>
                <ENT>700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1967</ENT>
                <ENT>650</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1968</ENT>
                <ENT>900</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1969</ENT>
                <ENT>1,950</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1970</ENT>
                <ENT>2,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1971</ENT>
                <ENT>2,000</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1972</ENT>
                <ENT>1,500</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1973</ENT>
                <ENT>2,700</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1974</ENT>
                <ENT>2,100</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1975</ENT>
                <ENT>2,600</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1976</ENT>
                <ENT>3,850</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1977</ENT>
                <ENT>4,150</ENT>
              </ROW>
              <ROW>
                <ENT I="01">1978</ENT>
                <ENT>0</ENT>
              </ROW>
            </GPOTABLE>
            <P>Her primary insurance amount under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method as of June 1981 is $240.40 (based on average indexed monthly earnings of $229). Her guaranteed-alternative primary insurance amount under the average-monthly-wage method as of June 1981 is $255.80 (based on average monthly wages of $131).</P>
            <P>However, Ms. F has enough earnings before 1951 to allow her 11 years of coverage before 1951 ($10,000÷$900=11, plus a remainder, which we drop). She has sufficient earnings in 1951-52, 1954-56, 1958, 1960, 1962-63, 1969-71, 1973, and 1976-77 to have a year of coverage for each of those years. She thus has 15 years of coverage after 1950 and a total of 26 years of coverage. We subtract 10 from her years of coverage, multiply the remainder (16) by $11.50 and get $184.00. We then apply the June 1979, June 1980, and June 1981 automatic cost-of-living increases (9.9 percent, 14.3 percent, and 11.2 percent, respectively) to that amount to find her special minimum primary insurance amount of $202.30 effective June 1979, $231.30 effective June 1980, and $257.30 effective June 1981. (See appendices V and VI.) Since her special minimum primary insurance amount is higher than the primary insurance amounts computed for her under the other methods described in this subpart for which she is eligible, her benefits (and those of her family) are based on the special minimum primary insurance amount.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 48 FR 46143, Oct. 11, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Cost-of-Living Increases</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.270</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Cost-of-living increases.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Your primary insurance amount may be automatically increased each December so it keeps up with rises in the cost of living. These automatic increases also apply to other benefit amounts, as described in § 404.271.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 51 FR 12603, Apr. 14, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <PRTPAGE P="83"/>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.271</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When automatic cost-of-living increases apply.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Besides increases in the primary insurance amounts of current beneficiaries, automatic cost-of-living increases also apply to—</P>
          <P>(a) The benefits of certain uninsured people age 72 and older (see § 404.380);</P>
          <P>(b) The special minimum primary insurance amounts (described in §§ 404.260 through 404.261) of current and future beneficiaries;</P>
          <P>(c) The primary insurance amounts of people who after 1978 become eligible for benefits or die before becoming eligible (beginning with December of the year they become eligible or die), although certain limitations are placed on the automatic adjustment of the frozen minimum primary insurance amount (as described in § 404.277); and</P>
          <P>(d) The <E T="03">maximum family benefit amounts</E> in column V of the benefit table in appendix III.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 51 FR 12603, Apr. 14, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.272</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Indexes we use to measure the rise in the cost-of-living.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">The bases.</E> To measure increases in the cost-of-living for annual automatic increase purposes, we use either:</P>
          <P>(1) The revised Consumer Price Index (CPI) for urban wage earners and clerical workers as published by the Department of Labor, or</P>
          <P>(2) The average wage index (AWI), which is the average of the annual total wages that we use to index (i.e., update) a worker's past earnings when we compute his or her primary insurance amount (§ 404.211(c)).</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Effect of the OASDI fund ratio.</E> Which of these indexes we use to measure increases in the cost-of-living depends on the Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) fund ratio.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">OASDI fund ratio for years after 1984.</E> For purposes of cost-of-living increases, the OASDI fund ratio is the ratio of the combined assets in the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund and the Federal Disability Insurance Trust Fund (see section 201 of the Social Security Act) on January 1 of a given year, to the estimated expenditures from the Funds in the same year. The January 1 balance consists of the assets (i.e., government bonds and cash) in the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund and the Federal Disability Insurance Trust Fund, plus Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) and Self-Employment Contributions Act (SECA) taxes transferred to these trust funds on January 1 of the given year, minus the outstanding amounts (principal and interest) owed to the Federal Hospital Insurance Trust Fund as a result of interfund loans. Estimated expenditures are amounts we expect to pay from the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and the Disability Insurance Trust Funds during the year, including the net amount that we pay into the Railroad Retirement Account, but excluding principal repayments and interest payments to the Hospital Insurance Trust Fund and transfer payments between the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and the Disability Insurance Trust Funds. The ratio as calculated under this rule is rounded to the nearest 0.1 percent.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Which index we use.</E> We use the CPI if the OASDI fund ratio is 15.0 percent or more for any year from 1984 through 1988, and if the ratio is 20.0 percent or more for any year after 1988. We use either the CPI or the AWI, depending on which has the lower percentage increase in the applicable measuring period (see § 404.274), if the OASDI fund ratio is less than 15.0 percent for any year from 1984 through 1988, and if the ratio is less than 20.0 percent for any year after 1988. For example, if the OASDI fund ratio for a year is 17.0 percent, the cost-of-living increase effective December of that year will be based on the CPI.</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 12603, Apr. 14, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.273</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When automatic cost-of-living increases are to be made.</SUBJECT>

          <P>We make automatic cost-of-living increases if the applicable index, either the CPI or the AWI, rises by 3.0 percent or more over a specified measuring period (see the rules in § 404.274). If the cost-of-living increase is to be based on an increase of 3.0 percent or more in the CPI, the increase becomes effective in December of the year in which the measuring period ends. If the increase <PRTPAGE P="84"/>is to be based on an increase of 3.0 percent or more in the AWI, the increase becomes effective in December of the year after the year in which the measuring period ends.</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 12603, Apr. 14, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.274</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Measuring the increase in the indexes.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> Depending on the OASDI fund ratio, we measure the rise in one index or in both indexes during the applicable measuring period (described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section) to determine whether there will be an automatic cost-of-living increase and if so, its amount.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Measuring period based on CPI.</E> For the increase effective December 1984 and later years, the measuring period we use for finding the amount of the CPI increase—</P>
          <P>(1) Begins with—</P>
          <P>(i) Any calendar quarter in which an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> benefit increase is effective; or, if later,</P>
          <P>(ii) The third calendar quarter of any year in which the last automatic increase became effective; and</P>

          <P>(2) Ends with the third calendar quarter of the following year, but only if the CPI has increased by at least 3.0 percent (after rounding to the nearest one-tenth of one percent) since the beginning of the measuring period. (If the CPI increase is less than 3.0 percent, we extend the measuring period to the third quarter of the next year, doing so repeatedly until the 3.0 percent level is reached.) If this measuring period ends in a year after the year in which an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase was enacted into law or took effect, there can be no cost-of-living increase based on this measuring period, and we will apply the rule in paragraph (d) of this section.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Measuring period based on AWI.</E> The measuring period we use for finding the amount of the AWI increase—</P>
          <P>(1) Begins with—</P>
          <P>(i) The calendar year before the year in which an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> benefit increase is effective; or, if later,</P>
          <P>(ii) The calendar year before the year in which the last automatic increase became effective; and</P>

          <P>(2) Ends with the following year, but only if the AWI has increased by at least 3.0 percent (after rounding to the nearest one-tenth of one percent) in that one-year period. (If the AWI increase is less than 3.0 percent, we extend the measuring period to the next year, doing so repeatedly until the 3.0 percent level is reached.) If this measuring period ends in a year in which an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase was enacted into law or took effect, there can be no cost-of-living increase based on this measuring period, and we will apply the rule in paragraph (d) of this section.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">When no automatic cost-of-living increase is possible.</E> No automatic cost-of-living increase is possible for the calendar year that immediately follows a year in which an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase was enacted into law or took effect. The measuring period for the next automatic cost-of-living increase—</P>
          <P>(1) Where the measuring period is based on the CPI,</P>
          <P>(i) Begins with the calendar quarter in which the <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase took effect; and</P>

          <P>(ii) Ends with the third calendar quarter of the next year in which the CPI has risen by at least 3.0 percent if an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase was not enacted or effective in the preceding year. (If the CPI increase is less than 3.0 percent, or an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase was enacted or effective in the prior year, we extend the end of the measuring period to the third quarter of the following year, doing so repeatedly until the 3.0 percent level is reached in a year which does not immediately follow an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase year.)</P>
          <P>(2) Where the measuring period is based on the AWI,</P>

          <P>(i) Begins with the calendar year before the year in which the <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase took effect; and</P>

          <P>(ii) Ends with the next calendar year in which the AWI has increased by at least 3.0 percent and in which an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase is not enacted or effective. (If the AWI increase is less than 3.0 percent, we extend the end of the measuring period to the following year, doing so repeatedly until the 3.0 percent level is reached in a year in which an <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increase is not enacted or effective.)</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 12603, Apr. 21, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <PRTPAGE P="85"/>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.275</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Amount of automatic cost-of-living increases.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Based on CPI.</E> When the average of the CPI for the three months of the quarter ending the measuring period is at least 3.0 percent higher than the average of the CPI for the three months of the quarter in which the measuring period began, we compute an automatic cost-of-living increase percentage to be effective beginning with benefits payable for December of the year in which the measuring period ended. To compute the average of the CPI, the three monthly CPI figures (which are published to one decimal place) are added, the total is divided by 3, and the result is rounded to the nearest 0.1. If the CPI is the applicable index (see § 404.272(d)), we apply the increase (rounded to the nearest one-tenth of one percent) to the amounts described in § 404.271. We round the resulting amounts to the next lower multiple of $0.10 if not already a multiple of $0.10.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Based on AWI.</E> When the AWI for the year which ends the measuring period is at least 3.0 percent higher than the AWI for the year which begins the measuring period and all the other conditions for an AWI-based increase are met, that percent is the automatic cost-of-living increase which is due beginning with benefits payable for December of the year after the measuring period ended. If the AWI is the applicable index (see § 404.272(d)), we apply that percentage increase (rounded to the nearest one-tenth of one percent) to the amounts described in § 404.271. We round the resulting amounts to the next lower multiple of $0.10 if not already a multiple of $0.10.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Additional increase.</E> See § 404.278 for the additional increase which might be possible.</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 12604, Apr. 21, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.276</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Publication of notice of increase.</SUBJECT>

          <P>When we determine that an automatic cost-of-living increase is due, we publish in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> within 45 days of the end of the measuring period used in finding the amount of the increase—</P>
          <P>(a) The fact that an increase is due;</P>
          <P>(b) The amount of the increase;</P>
          <P>(c) The increased special minimum primary insurance amounts; and </P>
          <P>(d) The range of increased maximum family benefits that corresponds to the range of increased special minimum primary insurance amounts.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.277</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Automatic increases of “frozen” minimum primary insurance amount.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> There are special rules for automatic cost-of-living increases in the minimum primary insurance amount for people whose primary insurance amount is computed under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method. The minimum primary insurance amount is <E T="03">frozen,</E> for people becoming eligible after 1978, and before 1982, at $122 (the least amount in the benefit table in effect in December 1978, rounded to the next higher $1.00. See appendix III.). The frozen minimum is subject to automatic cost-of-living increases only in years in which you or your dependents or survivors are entitled to benefits.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Old-age insurance benefit based on frozen minimum primary insurance amount.</E> We apply automatic cost-of-living increases to your minimum primary insurance amount beginning with the earliest of—</P>
          <P>(1) December of the year you become entitled to benefits and get at least a partial benefit; or</P>
          <P>(2) December of the year you reach age 65 if you are entitled to benefits at or before age 65, regardless of whether you get at least a partial benefit; or</P>
          <P>(3) December of the year you become entitled to benefits if that is not until after you reach age 65.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Survivor benefits based on minimum primary insurance amount either before or after the worker's entitlement to old-age insurance benefits.</E> (1) We apply automatic cost-of-living increases to your minimum primary insurance amount for purposes of adjusting the benefits of your survivors—</P>
          <P>(i) In June of any year in which your children, your surviving spouse caring for your children, or your parents are entitled to survivors benefits for at least one month; and</P>
          <P>(ii) Beginning with June of the earlier of—<PRTPAGE P="86"/>
          </P>
          <P>(A) The year your aged surviving spouse (as defined in §§ 404.335 and 404.336) becomes entitled to benefits and gets at least a partial benefit; or</P>
          <P>(B) The year your surviving spouse is 65 or older and becomes entitled to benefits.</P>
          <P>(2) Automatic cost-of-living increases are not applied to your minimum primary insurance amount in any year in which no survivor of yours is entitled to benefits on your social security record.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 48 FR 46143, Oct. 11, 1983; 51 FR 12604, Apr. 14, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.278</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Additional cost-of-living increase.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> In addition to the cost-of-living increase explained in § 404.275 for a given year, we will further increase the amounts in § 404.271 if—</P>
          <P>(1) The OASDI fund ratio is more than 32.0 percent in the given year in which a cost-of-living increase is due; and</P>
          <P>(2) In any prior year, the cost-of-living increase was based on the AWI as the lower of the CPI and AWI (or would have been based on the AWI except that it was less than the required 3.0 percent increase).</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Measuring period for the additional increase—</E>(1) <E T="03">Beginning.</E> To compute the additional increase, we begin with—</P>
          <P>(i) In the case of certain uninsured beneficiaries age 72 and older (see § 404.380), the first calendar year in which a cost-of-living adjustment was based on the AWI rather than the CPI;</P>
          <P>(ii) For all other individuals and for maximum benefits payable to a family, the year in which the insured individual became eligible for old-age or disability benefits to which he or she is currently entitled, or died before becoming eligible.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Ending.</E> The end of the measuring period is the year before the first year in which a cost-of-living increase is due based on the CPI and in which the OASDI fund ratio is more than 32.0 percent.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Compounded percentage benefit increase.</E> To compute the additional cost-of-living increase, we must first compute the compounded percentage benefit increase (CPBI) for both the cost-of-living increases that were actually paid during the measuring period and for the increases that would have been paid if the CPI had been the basis for all the increases.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Computing the CPBI.</E> The computation of the CPBI is as follows—</P>
          <P>(1) Obtain the sum of (i) 1.000 and (ii) the actual cost-of-living increase percentage (expressed as a decimal) for each year in the measuring period;</P>
          <P>(2) Multiply the resulting amount for the first year by that for the second year, then multiply that product by the amount for the third year, and continue until the last amount has been multiplied by the product of the preceding amounts;</P>
          <P>(3) Subtract 1 from the last product;</P>

          <P>(4) Multiply the remaining product by 100. The result is what we call the <E T="03">actual</E> CPBI.</P>

          <P>(5) Substitute the cost-of-living increase percentage(s) that would have been used if the increase(s) had been based on the CPI (for some years, this will be the percentage that was used), and do the same computations as in paragraphs (d) (1) through (4) of this section. The result is what we call the <E T="03">assumed</E> CPBI.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Computing the additional cost-of-living increase.</E> To compute the precentage increase, we—</P>
          <P>(1) Subtract the actual CPBI from the assumed CPBI;</P>
          <P>(2) Add 100 to the actual CPBI;</P>
          <P>(3) Divide the answer from paragraph (e)(1) of this section by the answer from paragraph (e)(2) of this section, multiply the quotient by 100, and round to the nearest 0.1. The result is the additional increase percentage, which we apply to the appropriate amount described in § 404.271 after that amount has been increased under § 404.275 for a given year. If that increased amount is not a multiple of $0.10, we will decrease it to the next lower multiple of $0.10.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Restrictions on paying an additional cost-of-living increase.</E> We will pay the additional increase to the extent necessary to bring the benefits up to the level they would have been if they had been increased based on the CPI. However, we will pay the additional increase only to the extent payment will not cause the OASDI fund ratio to drop below 32.0 percent for the year after <PRTPAGE P="87"/>the year in which the increase is effective.</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 12604, Apr. 21, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Recomputing Your Primary Insurance Amount</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.280</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputations.</SUBJECT>
          <P>At times after you or your survivors become entitled to benefits, we will recompute your primary insurance amount. Usually we will recompute only if doing so will increase your primary insurance amount. However, we will also recompute your primary insurance amount if you first became eligible for old-age or disability insurance benefits after 1985, and later become entitled to a pension based on your noncovered employment, as explained in § 404.213. There is no limit on the number of times your primary insurance amount may be recomputed, and we do most recomputations automatically. In the following sections, we explain:</P>
          <P>(a) Why a recomputation is made (§ 404.281),</P>
          <P>(b) When a recomputation takes effect (§ 404.282),</P>
          <P>(c) Methods of recomputing (§§ 404.283 and 404.284),</P>
          <P>(d) Automatic recomputations (§ 404.285),</P>
          <P>(e) Requesting a recomputation (§ 404.286),</P>
          <P>(f) Waiving a recomputation (§ 404.287), and</P>
          <P>(g) Recomputing when you are entitled to a pension based on noncovered employment (§ 404.288).</P>
          <CITA>[52 FR 47918, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.281</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Why your primary insurance amount may be recomputed.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Earnings not included in earlier computation or recomputation.</E> The most common reason for recomputing your primary insurance amount is to include earnings of yours that were not used in the first computation or in an earlier recomputation, as described in paragraphs (c) through (e) of this section. These earnings will result in a revised average monthly wage or revised average indexed monthly earnings.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">New computation method enacted.</E> If a new method of computing or recomputing primary insurance amounts is enacted into law and you are eligible to have your primary insurance amount recomputed under the new method, we will recompute it under the new method if doing so would increase your primary insurance amount.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Earnings in the year you reach age 62 or become disabled.</E> In the initial computation of your primary insurance amount, we do not use your earnings in the year you become entitled to old-age insurance benefits or become disabled. However, we can use those earnings (called <E T="03">lag earnings</E>) in a recomputation of your primary insurance amount. We recompute and begin paying you the higher benefits in the year after the year you become entitled to old-age benefits or become disabled.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Earnings not reported to us in time to use them in the computation of your primary insurance amount.</E> Because of the way reports of earnings are required to be submitted to us for years after 1977, the earnings you have in the year before you become entitled to old-age insurance benefits, or become disabled or in the year you die might not be reported to us in time to use them in computing your primary insurance amount. We recompute your primary insurance amount based on the new earnings information and begin paying you (or your survivors) the higher benefits based on the additional earnings, beginning with the month you became entitled or died.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Earnings after entitlement that are used in a recomputation.</E> Earnings that you have after you become entitled to benefits will be used in a recomputation of your primary insurance amount.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Entitlement to a monthly pension.</E> We will recompute your primary insurance amount if in a month after you became entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits, you become entitled to a pension based on noncovered employment, as explained in § 404.213. Further, we will recompute your primary insurance amount after your death to disregard a monthly pension based on noncovered employment which affected your primary insurance amount.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 52 FR 47918, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <PRTPAGE P="88"/>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.282</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effective date of recomputations.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Most recomputations are effective beginning with January of the calendar year after the year in which the additional earnings used in the recomputation were paid. However, a recomputation to include earnings in the year of death (whether or not paid before death) is effective for the month of death. Additionally if you first became eligible for old-age or disability insurance benefits after 1985 and you later also become entitled to a monthly pension based on noncovered employment, we will recompute your primary insurance amount under the rules in § 404.213; this recomputed Social Security benefit amount is effective for the first month you are entitled to the pension. Finally, if your primary insurance amount was affected by your entitlement to a pension, we will recompute the amount to disregard the pension, effective with the month of your death.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 52 FR 47918, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.283</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputation under method other than that used to find your primary insurance amount.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In some cases, we may recompute your primary insurance amount under a computation method different from the method used in the computation (or earlier recomputation) of your primary insurance amount, if you are eligible for a computation or recomputation under the different method.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.284</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputations for people who reach age 62, or become disabled, or die before age 62 after 1978.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> Years of your earnings after 1978 not used in the computation of your primary insurance amount (or in earlier recomputations) under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method may be substituted for earlier years of your indexed earnings in a recomputation, but only under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method. See § 404.288 for the rules on recomputing when you are entitled to a monthly pension based on noncovered employment.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Substituting actual dollar amounts in earnings for earlier years of indexed earnings.</E> When we recompute your primary insurance amount under the average-indexed-monthly earnings method, we use actual dollar amounts, i.e., no indexing, for earnings not included in the initial computation or earlier recomputation. These later earnings are substituted for earlier years of indexed or actual earnings that are lower.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Benefit formula used in recomputation.</E> The formula that was used in the first computation of your primary insurance amount is also used in recomputations of your primary insurance amount.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Your recomputed primary insurance amount.</E> We recompute your primary insurance amount by applying the benefit formula to your average indexed monthly earnings as revised to include additional earnings. See § 404.281. We then increase the recomputed PIA by the amounts of any automatic cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in primary insurance amounts that have become effective since you reached age 62, or became disabled or died before age 62.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Minimum increase in primary insurance amounts.</E> Your primary insurance amount may not be recomputed unless doing so would increase it by at least $1.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 1.</HD>

            <P>Ms. A, whose primary insurance amount we computed to be $432.40 in June 1979 in §§ 404.210 through 404.212 (based on average indexed monthly earnings of $903), had earnings of $11,000 in 1979 which were not used in the initial computation of her primary insurance amount. We may recompute her primary insurance amount effective for January 1980. In this recomputation, her 1979 earnings may be substituted in their actual dollar amount for the lowest year of her indexed earnings that was used in the initial computation. In Ms. A's case, we substitute the $11,000 for her 1966 indexed earnings of $8,911.36. Her total indexed earnings are now $251,470.05 and her new average indexed monthly earnings are $911. We apply to Ms. A's new average indexed monthly earnings the same benefit formula we used in the initial computation. Doing so produces an amount of $396.00. An automatic cost-of-living increase of 9.9 percent was effective in June 1979. We increase the $396.00 amount by 9.9 percent to find Ms. A's recomputed primary insurance amount of $435.30. Later we increased the primary insurance amount to <PRTPAGE P="89"/>$497.60 to reflect the 14.3 percent cost-of-living increase beginning June 1980 and to $553.40 to reflect the 11.2 percent cost-of-living increase beginning June 1981.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 2.</HD>
            <P>Mr. B, whose primary insurance amount we computed to be $429.20 (based on average monthly wages of $502) in June 1978 in §§ 404.220 through 404.222, had earnings of $12,000 in 1978 which were not used in the initial computation of his primary insurance amount. We may recompute his primary insurance amount effective for January 1979. In this recomputation, his 1978 earnings are substituted for the lowest year of earnings used in the initial computation ($2,700 in 1952). Mr. B's total earnings are now $142,000 and his new average monthly wage is $537.</P>
            <P>We next find Mr. B's new average monthly wage in column III of the December 1978 benefit table in appendix III. Reading across, we find his recomputed primary insurance amount on the same line in column IV, which is $407.70. We then apply the 9.9 percent, the 14.3 percent and the 11.2 percent automatic cost-of-living increases for June 1979, June 1980, and June 1981, respectively, to compute Mr. B's primary insurance amount of $569.60.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Guaranteed alternatives.</E> We may recompute your primary insurance amount by any of the following methods for which you qualify, if doing so would result in a higher amount than the one computed under the average-indexed-monthly-earnings method. Earnings in or after the year you reach age 62 cannot be used.</P>

          <P>(1) If you reached age 62 after 1978 and before 1984, we may recompute to include earnings for years before the year you reached age 62 by using the guaranteed alternative (§ 404.231). We will increase the result by any cost-of-living or <E T="03">ad hoc</E> increases in the primary insurance amounts that have become effective in and after the year you reached age 62.</P>
          <P>(2) We will also recompute under the old-start guarantee (§ 404.242) and the prior-disability guarantee (§ 404.252) if you meet the requirements of either or both these methods.</P>
          <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 52 FR 47918, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.285</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputations performed automatically.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Each year, we examine the earnings record of every retired, disabled, and deceased worker to see if the worker's primary insurance amount may be recomputed under any of the methods we have described. When a recomputation is called for, we perform it automatically and begin paying the higher benefits based on your recomputed primary insurance amount for the earliest possible month that the recomputation can be effective. You do not have to request this service, although you may request a recomputation at an earlier date than one would otherwise be performed (see § 404.286). Doing so, however, does not allow your increased primary insurance amount to be effective any sooner than it would be under an automatic recomputation. You may also waive a recomputation if one would disadvantage you or your family (see § 404.287).</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.286</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to request an immediate recomputation.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may request that your primary insurance amount be recomputed sooner than it would be recomputed automatically. To do so, you must make the request in writing to us and provide acceptable evidence of your earnings not included in the first computation or earlier recomputation of your primary insurance amount. If doing so will increase your primary insurance amount, we will recompute it. However, we cannot begin paying higher benefits on the recomputed primary insurance amount any sooner than we could under an automatic recomputation, i.e., for January of the year following the year in which the earnings were paid or derived.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.287</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Waiver of recomputation.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you or your family would be disadvantaged in some way by a recomputation of your primary insurance amount, or you and every member of your family do not want your primary insurance amount to be recomputed for any other reason, you may waive (that is, give up your right to) a recomputation, but you must do so in writing. That you waive one recomputation, however, does not mean that you also waive future recomputations for which you might be eligible.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <PRTPAGE P="90"/>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.288</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recomputing when you are entitled to a monthly pension based on noncovered employment.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">After entitlement to old-age or disability insurance benefits.</E> If you first become eligible for old-age or disability insurance benefits after 1985 and you later become entitled to a monthly pension based on noncovered employment, we may recompute your primary insurance amount under the rules in § 404.213. When recomputing, we will use the amount of the pension to which you are entitled or deemed entitled in the first month that you are concurrently eligible for both the pension and old-age or disability insurance benefits. We will disregard the rule in § 404.284(e) that the recomputation must increase your primary insurance amount by at least $1.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Already entitled to benefits and to a pension based on noncovered employment.</E> If we have already computed or recomputed your primary insurance amount to take into account your monthly pension, we may later recompute for one of the reasons explained in § 404.281. We will recompute your primary insurance amount under the rules in §§ 404.213 and 404.284. Any increase resulting from the recomputation under the rules of § 404.284 will be added to the most recent primary insurance amount which we had computed to take into account your monthly pension.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">After your death.</E> If one or more survivors are entitled to benefits after your death, we will recompute the primary insurance amount as though it had never been affected by your entitlement to a monthly pension based in whole or in part on noncovered employment.</P>
          <CITA>[52 FR 47918, Dec. 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Recalculations of Primary Insurance Amounts</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.290</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Recalculations.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Your primary insurance amount may be “recalculated” in certain instances. When we recalculate your primary amount, we refigure it under the same method we used in the first computation by taking into account—</P>
          <P>(1) Earnings (including compensation for railroad service) incorrectly included or excluded in the first computation;</P>
          <P>(2) Special deemed earnings credits including credits for military service (see subpart N of this part) and for individuals interned during World War II (see subpart K of this part), not available at the time of the first computation;</P>
          <P>(3) Correction of clerical or mathematical errors; or</P>
          <P>(4) Other miscellaneous changes in status.</P>
          <P>(b) Unlike recomputations, which may only serve to increase your primary insurance amount, recalculations may serve to either increase or reduce it.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <APPENDIX>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Appendices to Subpart C</HD>

        <P>The following appendices contain data that are needed in computing primary insurance amounts. Appendix I contains <E T="03">average of the total wages</E> figures, which we use to <E T="03">index</E> a worker's earnings for purposes of computing his or her average indexed monthly earnings. Appendix II contains benefit formulas which we apply to a worker's average indexed monthly earnings to find his or her primary insurance amount. Appendix III contains the benefit table we use to find a worker's primary insurance amount from his or her average monthly wage. We use the figures in appendix IV to find your years of coverage for years after 1950 for purposes of your special minimum primary insurance amount. Appendix V contains the table for computing the special minimum primary insurance amount. Appendix VI is a table of the percentage increases in primary insurance amounts since 1978. Appendix VII is a table of the <E T="03">old-law</E> contribution and benefit base that would have been effective under the Social Security Act without enactment of the 1977 amendments.</P>

        <P>The figures in the appendices are by law automatically adjusted each year. We are required to announce the changes through timely publication in the <E T="04">Federal Register.</E> The only exception to the requirement of publication in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> is the update of benefit amounts shown in appendix III. We update the benefit amounts for payment purposes but are not required by law to publish this extensive table in the <E T="04">Federal Register.</E> We have not updated the table in appendix III, but the introductory paragraphs at appendix III explain how you can compute the current benefit amount.</P>
        <P>When we publish the figures in the <E T="04">Federal Register,</E> we do not change every one of these figures. Instead, we provide new ones for each year that passes. We continue to use the old ones for various computation <PRTPAGE P="91"/>purposes, as the regulations show. Most of the new figures for these appendices are required by law to be published by November 1 of each year. Notice of automatic cost-of-living increases in primary insurance amounts is required to be published within 45 days of the end of the applicable measuring period for the increase (see §§ 404.274 and 404.276). In effect, publication is required within 45 days of the end of the third calendar quarter of any year in which there is to be an automatic cost-of-living increase.</P>

        <P>We begin to use the new data in computing primary insurance amounts as soon as required by law, even before we periodically update these appendices. If the data you need to find your primary insurance amount have not yet been included in the appendices, you may find the figures in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> on or about November 1.</P>
        <CITA>[52 FR 8247, Mar. 17, 1987]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
      <APPENDIX>
        <EAR>Pt. 404, Subpt. C, App. II</EAR>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Appendix II of Subpart C of Part 404—Benefit Formulas Used With Average Indexed Monthly Earnings</E>
        </HD>
        <P>As explained in § 404.212, we use one of the formulas below to compute your primary insurance amount from your average indexed monthly earnings (AIME). To select the appropriate formula, we find in the left-hand column the year after 1978 in which you reach age 62, or become disabled, or die before age 62. The benefit formula to be used in computing your primary insurance amount is on the same line in the right-hand columns. For example, if you reach age 62 or become disabled or die before age 62 in 1979, then we compute 90 percent of the first $180 of AIME, 32 percent of the next $905 of AIME, and 15 percent of AIME over $1,085. After we figure your amount for each step in the formula, we add the amounts. If the total is not already a multiple of $0.10, we round the total as follows:</P>
        <P>(1) For computations using the benefit formulas in effect for 1979 through 1982, we round the total upward to the nearest $0.10, and</P>
        <P>(2) For computations using the benefit formulas in effect for 1983 and later, we round the total downward to the nearest $0.10.</P>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,6,8,8" COLS="4" OPTS="L2,i1">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">Benefit Formulas</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">Year you reach age 62 <SU>1</SU>
            </CHED>
            <CHED H="1">90 percent of the first—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">plus 32 percent of the next—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">plus 15 percent of AIME over—</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1979</ENT>
            <ENT>$180</ENT>
            <ENT>$905</ENT>
            <ENT>$1,085</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1980</ENT>
            <ENT>194</ENT>
            <ENT>977</ENT>
            <ENT>1,171</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1981</ENT>
            <ENT>211</ENT>
            <ENT>1,063</ENT>
            <ENT>1,274</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1982</ENT>
            <ENT>230</ENT>
            <ENT>1,158</ENT>
            <ENT>1,388</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1983</ENT>
            <ENT>254</ENT>
            <ENT>1,274</ENT>
            <ENT>1,528</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1984</ENT>
            <ENT>267</ENT>
            <ENT>1,345</ENT>
            <ENT>1,612</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1985</ENT>
            <ENT>280</ENT>
            <ENT>1,411</ENT>
            <ENT>1,691</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1986</ENT>
            <ENT>297</ENT>
            <ENT>1,493</ENT>
            <ENT>1,790</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1987</ENT>
            <ENT>310</ENT>
            <ENT>1,556</ENT>
            <ENT>1,866</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1988</ENT>
            <ENT>319</ENT>
            <ENT>1,603</ENT>
            <ENT>1,922</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1989</ENT>
            <ENT>339</ENT>
            <ENT>1,705</ENT>
            <ENT>2,044</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1990</ENT>
            <ENT>356</ENT>
            <ENT>1,789</ENT>
            <ENT>2,145</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1991</ENT>
            <ENT>370</ENT>
            <ENT>1,860</ENT>
            <ENT>2,230</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1992</ENT>
            <ENT>387</ENT>
            <ENT>1,946</ENT>
            <ENT>2,333</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <TNOTE>
            <SU>1</SU> Or become disabled or die before age 62.</TNOTE>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <CITA>[57 FR 44096, Sept. 24, 1992; 57 FR 45878, Oct. 5, 1992]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
      <APPENDIX>
        <PRTPAGE P="92"/>
        <EAR>Pt. 404, Subpt. C, App. III</EAR>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Appendix III of Subpart C of Part 404—Benefit Table</E>
        </HD>
        <P>This benefit table shows primary insurance amounts and maximum family benefits in effect in December 1978 based on cost-of-living increases which became effective for June 1978. (See § 404.403 for information on maximum family benefits.) You will also be able to find primary insurance amounts for an individual whose entitlement began in the period June 1977 through May 1978.</P>
        <P>The benefit table in effect in December 1978 had a minimum primary insurance amount of $121.80. As explained in § 404.222(b), certain workers eligible, or who died without having been eligible, before 1982 had their benefit computed from this table. However, the minimum benefit provision was repealed for other workers by the 1981 amendments to the Act (the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981, Pub. L. 97-35 as modified by Pub. L. 97-123). As a result, this benefit table includes a downward extension from the former minimum of $121.80 to the lowest primary insurance amount now possible. The extension is calculated as follows. For each single dollar of average monthly wage in the benefit table, the primary insurance amount shown for December 1978 is $121.80 multiplied by the ratio of that average monthly wage to $76. The upper limit of each primary insurance benefit range in column I of the table is $16.20 multiplied by the ratio of the average monthly wage in column III of the table to $76. The maximum family benefit is 150 percent of the corresponding primary insurance amount.</P>
        <P>The repeal of the minimum benefit provision is effective with January 1982 for most workers and their families where the worker initially becomes eligible for benefits after 1981 or dies after 1981 without having been eligible before January 1982. For members of a religious order who are required to take a vow of poverty, as explained in 20 CFR 404.1024, and which religious order elected Social Security coverage before December 29, 1981, the repeal is effective with January 1992 based on first eligibility or death in that month or later.</P>
        <P>To use this table, you must first compute the primary insurance benefit (column I) or the average monthly wage (column III), then move across the same line to either column II or column IV as appropriate. To determine increases in primary insurance amounts since December 1978 you should see appendix VI. Appendix VI tells you, by year, the percentage of the increases. In applying each cost-of-living increase to primary insurance amounts, we round the increased primary insurance amount to the next lower multiple of $0.10 if not already a multiple of $0.10. (For cost-of-living increases which are effective before June 1982, we round to the next higher multiple of $0.10.)</P>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="5,7,7,5,5,7,7" COLS="7" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">Extended December</E> 1978 <E T="04">Table of Benefits Effective January</E> 1982</TTITLE>
          <TDESC>[In dollars]</TDESC>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Primary insurance benefit: If an individual's primary insurance benefit (as determined under § 404.241(e)) is—</CHED>
            <CHED H="2">At least—</CHED>
            <CHED H="2">But not more than—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount effective June 1977: Or his or her primary insurance amount is—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Average monthly wage: Or his or her average monthly wage (as determined under § 404.221) is—</CHED>
            <CHED H="2">At least—</CHED>
            <CHED H="2">But not more than—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">IV. Primary insurance amount effective January 1982: Then his or her primary insurance amount is—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">V. Maximum family benefits: And the maximum amount of benefits payable on the basis of his or her wages and self-employment income is—</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>1</ENT>
            <ENT>1.70</ENT>
            <ENT>2.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT>0.42</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>2</ENT>
            <ENT>2</ENT>
            <ENT>3.30</ENT>
            <ENT>5.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">0.43</ENT>
            <ENT>.63</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>3</ENT>
            <ENT>3</ENT>
            <ENT>4.90</ENT>
            <ENT>7.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">.64</ENT>
            <ENT>.85</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>4</ENT>
            <ENT>4</ENT>
            <ENT>6.50</ENT>
            <ENT>9.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">.86</ENT>
            <ENT>1.06</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>5</ENT>
            <ENT>5</ENT>
            <ENT>8.10</ENT>
            <ENT>12.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1.07</ENT>
            <ENT>1.27</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>6</ENT>
            <ENT>6</ENT>
            <ENT>9.70</ENT>
            <ENT>14.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1.28</ENT>
            <ENT>1.49</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>7</ENT>
            <ENT>7</ENT>
            <ENT>11.30</ENT>
            <ENT>17.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1.70</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>8</ENT>
            <ENT>8</ENT>
            <ENT>12.90</ENT>
            <ENT>19.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1.71</ENT>
            <ENT>1.91</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>9</ENT>
            <ENT>9</ENT>
            <ENT>14.50</ENT>
            <ENT>21.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1.92</ENT>
            <ENT>2.13</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>10</ENT>
            <ENT>10</ENT>
            <ENT>16.10</ENT>
            <ENT>24.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">2.14</ENT>
            <ENT>2.34</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>11</ENT>
            <ENT>11</ENT>
            <ENT>17.70</ENT>
            <ENT>26.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">2.35</ENT>
            <ENT>2.55</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>12</ENT>
            <ENT>12</ENT>
            <ENT>19.30</ENT>
            <ENT>29.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">2.56</ENT>
            <ENT>2.77</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>13</ENT>
            <ENT>13</ENT>
            <ENT>20.90</ENT>
            <ENT>31.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">2.78</ENT>
            <ENT>2.98</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>14</ENT>
            <ENT>14</ENT>
            <ENT>22.50</ENT>
            <ENT>33.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">2.99</ENT>
            <ENT>3.19</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>15</ENT>
            <ENT>15</ENT>
            <ENT>24.10</ENT>
            <ENT>36.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">3.20</ENT>
            <ENT>3.41</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>16</ENT>
            <ENT>16</ENT>
            <ENT>25.70</ENT>
            <ENT>38.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">3.42</ENT>
            <ENT>3.62</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>17</ENT>
            <ENT>17</ENT>
            <ENT>27.30</ENT>
            <ENT>41.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">3.63</ENT>
            <ENT>3.83</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>18</ENT>
            <ENT>18</ENT>
            <ENT>28.90</ENT>
            <ENT>43.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">3.84</ENT>
            <ENT>4.05</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>19</ENT>
            <ENT>19</ENT>
            <ENT>30.50</ENT>
            <ENT>45.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">4.06</ENT>
            <ENT>4.26</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>20</ENT>
            <ENT>20</ENT>
            <ENT>32.10</ENT>
            <ENT>48.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">4.27</ENT>
            <ENT>4.47</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>21</ENT>
            <ENT>21</ENT>
            <ENT>33.70</ENT>
            <ENT>50.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">4.48</ENT>
            <ENT>4.68</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>22</ENT>
            <ENT>22</ENT>
            <ENT>35.30</ENT>
            <ENT>53.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">4.69</ENT>
            <ENT>4.90</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>23</ENT>
            <ENT>23</ENT>
            <ENT>36.90</ENT>
            <ENT>55.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">4.91</ENT>
            <ENT>5.11</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>24</ENT>
            <ENT>24</ENT>
            <ENT>38.50</ENT>
            <ENT>57.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <PRTPAGE P="93"/>
            <ENT I="01">5.12</ENT>
            <ENT>5.32</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>25</ENT>
            <ENT>25</ENT>
            <ENT>40.10</ENT>
            <ENT>60.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">5.33</ENT>
            <ENT>5.54</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>26</ENT>
            <ENT>26</ENT>
            <ENT>41.70</ENT>
            <ENT>62.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">5.55</ENT>
            <ENT>5.75</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>27</ENT>
            <ENT>27</ENT>
            <ENT>43.30</ENT>
            <ENT>65.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">5.76</ENT>
            <ENT>5.96</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>28</ENT>
            <ENT>28</ENT>
            <ENT>44.90</ENT>
            <ENT>67.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">5.97</ENT>
            <ENT>6.18</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>29</ENT>
            <ENT>29</ENT>
            <ENT>46.50</ENT>
            <ENT>69.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">6.19</ENT>
            <ENT>6.39</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>30</ENT>
            <ENT>30</ENT>
            <ENT>48.10</ENT>
            <ENT>72.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">6.40</ENT>
            <ENT>6.60</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>31</ENT>
            <ENT>31</ENT>
            <ENT>49.70</ENT>
            <ENT>74.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">6.61</ENT>
            <ENT>6.82</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>32</ENT>
            <ENT>32</ENT>
            <ENT>51.30</ENT>
            <ENT>77.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">6.83</ENT>
            <ENT>7.03</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>33</ENT>
            <ENT>33</ENT>
            <ENT>52.90</ENT>
            <ENT>79.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">7.04</ENT>
            <ENT>7.24</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>34</ENT>
            <ENT>34</ENT>
            <ENT>54.50</ENT>
            <ENT>81.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">7.25</ENT>
            <ENT>7.46</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>35</ENT>
            <ENT>35</ENT>
            <ENT>56.10</ENT>
            <ENT>84.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">7.47</ENT>
            <ENT>7.67</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>36</ENT>
            <ENT>36</ENT>
            <ENT>57.70</ENT>
            <ENT>86.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">7.68</ENT>
            <ENT>7.88</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>37</ENT>
            <ENT>37</ENT>
            <ENT>59.30</ENT>
            <ENT>89.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">7.89</ENT>
            <ENT>8.10</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>38</ENT>
            <ENT>38</ENT>
            <ENT>60.90</ENT>
            <ENT>91.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">8.11</ENT>
            <ENT>8.31</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>39</ENT>
            <ENT>39</ENT>
            <ENT>62.60</ENT>
            <ENT>93.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">8.32</ENT>
            <ENT>8.52</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>40</ENT>
            <ENT>40</ENT>
            <ENT>64.20</ENT>
            <ENT>96.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">8.53</ENT>
            <ENT>8.73</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>41</ENT>
            <ENT>41</ENT>
            <ENT>65.80</ENT>
            <ENT>98.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">8.74</ENT>
            <ENT>8.95</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>42</ENT>
            <ENT>42</ENT>
            <ENT>67.40</ENT>
            <ENT>101.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">8.96</ENT>
            <ENT>9.16</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>43</ENT>
            <ENT>43</ENT>
            <ENT>69.00</ENT>
            <ENT>103.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">9.17</ENT>
            <ENT>9.37</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>44</ENT>
            <ENT>44</ENT>
            <ENT>70.60</ENT>
            <ENT>105.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">9.38</ENT>
            <ENT>9.59</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>45</ENT>
            <ENT>45</ENT>
            <ENT>72.20</ENT>
            <ENT>108.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">9.60</ENT>
            <ENT>9.80</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>46</ENT>
            <ENT>46</ENT>
            <ENT>73.80</ENT>
            <ENT>110.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">9.81</ENT>
            <ENT>10.01</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>47</ENT>
            <ENT>47</ENT>
            <ENT>75.40</ENT>
            <ENT>113.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">10.02</ENT>
            <ENT>10.23</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>48</ENT>
            <ENT>48</ENT>
            <ENT>77.00</ENT>
            <ENT>115.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">10.24</ENT>
            <ENT>10.44</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>49</ENT>
            <ENT>49</ENT>
            <ENT>78.60</ENT>
            <ENT>117.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">10.45</ENT>
            <ENT>10.65</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>50</ENT>
            <ENT>50</ENT>
            <ENT>80.20</ENT>
            <ENT>120.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">10.66</ENT>
            <ENT>10.87</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>51</ENT>
            <ENT>51</ENT>
            <ENT>81.80</ENT>
            <ENT>122.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">10.88</ENT>
            <ENT>11.08</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>52</ENT>
            <ENT>52</ENT>
            <ENT>83.40</ENT>
            <ENT>125.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11.09</ENT>
            <ENT>11.29</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>53</ENT>
            <ENT>53</ENT>
            <ENT>85.00</ENT>
            <ENT>127.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11.30</ENT>
            <ENT>11.51</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>54</ENT>
            <ENT>54</ENT>
            <ENT>86.60</ENT>
            <ENT>129.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11.52</ENT>
            <ENT>11.72</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>55</ENT>
            <ENT>55</ENT>
            <ENT>88.20</ENT>
            <ENT>132.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11.73</ENT>
            <ENT>11.93</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>56</ENT>
            <ENT>56</ENT>
            <ENT>89.80</ENT>
            <ENT>134.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11.94</ENT>
            <ENT>12.15</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>57</ENT>
            <ENT>57</ENT>
            <ENT>91.40</ENT>
            <ENT>137.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12.16</ENT>
            <ENT>12.36</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>58</ENT>
            <ENT>58</ENT>
            <ENT>93.00</ENT>
            <ENT>139.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12.37</ENT>
            <ENT>12.57</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>59</ENT>
            <ENT>59</ENT>
            <ENT>94.60</ENT>
            <ENT>141.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12.58</ENT>
            <ENT>12.78</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>60</ENT>
            <ENT>60</ENT>
            <ENT>96.20</ENT>
            <ENT>144.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12.79</ENT>
            <ENT>13.00</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>61</ENT>
            <ENT>61</ENT>
            <ENT>97.80</ENT>
            <ENT>146.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13.01</ENT>
            <ENT>13.21</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>62</ENT>
            <ENT>62</ENT>
            <ENT>99.40</ENT>
            <ENT>149.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13.22</ENT>
            <ENT>13.42</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>63</ENT>
            <ENT>63</ENT>
            <ENT>101.00</ENT>
            <ENT>151.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13.43</ENT>
            <ENT>13.64</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>64</ENT>
            <ENT>64</ENT>
            <ENT>102.60</ENT>
            <ENT>153.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13.65</ENT>
            <ENT>13.85</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>65</ENT>
            <ENT>65</ENT>
            <ENT>104.20</ENT>
            <ENT>156.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13.86</ENT>
            <ENT>14.06</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>66</ENT>
            <ENT>66</ENT>
            <ENT>105.80</ENT>
            <ENT>158.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14.07</ENT>
            <ENT>14.28</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>67</ENT>
            <ENT>67</ENT>
            <ENT>107.40</ENT>
            <ENT>161.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14.29</ENT>
            <ENT>14.49</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>68</ENT>
            <ENT>68</ENT>
            <ENT>109.00</ENT>
            <ENT>163.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14.50</ENT>
            <ENT>14.70</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>69</ENT>
            <ENT>69</ENT>
            <ENT>110.60</ENT>
            <ENT>165.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14.71</ENT>
            <ENT>14.92</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>70</ENT>
            <ENT>70</ENT>
            <ENT>112.20</ENT>
            <ENT>168.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14.93</ENT>
            <ENT>15.13</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>71</ENT>
            <ENT>71</ENT>
            <ENT>113.80</ENT>
            <ENT>170.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15.14</ENT>
            <ENT>15.34</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>72</ENT>
            <ENT>72</ENT>
            <ENT>115.40</ENT>
            <ENT>173.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15.35</ENT>
            <ENT>15.56</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>73</ENT>
            <ENT>73</ENT>
            <ENT>117.00</ENT>
            <ENT>175.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15.57</ENT>
            <ENT>15.77</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>74</ENT>
            <ENT>74</ENT>
            <ENT>118.60</ENT>
            <ENT>177.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15.78</ENT>
            <ENT>15.98</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>75</ENT>
            <ENT>75</ENT>
            <ENT>120.20</ENT>
            <ENT>180.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15.99</ENT>
            <ENT>16.20</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>76</ENT>
            <ENT>76</ENT>
            <ENT>121.80</ENT>
            <ENT>182.70<PRTPAGE P="94"/>
            </ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="5,7,7,5,5,7,7" COLS="7" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">Table of Benefits in Effect in December</E> 1978</TTITLE>
          <TDESC>[In dollars]</TDESC>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Primary insurance benefit: If an individual's primary insurance benefit (as determined under § 404.241(e)) is—</CHED>
            <CHED H="2">At least—</CHED>
            <CHED H="2">But not more than—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount effective June 1977: Or his or her primary insurance amount is—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Average monthly wage: Or his or her average monthly wage (as determined under § 404.221) is—</CHED>
            <CHED H="2">At least—</CHED>
            <CHED H="2">But not more than—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">IV. Primary insurance amount effective June 1978: Then his or her primary insurance amount is—</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">V. Maximum family benefits: And the maximum amount of benefits payable on the basis of his or her wages and self-employment income is—</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT>16.20</ENT>
            <ENT>114.30</ENT>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>76</ENT>
            <ENT>121.80</ENT>
            <ENT>182.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16.21</ENT>
            <ENT>16.84</ENT>
            <ENT>116.10</ENT>
            <ENT>77</ENT>
            <ENT>78</ENT>
            <ENT>123.70</ENT>
            <ENT>185.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16.85</ENT>
            <ENT>17.60</ENT>
            <ENT>118.80</ENT>
            <ENT>79</ENT>
            <ENT>80</ENT>
            <ENT>126.60</ENT>
            <ENT>189.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17.61</ENT>
            <ENT>18.40</ENT>
            <ENT>121.00</ENT>
            <ENT>81</ENT>
            <ENT>81</ENT>
            <ENT>128.90</ENT>
            <ENT>193.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18.41</ENT>
            <ENT>19.24</ENT>
            <ENT>123.00</ENT>
            <ENT>82</ENT>
            <ENT>83</ENT>
            <ENT>131.20</ENT>
            <ENT>196.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19.25</ENT>
            <ENT>20.00</ENT>
            <ENT>125.80</ENT>
            <ENT>84</ENT>
            <ENT>85</ENT>
            <ENT>134.00</ENT>
            <ENT>201.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20.01</ENT>
            <ENT>20.64</ENT>
            <ENT>128.10</ENT>
            <ENT>86</ENT>
            <ENT>87</ENT>
            <ENT>136.50</ENT>
            <ENT>204.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20.65</ENT>
            <ENT>21.28</ENT>
            <ENT>130.10</ENT>
            <ENT>88</ENT>
            <ENT>89</ENT>
            <ENT>138.60</ENT>
            <ENT>207.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21.29</ENT>
            <ENT>21.88</ENT>
            <ENT>132.70</ENT>
            <ENT>90</ENT>
            <ENT>90</ENT>
            <ENT>141.40</ENT>
            <ENT>212.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21.89</ENT>
            <ENT>22.28</ENT>
            <ENT>135.00</ENT>
            <ENT>91</ENT>
            <ENT>92</ENT>
            <ENT>143.80</ENT>
            <ENT>215.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22.29</ENT>
            <ENT>22.68</ENT>
            <ENT>137.20</ENT>
            <ENT>93</ENT>
            <ENT>94</ENT>
            <ENT>146.20</ENT>
            <ENT>219.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22.59</ENT>
            <ENT>23.08</ENT>
            <ENT>139.40</ENT>
            <ENT>95</ENT>
            <ENT>96</ENT>
            <ENT>148.50</ENT>
            <ENT>222.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23.09</ENT>
            <ENT>23.44</ENT>
            <ENT>142.00</ENT>
            <ENT>97</ENT>
            <ENT>97</ENT>
            <ENT>151.30</ENT>
            <ENT>227.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23.45</ENT>
            <ENT>23.76</ENT>
            <ENT>144.30</ENT>
            <ENT>98</ENT>
            <ENT>99</ENT>
            <ENT>153.70</ENT>
            <ENT>230.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23.77</ENT>
            <ENT>24.20</ENT>
            <ENT>147.10</ENT>
            <ENT>100</ENT>
            <ENT>101</ENT>
            <ENT>156.70</ENT>
            <ENT>235.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24.21</ENT>
            <ENT>24.60</ENT>
            <ENT>149.20</ENT>
            <ENT>102</ENT>
            <ENT>102</ENT>
            <ENT>158.90</ENT>
            <ENT>238.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24.61</ENT>
            <ENT>25.00</ENT>
            <ENT>151.70</ENT>
            <ENT>103</ENT>
            <ENT>104</ENT>
            <ENT>161.60</ENT>
            <ENT>242.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25.01</ENT>
            <ENT>25.48</ENT>
            <ENT>154.50</ENT>
            <ENT>105</ENT>
            <ENT>106</ENT>
            <ENT>164.60</ENT>
            <ENT>246.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25.49</ENT>
            <ENT>25.92</ENT>
            <ENT>157.00</ENT>
            <ENT>107</ENT>
            <ENT>107</ENT>
            <ENT>167.30</ENT>
            <ENT>251.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25.93</ENT>
            <ENT>26.40</ENT>
            <ENT>159.40</ENT>
            <ENT>108</ENT>
            <ENT>109</ENT>
            <ENT>169.80</ENT>
            <ENT>254.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26.41</ENT>
            <ENT>26.94</ENT>
            <ENT>161.90</ENT>
            <ENT>110</ENT>
            <ENT>113</ENT>
            <ENT>172.50</ENT>
            <ENT>258.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26.95</ENT>
            <ENT>27.46</ENT>
            <ENT>164.20</ENT>
            <ENT>114</ENT>
            <ENT>118</ENT>
            <ENT>174.90</ENT>
            <ENT>262.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27.47</ENT>
            <ENT>28.00</ENT>
            <ENT>166.70</ENT>
            <ENT>119</ENT>
            <ENT>122</ENT>
            <ENT>177.60</ENT>
            <ENT>266.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28.01</ENT>
            <ENT>28.68</ENT>
            <ENT>169.30</ENT>
            <ENT>123</ENT>
            <ENT>127</ENT>
            <ENT>180.40</ENT>
            <ENT>270.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28.69</ENT>
            <ENT>29.25</ENT>
            <ENT>171.80</ENT>
            <ENT>128</ENT>
            <ENT>132</ENT>
            <ENT>183.00</ENT>
            <ENT>274.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29.26</ENT>
            <ENT>29.68</ENT>
            <ENT>174.10</ENT>
            <ENT>133</ENT>
            <ENT>136</ENT>
            <ENT>185.50</ENT>
            <ENT>278.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29.69</ENT>
            <ENT>30.36</ENT>
            <ENT>176.50</ENT>
            <ENT>137</ENT>
            <ENT>141</ENT>
            <ENT>188.00</ENT>
            <ENT>282.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30.37</ENT>
            <ENT>30.92</ENT>
            <ENT>179.10</ENT>
            <ENT>142</ENT>
            <ENT>146</ENT>
            <ENT>190.80</ENT>
            <ENT>286.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30.93</ENT>
            <ENT>31.36</ENT>
            <ENT>181.70</ENT>
            <ENT>147</ENT>
            <ENT>150</ENT>
            <ENT>193.60</ENT>
            <ENT>290.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">31.37</ENT>
            <ENT>32.00</ENT>
            <ENT>183.90</ENT>
            <ENT>151</ENT>
            <ENT>155</ENT>
            <ENT>195.90</ENT>
            <ENT>293.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">32.01</ENT>
            <ENT>32.60</ENT>
            <ENT>186.50</ENT>
            <ENT>156</ENT>
            <ENT>160</ENT>
            <ENT>198.70</ENT>
            <ENT>298.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">32.61</ENT>
            <ENT>33.20</ENT>
            <ENT>189.00</ENT>
            <ENT>161</ENT>
            <ENT>164</ENT>
            <ENT>201.30</ENT>
            <ENT>302.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">33.21</ENT>
            <ENT>33.88</ENT>
            <ENT>191.40</ENT>
            <ENT>165</ENT>
            <ENT>169</ENT>
            <ENT>203.90</ENT>
            <ENT>305.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">33.89</ENT>
            <ENT>34.50</ENT>
            <ENT>194.00</ENT>
            <ENT>170</ENT>
            <ENT>174</ENT>
            <ENT>206.70</ENT>
            <ENT>310.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">34.51</ENT>
            <ENT>35.00</ENT>
            <ENT>196.30</ENT>
            <ENT>175</ENT>
            <ENT>178</ENT>
            <ENT>209.10</ENT>
            <ENT>313.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">35.01</ENT>
            <ENT>35.80</ENT>
            <ENT>198.90</ENT>
            <ENT>179</ENT>
            <ENT>183</ENT>
            <ENT>211.90</ENT>
            <ENT>318.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">35.81</ENT>
            <ENT>36.40</ENT>
            <ENT>201.30</ENT>
            <ENT>184</ENT>
            <ENT>188</ENT>
            <ENT>214.40</ENT>
            <ENT>321.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">36.41</ENT>
            <ENT>37.08</ENT>
            <ENT>203.90</ENT>
            <ENT>189</ENT>
            <ENT>193</ENT>
            <ENT>217.20</ENT>
            <ENT>326.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">37.09</ENT>
            <ENT>37.60</ENT>
            <ENT>206.40</ENT>
            <ENT>194</ENT>
            <ENT>197</ENT>
            <ENT>219.90</ENT>
            <ENT>329.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">37.61</ENT>
            <ENT>38.20</ENT>
            <ENT>208.80</ENT>
            <ENT>198</ENT>
            <ENT>202</ENT>
            <ENT>222.40</ENT>
            <ENT>333.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">38.21</ENT>
            <ENT>39.12</ENT>
            <ENT>211.50</ENT>
            <ENT>203</ENT>
            <ENT>207</ENT>
            <ENT>225.30</ENT>
            <ENT>338.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">39.13</ENT>
            <ENT>39.68</ENT>
            <ENT>214.00</ENT>
            <ENT>208</ENT>
            <ENT>211</ENT>
            <ENT>228.00</ENT>
            <ENT>342.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">39.69</ENT>
            <ENT>40.33</ENT>
            <ENT>216.00</ENT>
            <ENT>212</ENT>
            <ENT>216</ENT>
            <ENT>230.10</ENT>
            <ENT>345.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">40.34</ENT>
            <ENT>41.12</ENT>
            <ENT>218.70</ENT>
            <ENT>217</ENT>
            <ENT>221</ENT>
            <ENT>233.00</ENT>
            <ENT>349.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">41.13</ENT>
            <ENT>41.76</ENT>
            <ENT>221.20</ENT>
            <ENT>222</ENT>
            <ENT>225</ENT>
            <ENT>235.60</ENT>
            <ENT>353.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">41.77</ENT>
            <ENT>42.44</ENT>
            <ENT>223.90</ENT>
            <ENT>226</ENT>
            <ENT>230</ENT>
            <ENT>238.50</ENT>
            <ENT>357.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">42.45</ENT>
            <ENT>43.20</ENT>
            <ENT>226.30</ENT>
            <ENT>231</ENT>
            <ENT>235</ENT>
            <ENT>241.10</ENT>
            <ENT>361.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">43.21</ENT>
            <ENT>43.76</ENT>
            <ENT>229.10</ENT>
            <ENT>236</ENT>
            <ENT>239</ENT>
            <ENT>244.00</ENT>
            <ENT>366.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">43.77</ENT>
            <ENT>44.44</ENT>
            <ENT>231.20</ENT>
            <ENT>240</ENT>
            <ENT>244</ENT>
            <ENT>246.30</ENT>
            <ENT>371.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">44.45</ENT>
            <ENT>44.88</ENT>
            <ENT>233.50</ENT>
            <ENT>245</ENT>
            <ENT>249</ENT>
            <ENT>248.70</ENT>
            <ENT>378.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">44.89</ENT>
            <ENT>45.60</ENT>
            <ENT>236.40</ENT>
            <ENT>250</ENT>
            <ENT>253</ENT>
            <ENT>251.80</ENT>
            <ENT>384.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>238.70</ENT>
            <ENT>254</ENT>
            <ENT>258</ENT>
            <ENT>254.30</ENT>
            <ENT>392.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>240.80</ENT>
            <ENT>259</ENT>
            <ENT>263</ENT>
            <ENT>256.50</ENT>
            <ENT>400.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>243.70</ENT>
            <ENT>264</ENT>
            <ENT>267</ENT>
            <ENT>259.60</ENT>
            <ENT>206.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>246.10</ENT>
            <ENT>268</ENT>
            <ENT>272</ENT>
            <ENT>262.10</ENT>
            <ENT>413.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>248.70</ENT>
            <ENT>273</ENT>
            <ENT>277</ENT>
            <ENT>264.90</ENT>
            <ENT>421.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>251.00</ENT>
            <ENT>278</ENT>
            <ENT>281</ENT>
            <ENT>267.40</ENT>
            <ENT>427.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>253.50</ENT>
            <ENT>282</ENT>
            <ENT>286</ENT>
            <ENT>270.00</ENT>
            <ENT>434.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>256.20</ENT>
            <ENT>287</ENT>
            <ENT>291</ENT>
            <ENT>272.90</ENT>
            <ENT>442.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>258.30</ENT>
            <ENT>292</ENT>
            <ENT>295</ENT>
            <ENT>275.10</ENT>
            <ENT>448.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>261.10</ENT>
            <ENT>296</ENT>
            <ENT>300</ENT>
            <ENT>278.10</ENT>
            <ENT>456.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>263.50</ENT>
            <ENT>301</ENT>
            <ENT>305</ENT>
            <ENT>280.70</ENT>
            <ENT>463.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>265.80</ENT>
            <ENT>306</ENT>
            <ENT>309</ENT>
            <ENT>283.10</ENT>
            <ENT>469.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <PRTPAGE P="95"/>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>268.50</ENT>
            <ENT>310</ENT>
            <ENT>314</ENT>
            <ENT>286.00</ENT>
            <ENT>477.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>270.70</ENT>
            <ENT>315</ENT>
            <ENT>319</ENT>
            <ENT>288.30</ENT>
            <ENT>485.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>273.20</ENT>
            <ENT>320</ENT>
            <ENT>323</ENT>
            <ENT>291.00</ENT>
            <ENT>491.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>275.80</ENT>
            <ENT>324</ENT>
            <ENT>328</ENT>
            <ENT>293.80</ENT>
            <ENT>498.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>278.10</ENT>
            <ENT>329</ENT>
            <ENT>333</ENT>
            <ENT>296.20</ENT>
            <ENT>506.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>281.00</ENT>
            <ENT>334</ENT>
            <ENT>337</ENT>
            <ENT>299.30</ENT>
            <ENT>512.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>283.00</ENT>
            <ENT>338</ENT>
            <ENT>342</ENT>
            <ENT>301.40</ENT>
            <ENT>519.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>285.60</ENT>
            <ENT>343</ENT>
            <ENT>347</ENT>
            <ENT>304.20</ENT>
            <ENT>527.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>288.30</ENT>
            <ENT>348</ENT>
            <ENT>351</ENT>
            <ENT>307.10</ENT>
            <ENT>533.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>290.50</ENT>
            <ENT>352</ENT>
            <ENT>356</ENT>
            <ENT>309.40</ENT>
            <ENT>541.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>293.30</ENT>
            <ENT>357</ENT>
            <ENT>361</ENT>
            <ENT>312.40</ENT>
            <ENT>548.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>295.60</ENT>
            <ENT>362</ENT>
            <ENT>365</ENT>
            <ENT>314.90</ENT>
            <ENT>554.90</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>297.90</ENT>
            <ENT>366</ENT>
            <ENT>370</ENT>
            <ENT>317.30</ENT>
            <ENT>562.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>300.60</ENT>
            <ENT>371</ENT>
            <ENT>375</ENT>
            <ENT>320.20</ENT>
            <ENT>569.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>303.10</ENT>
            <ENT>376</ENT>
            <ENT>379</ENT>
            <ENT>322.90</ENT>
            <ENT>576.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>305.70</ENT>
            <ENT>380</ENT>
            <ENT>384</ENT>
            <ENT>325.60</ENT>
            <ENT>583.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>307.90</ENT>
            <ENT>385</ENT>
            <ENT>389</ENT>
            <ENT>328.00</ENT>
            <ENT>591.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>310.30</ENT>
            <ENT>390</ENT>
            <ENT>393</ENT>
            <ENT>330.50</ENT>
            <ENT>597.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>313.00</ENT>
            <ENT>394</ENT>
            <ENT>398</ENT>
            <ENT>333.40</ENT>
            <ENT>605.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>315.40</ENT>
            <ENT>399</ENT>
            <ENT>403</ENT>
            <ENT>336.00</ENT>
            <ENT>612.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>318.20</ENT>
            <ENT>404</ENT>
            <ENT>407</ENT>
            <ENT>338.90</ENT>
            <ENT>618.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>320.20</ENT>
            <ENT>408</ENT>
            <ENT>412</ENT>
            <ENT>341.10</ENT>
            <ENT>626.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>322.50</ENT>
            <ENT>413</ENT>
            <ENT>417</ENT>
            <ENT>343.50</ENT>
            <ENT>633.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>324.80</ENT>
            <ENT>418</ENT>
            <ENT>421</ENT>
            <ENT>346.00</ENT>
            <ENT>639.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>327.40</ENT>
            <ENT>422</ENT>
            <ENT>426</ENT>
            <ENT>348.70</ENT>
            <ENT>647.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>329.60</ENT>
            <ENT>427</ENT>
            <ENT>431</ENT>
            <ENT>351.10</ENT>
            <ENT>655.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>331.60</ENT>
            <ENT>432</ENT>
            <ENT>436</ENT>
            <ENT>353.20</ENT>
            <ENT>662.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>334.40</ENT>
            <ENT>437</ENT>
            <ENT>440</ENT>
            <ENT>356.20</ENT>
            <ENT>665.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>336.50</ENT>
            <ENT>441</ENT>
            <ENT>445</ENT>
            <ENT>358.40</ENT>
            <ENT>669.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>338.70</ENT>
            <ENT>446</ENT>
            <ENT>450</ENT>
            <ENT>360.80</ENT>
            <ENT>673.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>341.30</ENT>
            <ENT>451</ENT>
            <ENT>454</ENT>
            <ENT>363.50</ENT>
            <ENT>676.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>343.50</ENT>
            <ENT>455</ENT>
            <ENT>459</ENT>
            <ENT>365.90</ENT>
            <ENT>680.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>345.80</ENT>
            <ENT>460</ENT>
            <ENT>464</ENT>
            <ENT>368.30</ENT>
            <ENT>683.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>347.90</ENT>
            <ENT>465</ENT>
            <ENT>468</ENT>
            <ENT>370.60</ENT>
            <ENT>687.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>350.70</ENT>
            <ENT>469</ENT>
            <ENT>473</ENT>
            <ENT>373.50</ENT>
            <ENT>690.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>352.60</ENT>
            <ENT>474</ENT>
            <ENT>478</ENT>
            <ENT>375.60</ENT>
            <ENT>694.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>354.90</ENT>
            <ENT>479</ENT>
            <ENT>482</ENT>
            <ENT>378.00</ENT>
            <ENT>697.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>357.40</ENT>
            <ENT>483</ENT>
            <ENT>487</ENT>
            <ENT>380.70</ENT>
            <ENT>701.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>359.70</ENT>
            <ENT>488</ENT>
            <ENT>492</ENT>
            <ENT>383.10</ENT>
            <ENT>705.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>361.90</ENT>
            <ENT>493</ENT>
            <ENT>496</ENT>
            <ENT>385.50</ENT>
            <ENT>708.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>364.50</ENT>
            <ENT>497</ENT>
            <ENT>501</ENT>
            <ENT>388.20</ENT>
            <ENT>712.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>366.60</ENT>
            <ENT>502</ENT>
            <ENT>506</ENT>
            <ENT>390.50</ENT>
            <ENT>715.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>368.90</ENT>
            <ENT>507</ENT>
            <ENT>510</ENT>
            <ENT>392.90</ENT>
            <ENT>719.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>371.10</ENT>
            <ENT>511</ENT>
            <ENT>515</ENT>
            <ENT>395.30</ENT>
            <ENT>722.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>373.70</ENT>
            <ENT>516</ENT>
            <ENT>520</ENT>
            <ENT>398.00</ENT>
            <ENT>726.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>375.80</ENT>
            <ENT>521</ENT>
            <ENT>524</ENT>
            <ENT>400.30</ENT>
            <ENT>729.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>378.10</ENT>
            <ENT>525</ENT>
            <ENT>529</ENT>
            <ENT>402.70</ENT>
            <ENT>733.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>380.80</ENT>
            <ENT>530</ENT>
            <ENT>534</ENT>
            <ENT>405.60</ENT>
            <ENT>737.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>382.80</ENT>
            <ENT>535</ENT>
            <ENT>538</ENT>
            <ENT>407.70</ENT>
            <ENT>740.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>385.10</ENT>
            <ENT>539</ENT>
            <ENT>543</ENT>
            <ENT>410.20</ENT>
            <ENT>744.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>387.60</ENT>
            <ENT>544</ENT>
            <ENT>548</ENT>
            <ENT>412.80</ENT>
            <ENT>747.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>389.90</ENT>
            <ENT>549</ENT>
            <ENT>553</ENT>
            <ENT>415.30</ENT>
            <ENT>751.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>392.10</ENT>
            <ENT>554</ENT>
            <ENT>556</ENT>
            <ENT>417.60</ENT>
            <ENT>753.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>393.90</ENT>
            <ENT>557</ENT>
            <ENT>560</ENT>
            <ENT>419.60</ENT>
            <ENT>756.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>396.10</ENT>
            <ENT>561</ENT>
            <ENT>563</ENT>
            <ENT>421.90</ENT>
            <ENT>759.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>398.20</ENT>
            <ENT>564</ENT>
            <ENT>567</ENT>
            <ENT>424.10</ENT>
            <ENT>762.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>400.40</ENT>
            <ENT>568</ENT>
            <ENT>570</ENT>
            <ENT>426.50</ENT>
            <ENT>764.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>402.30</ENT>
            <ENT>571</ENT>
            <ENT>574</ENT>
            <ENT>428.50</ENT>
            <ENT>767.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>404.40</ENT>
            <ENT>575</ENT>
            <ENT>577</ENT>
            <ENT>430.70</ENT>
            <ENT>769.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>406.20</ENT>
            <ENT>578</ENT>
            <ENT>581</ENT>
            <ENT>432.70</ENT>
            <ENT>772.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>408.40</ENT>
            <ENT>582</ENT>
            <ENT>584</ENT>
            <ENT>435.00</ENT>
            <ENT>775.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>410.20</ENT>
            <ENT>585</ENT>
            <ENT>588</ENT>
            <ENT>436.90</ENT>
            <ENT>778.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>412.60</ENT>
            <ENT>589</ENT>
            <ENT>591</ENT>
            <ENT>439.50</ENT>
            <ENT>780.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <PRTPAGE P="96"/>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>414.60</ENT>
            <ENT>592</ENT>
            <ENT>595</ENT>
            <ENT>441.60</ENT>
            <ENT>783.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>416.70</ENT>
            <ENT>596</ENT>
            <ENT>598</ENT>
            <ENT>443.80</ENT>
            <ENT>785.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>418.70</ENT>
            <ENT>599</ENT>
            <ENT>602</ENT>
            <ENT>446.00</ENT>
            <ENT>788.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>420.70</ENT>
            <ENT>603</ENT>
            <ENT>605</ENT>
            <ENT>448.10</ENT>
            <ENT>791.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>422.80</ENT>
            <ENT>606</ENT>
            <ENT>609</ENT>
            <ENT>450.30</ENT>
            <ENT>794.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>424.90</ENT>
            <ENT>610</ENT>
            <ENT>612</ENT>
            <ENT>452.60</ENT>
            <ENT>796.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>426.90</ENT>
            <ENT>613</ENT>
            <ENT>616</ENT>
            <ENT>454.70</ENT>
            <ENT>799.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>428.90</ENT>
            <ENT>617</ENT>
            <ENT>620</ENT>
            <ENT>456.80</ENT>
            <ENT>802.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>431.00</ENT>
            <ENT>621</ENT>
            <ENT>623</ENT>
            <ENT>459.10</ENT>
            <ENT>804.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>433.00</ENT>
            <ENT>624</ENT>
            <ENT>627</ENT>
            <ENT>461.20</ENT>
            <ENT>807.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>435.10</ENT>
            <ENT>628</ENT>
            <ENT>630</ENT>
            <ENT>463.40</ENT>
            <ENT>810.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>437.10</ENT>
            <ENT>631</ENT>
            <ENT>634</ENT>
            <ENT>465.60</ENT>
            <ENT>814.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>439.20</ENT>
            <ENT>635</ENT>
            <ENT>637</ENT>
            <ENT>467.80</ENT>
            <ENT>818.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>441.40</ENT>
            <ENT>638</ENT>
            <ENT>641</ENT>
            <ENT>470.10</ENT>
            <ENT>822.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>443.20</ENT>
            <ENT>642</ENT>
            <ENT>644</ENT>
            <ENT>472.10</ENT>
            <ENT>826.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>445.40</ENT>
            <ENT>645</ENT>
            <ENT>648</ENT>
            <ENT>474.40</ENT>
            <ENT>830.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>447.40</ENT>
            <ENT>649</ENT>
            <ENT>652</ENT>
            <ENT>476.50</ENT>
            <ENT>833.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>448.60</ENT>
            <ENT>653</ENT>
            <ENT>656</ENT>
            <ENT>477.80</ENT>
            <ENT>836.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>449.90</ENT>
            <ENT>657</ENT>
            <ENT>660</ENT>
            <ENT>479.20</ENT>
            <ENT>838.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>451.50</ENT>
            <ENT>661</ENT>
            <ENT>665</ENT>
            <ENT>480.90</ENT>
            <ENT>841.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>453.10</ENT>
            <ENT>666</ENT>
            <ENT>670</ENT>
            <ENT>482.60</ENT>
            <ENT>844.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>454.80</ENT>
            <ENT>671</ENT>
            <ENT>675</ENT>
            <ENT>484.40</ENT>
            <ENT>847.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>456.40</ENT>
            <ENT>676</ENT>
            <ENT>680</ENT>
            <ENT>486.10</ENT>
            <ENT>850.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>458.00</ENT>
            <ENT>681</ENT>
            <ENT>685</ENT>
            <ENT>487.80</ENT>
            <ENT>853.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>459.80</ENT>
            <ENT>686</ENT>
            <ENT>690</ENT>
            <ENT>489.70</ENT>
            <ENT>856.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>461.20</ENT>
            <ENT>691</ENT>
            <ENT>695</ENT>
            <ENT>491.20</ENT>
            <ENT>859.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>462.80</ENT>
            <ENT>696</ENT>
            <ENT>700</ENT>
            <ENT>492.90</ENT>
            <ENT>862.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>464.50</ENT>
            <ENT>701</ENT>
            <ENT>705</ENT>
            <ENT>494.70</ENT>
            <ENT>865.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>466.10</ENT>
            <ENT>706</ENT>
            <ENT>710</ENT>
            <ENT>496.40</ENT>
            <ENT>868.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>467.70</ENT>
            <ENT>711</ENT>
            <ENT>715</ENT>
            <ENT>498.20</ENT>
            <ENT>871.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>469.40</ENT>
            <ENT>716</ENT>
            <ENT>720</ENT>
            <ENT>500.00</ENT>
            <ENT>874.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>471.00</ENT>
            <ENT>721</ENT>
            <ENT>725</ENT>
            <ENT>501.70</ENT>
            <ENT>877.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>472.60</ENT>
            <ENT>726</ENT>
            <ENT>730</ENT>
            <ENT>503.40</ENT>
            <ENT>880.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>474.20</ENT>
            <ENT>731</ENT>
            <ENT>735</ENT>
            <ENT>505.10</ENT>
            <ENT>883.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>475.90</ENT>
            <ENT>736</ENT>
            <ENT>740</ENT>
            <ENT>506.90</ENT>
            <ENT>886.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>477.40</ENT>
            <ENT>741</ENT>
            <ENT>745</ENT>
            <ENT>508.50</ENT>
            <ENT>889.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>478.90</ENT>
            <ENT>746</ENT>
            <ENT>750</ENT>
            <ENT>510.10</ENT>
            <ENT>892.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>480.40</ENT>
            <ENT>751</ENT>
            <ENT>755</ENT>
            <ENT>511.70</ENT>
            <ENT>896.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>481.80</ENT>
            <ENT>756</ENT>
            <ENT>760</ENT>
            <ENT>513.20</ENT>
            <ENT>897.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>483.20</ENT>
            <ENT>761</ENT>
            <ENT>765</ENT>
            <ENT>514.70</ENT>
            <ENT>900.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>484.50</ENT>
            <ENT>766</ENT>
            <ENT>770</ENT>
            <ENT>516.00</ENT>
            <ENT>903.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>485.80</ENT>
            <ENT>771</ENT>
            <ENT>775</ENT>
            <ENT>517.40</ENT>
            <ENT>905.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>487.20</ENT>
            <ENT>776</ENT>
            <ENT>780</ENT>
            <ENT>518.90</ENT>
            <ENT>907.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>488.60</ENT>
            <ENT>781</ENT>
            <ENT>785</ENT>
            <ENT>520.40</ENT>
            <ENT>910.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>489.80</ENT>
            <ENT>786</ENT>
            <ENT>790</ENT>
            <ENT>521.70</ENT>
            <ENT>912.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>491.10</ENT>
            <ENT>791</ENT>
            <ENT>795</ENT>
            <ENT>523.10</ENT>
            <ENT>915.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>492.50</ENT>
            <ENT>796</ENT>
            <ENT>800</ENT>
            <ENT>524.60</ENT>
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            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>801</ENT>
            <ENT>805</ENT>
            <ENT>526.20</ENT>
            <ENT>920.50</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>806</ENT>
            <ENT>810</ENT>
            <ENT>527.50</ENT>
            <ENT>923.00</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>496.70</ENT>
            <ENT>811</ENT>
            <ENT>815</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>816</ENT>
            <ENT>820</ENT>
            <ENT>530.40</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>821</ENT>
            <ENT>825</ENT>
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            <ENT>930.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>500.70</ENT>
            <ENT>826</ENT>
            <ENT>830</ENT>
            <ENT>533.30</ENT>
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            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>502.00</ENT>
            <ENT>831</ENT>
            <ENT>835</ENT>
            <ENT>534.70</ENT>
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            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>836</ENT>
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            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>841</ENT>
            <ENT>845</ENT>
            <ENT>537.60</ENT>
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            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>846</ENT>
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            <ENT>538.90</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>871</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>876</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
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            <ENT>550.40</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>895</ENT>
            <ENT>551.90</ENT>
            <ENT>966.00</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>900</ENT>
            <ENT>553.40</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>521.00</ENT>
            <ENT>901</ENT>
            <ENT>905</ENT>
            <ENT>554.90</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>556.30</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>523.70</ENT>
            <ENT>911</ENT>
            <ENT>915</ENT>
            <ENT>557.80</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>525.10</ENT>
            <ENT>916</ENT>
            <ENT>920</ENT>
            <ENT>559.30</ENT>
            <ENT>978.30</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>526.30</ENT>
            <ENT>921</ENT>
            <ENT>925</ENT>
            <ENT>560.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>926</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>931</ENT>
            <ENT>935</ENT>
            <ENT>563.40</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>530.40</ENT>
            <ENT>936</ENT>
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            <ENT>564.90</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>531.70</ENT>
            <ENT>941</ENT>
            <ENT>945</ENT>
            <ENT>566.30</ENT>
            <ENT>991.00</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>533.00</ENT>
            <ENT>946</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>951</ENT>
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            <ENT>569.30</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>956</ENT>
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            <ENT>570.80</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>961</ENT>
            <ENT>965</ENT>
            <ENT>572.30</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>966</ENT>
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            <ENT>573.40</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>971</ENT>
            <ENT>975</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>980</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>981</ENT>
            <ENT>985</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>986</ENT>
            <ENT>990</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,013.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>545.20</ENT>
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            <ENT>995</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,016.20</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,018.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,001</ENT>
            <ENT>1,005</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,020.70</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>548.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,006</ENT>
            <ENT>1,010</ENT>
            <ENT>584.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,011</ENT>
            <ENT>1,015</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,016</ENT>
            <ENT>1,020</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,025</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,026</ENT>
            <ENT>1,030</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,031</ENT>
            <ENT>1,035</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
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            <ENT>1,036</ENT>
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            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,041</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,046</ENT>
            <ENT>1,050</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,051</ENT>
            <ENT>1,055</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,043.40</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,056</ENT>
            <ENT>1,060</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,045.90</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,061</ENT>
            <ENT>1,065</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,048.00</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
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            <ENT>1,071</ENT>
            <ENT>1,075</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,076</ENT>
            <ENT>1,080</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,081</ENT>
            <ENT>1,085</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
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            <ENT>1,086</ENT>
            <ENT>1,090</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,059.40</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,091</ENT>
            <ENT>1,095</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,096</ENT>
            <ENT>1,100</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>572.00</ENT>
            <ENT>1,101</ENT>
            <ENT>1,105</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,106</ENT>
            <ENT>1,110</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,111</ENT>
            <ENT>1,115</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,116</ENT>
            <ENT>1,120</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,073.10</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,121</ENT>
            <ENT>1,125</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,075.30</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,130</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,131</ENT>
            <ENT>1,135</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,136</ENT>
            <ENT>1,140</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,141</ENT>
            <ENT>1,145</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,150</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,151</ENT>
            <ENT>1,555</ENT>
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            <ENT I="01"/>
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            <ENT>1,160</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,161</ENT>
            <ENT>1,165</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,170</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
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            <ENT>1,171</ENT>
            <ENT>1,175</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,098.00</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
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            <ENT>1,176</ENT>
            <ENT>1,180</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,100.20</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,181</ENT>
            <ENT>1,185</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,102.20</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,186</ENT>
            <ENT>1,190</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,104.30</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,191</ENT>
            <ENT>1,195</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,106.50</ENT>
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          <ROW>
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            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,196</ENT>
            <ENT>1,200</ENT>
            <ENT>633.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1,108.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,201</ENT>
            <ENT>1,205</ENT>
            <ENT>634.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,110.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,206</ENT>
            <ENT>1,210</ENT>
            <ENT>636.00</ENT>
            <ENT>1,112.90</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,211</ENT>
            <ENT>1,215</ENT>
            <ENT>637.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,114.90</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,216</ENT>
            <ENT>1,220</ENT>
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            <ENT>1,117.00</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>600.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,221</ENT>
            <ENT>1,225</ENT>
            <ENT>639.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1,119.00</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>601.60</ENT>
            <ENT>1,226</ENT>
            <ENT>1,230</ENT>
            <ENT>640.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,121.20</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>602.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,231</ENT>
            <ENT>1,235</ENT>
            <ENT>641.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,123.30</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>603.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,236</ENT>
            <ENT>1,240</ENT>
            <ENT>643.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,125.40</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>605.00</ENT>
            <ENT>1,241</ENT>
            <ENT>1,245</ENT>
            <ENT>644.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,127.50</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>606.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,246</ENT>
            <ENT>1,250</ENT>
            <ENT>645.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1,129.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>607.20</ENT>
            <ENT>1,251</ENT>
            <ENT>1,255</ENT>
            <ENT>646.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,131.60</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
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            <ENT>1,256</ENT>
            <ENT>1,260</ENT>
            <ENT>647.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,133.80</ENT>
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          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>609.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1,261</ENT>
            <ENT>1,265</ENT>
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          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>610.60</ENT>
            <ENT>1,266</ENT>
            <ENT>1,270</ENT>
            <ENT>650.30</ENT>
            <ENT>1,138.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>611.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,271</ENT>
            <ENT>1,275</ENT>
            <ENT>651.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1,140.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>612.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,276</ENT>
            <ENT>1,280</ENT>
            <ENT>652.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,142.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>613.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,281</ENT>
            <ENT>1,285</ENT>
            <ENT>653.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,144.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>614.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,286</ENT>
            <ENT>1,290</ENT>
            <ENT>654.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,146.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>616.00</ENT>
            <ENT>1,291</ENT>
            <ENT>1,295</ENT>
            <ENT>656.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,148.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>617.00</ENT>
            <ENT>1,296</ENT>
            <ENT>1,300</ENT>
            <ENT>657.20</ENT>
            <ENT>1,150.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>618.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,301</ENT>
            <ENT>1,305</ENT>
            <ENT>658.30</ENT>
            <ENT>1,152.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>619.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,306</ENT>
            <ENT>1,310</ENT>
            <ENT>659.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,154.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>620.20</ENT>
            <ENT>1,311</ENT>
            <ENT>1,315</ENT>
            <ENT>660.60</ENT>
            <ENT>1,155.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>621.30</ENT>
            <ENT>1,316</ENT>
            <ENT>1,320</ENT>
            <ENT>661.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,157.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>622.30</ENT>
            <ENT>1,321</ENT>
            <ENT>1,325</ENT>
            <ENT>662.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,159.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>623.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,326</ENT>
            <ENT>1,330</ENT>
            <ENT>664.00</ENT>
            <ENT>1,161.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>624.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,331</ENT>
            <ENT>1,335</ENT>
            <ENT>665.00</ENT>
            <ENT>1,163.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>625.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1,336</ENT>
            <ENT>1,340</ENT>
            <ENT>666.20</ENT>
            <ENT>1,165.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>626.60</ENT>
            <ENT>1,341</ENT>
            <ENT>1,345</ENT>
            <ENT>667.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,167.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>627.60</ENT>
            <ENT>1,346</ENT>
            <ENT>1,350</ENT>
            <ENT>668.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,169.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>628.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,351</ENT>
            <ENT>1,355</ENT>
            <ENT>669.60</ENT>
            <ENT>1,171.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>629.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,356</ENT>
            <ENT>1,360</ENT>
            <ENT>670.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,173.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>630.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,361</ENT>
            <ENT>1,365</ENT>
            <ENT>671.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,175.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>631.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,366</ENT>
            <ENT>1,370</ENT>
            <ENT>672.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,177.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>632.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,371</ENT>
            <ENT>1,375</ENT>
            <ENT>674.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,179.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>633.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,376</ENT>
            <ENT>1,380</ENT>
            <ENT>675.20</ENT>
            <ENT>1,181.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>634.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,381</ENT>
            <ENT>1,385</ENT>
            <ENT>676.20</ENT>
            <ENT>1,183.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>635.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,386</ENT>
            <ENT>1,390</ENT>
            <ENT>677.30</ENT>
            <ENT>1,185.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>636.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,391</ENT>
            <ENT>1,395</ENT>
            <ENT>678.30</ENT>
            <ENT>1,187.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>637.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,396</ENT>
            <ENT>1,400</ENT>
            <ENT>679.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,189.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>638.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,401</ENT>
            <ENT>1,405</ENT>
            <ENT>680.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1,190.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>639.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,406</ENT>
            <ENT>1,410</ENT>
            <ENT>681.50</ENT>
            <ENT>1,192.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>640.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,411</ENT>
            <ENT>1,415</ENT>
            <ENT>682.60</ENT>
            <ENT>1,194.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>641.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,416</ENT>
            <ENT>1,420</ENT>
            <ENT>683.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,196.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>642.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,421</ENT>
            <ENT>1,425</ENT>
            <ENT>685.70</ENT>
            <ENT>1,198.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>643.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,426</ENT>
            <ENT>1,430</ENT>
            <ENT>684.80</ENT>
            <ENT>1,200.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>644.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,431</ENT>
            <ENT>1,435</ENT>
            <ENT>686.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,202.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>645.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,436</ENT>
            <ENT>1,440</ENT>
            <ENT>687.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,203.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>646.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,441</ENT>
            <ENT>1,445</ENT>
            <ENT>689.00</ENT>
            <ENT>1,205.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>647.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,446</ENT>
            <ENT>1,450</ENT>
            <ENT>690.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,207.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>648.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,451</ENT>
            <ENT>1,455</ENT>
            <ENT>691.10</ENT>
            <ENT>1,209.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>649.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,456</ENT>
            <ENT>1,460</ENT>
            <ENT>692.20</ENT>
            <ENT>1,211.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>650.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,461</ENT>
            <ENT>1,465</ENT>
            <ENT>693.30</ENT>
            <ENT>1,213.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>651.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,466</ENT>
            <ENT>1,470</ENT>
            <ENT>694.30</ENT>
            <ENT>1,215.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01"/>
            <ENT/>
            <ENT>652.90</ENT>
            <ENT>1,471</ENT>
            <ENT>1,475</ENT>
            <ENT>695.40</ENT>
            <ENT>1,216.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <CITA TYPE="W">[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982; 47 FR 35479, Aug. 16, 1982, as amended at 48 FR 46143, Oct. 11, 1983; 48 FR 50076, Oct. 31, 1983]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
      <APPENDIX>
        <PRTPAGE P="99"/>
        <EAR>Pt. 404, Subpt. C, App. IV</EAR>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Appendix IV of Subpart C of Part 404—Earnings Needed for a Year of Coverage After 1950</E>
        </HD>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,10,13" COLS="3" OPTS="L2,i1">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">Minimum Social Security Earnings to Qualify for a Year of Coverage After 1950 for Purposes of the—</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">Year</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">Special minimum primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">Benefit computations described in section 404.213(d) <SU>2</SU>
            </CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1951-1954</ENT>
            <ENT>$900</ENT>
            <ENT>$900</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1955-1958</ENT>
            <ENT>1,050</ENT>
            <ENT>1,050</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1959-1965</ENT>
            <ENT>1,200</ENT>
            <ENT>1,200</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1966-1967</ENT>
            <ENT>1,650</ENT>
            <ENT>1,650</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1968-1971</ENT>
            <ENT>1,950</ENT>
            <ENT>1,950</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1972</ENT>
            <ENT>2,250</ENT>
            <ENT>2,250</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1973</ENT>
            <ENT>2,700</ENT>
            <ENT>2,700</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1974</ENT>
            <ENT>3,300</ENT>
            <ENT>3,300</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1975</ENT>
            <ENT>3,525</ENT>
            <ENT>3,525</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1976</ENT>
            <ENT>3,825</ENT>
            <ENT>3,825</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1977</ENT>
            <ENT>4,125</ENT>
            <ENT>4,125</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1978</ENT>
            <ENT>4,425</ENT>
            <ENT>4,425</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1979</ENT>
            <ENT>4,725</ENT>
            <ENT>4,725</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1980</ENT>
            <ENT>5,100</ENT>
            <ENT>5,100</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1981</ENT>
            <ENT>5,550</ENT>
            <ENT>5,550</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1982</ENT>
            <ENT>6,075</ENT>
            <ENT>6,075</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1983</ENT>
            <ENT>6,675</ENT>
            <ENT>6,675</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1984</ENT>
            <ENT>7,050</ENT>
            <ENT>7,050</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1985</ENT>
            <ENT>7,425</ENT>
            <ENT>7,425</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1986</ENT>
            <ENT>7,875</ENT>
            <ENT>7,875</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1987</ENT>
            <ENT>8,175</ENT>
            <ENT>8,175</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1988</ENT>
            <ENT>8,400</ENT>
            <ENT>8,400</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1989</ENT>
            <ENT>8,925</ENT>
            <ENT>8,925</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1990</ENT>
            <ENT>9,525</ENT>
            <ENT>9,525</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1991</ENT>
            <ENT>5,940</ENT>
            <ENT>9,900</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1992</ENT>
            <ENT>6,210</ENT>
            <ENT>10,350</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <TNOTE>
            <SU>2</SU> Applies only to certain individuals with pensions from noncovered employment.</TNOTE>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <NOTE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Note:</HD>
          <P>For 1951-78, the amounts shown are 25 percent of the contribution and benefit base (the contribution and benefit base is the same as the annual wage limitation as shown in § 404.1047) in effect. For years after 1978, however, the amounts are 25 percent of what the contribution and benefit base would have been if the 1977 Social Security Amendments had not been enacted, except, for special minimum benefit purposes, the applicable percentage is 15 percent for years after 1990.</P>
        </NOTE>
        <CITA>[57 FR 44096, Sept. 24, 1992]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
      <APPENDIX>
        <EAR>Pt. 404, Subpt. C, App. V</EAR>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Appendix V of Subpart C of Part 404—Computing the Special Minimum Primary Insurance Amount and Related Maximum Family Benefits</E>
        </HD>
        <P>These tables are based on section 215(a)(1)(C)(i) of the Social Security Act, as amended. They include the percent cost-of-living increase shown in appendix VI for each effective date.</P>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,9,9" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">June 1979</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$12.70</ENT>
            <ENT>$19.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>25.30</ENT>
            <ENT>38.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>38.00</ENT>
            <ENT>57.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>50.60</ENT>
            <ENT>75.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>63.20</ENT>
            <ENT>94.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>75.90</ENT>
            <ENT>113.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>88.50</ENT>
            <ENT>132.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>101.20</ENT>
            <ENT>151.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>113.80</ENT>
            <ENT>170.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>126.40</ENT>
            <ENT>189.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>139.10</ENT>
            <ENT>208.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>151.70</ENT>
            <ENT>227.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>164.40</ENT>
            <ENT>246.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>177.00</ENT>
            <ENT>265.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>189.60</ENT>
            <ENT>284.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>202.30</ENT>
            <ENT>303.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>214.90</ENT>
            <ENT>322.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>227.50</ENT>
            <ENT>341.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>240.20</ENT>
            <ENT>360.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>252.80</ENT>
            <ENT>379.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s25,9,9" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">June 1980</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$14.60</ENT>
            <ENT>$21.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>29.00</ENT>
            <ENT>43.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>43.50</ENT>
            <ENT>65.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>57.90</ENT>
            <ENT>86.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>72.30</ENT>
            <ENT>108.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>86.80</ENT>
            <ENT>130.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>101.20</ENT>
            <ENT>151.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>115.70</ENT>
            <ENT>173.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>130.10</ENT>
            <ENT>195.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>144.50</ENT>
            <ENT>216.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>159.00</ENT>
            <ENT>238.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>173.40</ENT>
            <ENT>260.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>188.00</ENT>
            <ENT>282.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>202.40</ENT>
            <ENT>303.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>216.80</ENT>
            <ENT>325.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>231.30</ENT>
            <ENT>347.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>245.70</ENT>
            <ENT>368.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>260.10</ENT>
            <ENT>390.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>274.60</ENT>
            <ENT>411.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>289.00</ENT>
            <ENT>433.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s25,9,9" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">June 1981</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefits</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$16.30</ENT>
            <ENT>$24.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>32.30</ENT>
            <ENT>48.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>48.40</ENT>
            <ENT>72.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>64.40</ENT>
            <ENT>96.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>80.40</ENT>
            <ENT>120.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>96.60</ENT>
            <ENT>144.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>112.60</ENT>
            <ENT>168.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>128.70</ENT>
            <ENT>193.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>144.70</ENT>
            <ENT>217.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>160.70</ENT>
            <ENT>241.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>176.90</ENT>
            <ENT>265.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>192.90</ENT>
            <ENT>289.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>209.10</ENT>
            <ENT>313.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>225.10</ENT>
            <ENT>337.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>241.10</ENT>
            <ENT>361.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <PRTPAGE P="100"/>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>257.30</ENT>
            <ENT>386.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>273.30</ENT>
            <ENT>410.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>289.30</ENT>
            <ENT>434.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>305.40</ENT>
            <ENT>458.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>321.40</ENT>
            <ENT>482.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s25,9,9" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">June 1982</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$17.50</ENT>
            <ENT>$26.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>34.60</ENT>
            <ENT>52.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>51.90</ENT>
            <ENT>78.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>69.10</ENT>
            <ENT>103.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>86.30</ENT>
            <ENT>129.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>103.70</ENT>
            <ENT>155.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>120.90</ENT>
            <ENT>181.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>138.20</ENT>
            <ENT>207.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>155.40</ENT>
            <ENT>233.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>172.50</ENT>
            <ENT>258.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>189.90</ENT>
            <ENT>285.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>207.10</ENT>
            <ENT>310.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>224.50</ENT>
            <ENT>336.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>241.70</ENT>
            <ENT>362.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>258.90</ENT>
            <ENT>388.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>276.30</ENT>
            <ENT>414.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>293.50</ENT>
            <ENT>440.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>310.70</ENT>
            <ENT>466.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>327.90</ENT>
            <ENT>491.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>345.10</ENT>
            <ENT>517.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s25,9,9" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December 1983</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$18.10</ENT>
            <ENT>$27.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>35.80</ENT>
            <ENT>53.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>53.70</ENT>
            <ENT>80.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>71.50</ENT>
            <ENT>107.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>89.30</ENT>
            <ENT>134.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>107.30</ENT>
            <ENT>161.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>125.10</ENT>
            <ENT>187.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>143.00</ENT>
            <ENT>214.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>160.80</ENT>
            <ENT>241.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>178.50</ENT>
            <ENT>267.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>196.50</ENT>
            <ENT>294.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>214.30</ENT>
            <ENT>321.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>232.30</ENT>
            <ENT>348.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>250.10</ENT>
            <ENT>375.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>267.90</ENT>
            <ENT>401.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>285.90</ENT>
            <ENT>429.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>303.70</ENT>
            <ENT>455.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>321.50</ENT>
            <ENT>482.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>339.30</ENT>
            <ENT>509.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>357.10</ENT>
            <ENT>535.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s25,9,9" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December 1984</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$18.70</ENT>
            <ENT>$28.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>37.00</ENT>
            <ENT>55.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>55.50</ENT>
            <ENT>83.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>74.00</ENT>
            <ENT>111.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>92.40</ENT>
            <ENT>138.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>111.00</ENT>
            <ENT>166.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>129.40</ENT>
            <ENT>194.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>148.00</ENT>
            <ENT>222.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>166.40</ENT>
            <ENT>249.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>184.70</ENT>
            <ENT>277.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>203.30</ENT>
            <ENT>305.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>221.80</ENT>
            <ENT>332.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>240.40</ENT>
            <ENT>360.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>258.80</ENT>
            <ENT>388.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>277.20</ENT>
            <ENT>415.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>295.90</ENT>
            <ENT>444.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>314.30</ENT>
            <ENT>471.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>332.70</ENT>
            <ENT>499.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>351.10</ENT>
            <ENT>526.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>369.50</ENT>
            <ENT>554.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s25,9,9" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December 1985</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$19.20</ENT>
            <ENT>$28.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>38.10</ENT>
            <ENT>57.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>57.20</ENT>
            <ENT>86.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>76.20</ENT>
            <ENT>114.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>95.20</ENT>
            <ENT>142.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>114.40</ENT>
            <ENT>171.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>133.40</ENT>
            <ENT>200.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>152.50</ENT>
            <ENT>228.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>171.50</ENT>
            <ENT>257.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>190.40</ENT>
            <ENT>285.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>209.60</ENT>
            <ENT>314.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>228.60</ENT>
            <ENT>343.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>247.80</ENT>
            <ENT>371.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>266.80</ENT>
            <ENT>400.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>285.70</ENT>
            <ENT>428.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>305.00</ENT>
            <ENT>457.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>324.00</ENT>
            <ENT>486.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>343.00</ENT>
            <ENT>514.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>361.90</ENT>
            <ENT>543.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>380.90</ENT>
            <ENT>571.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s25,9,9" COLS="3" OPTS="L2">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December 1986</E>
          </TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$19.40</ENT>
            <ENT>$29.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>38.50</ENT>
            <ENT>58.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>57.90</ENT>
            <ENT>87.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>77.10</ENT>
            <ENT>115.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>96.40</ENT>
            <ENT>144.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>115.80</ENT>
            <ENT>173.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>135.10</ENT>
            <ENT>202.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>154.40</ENT>
            <ENT>231.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>173.70</ENT>
            <ENT>260.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>192.80</ENT>
            <ENT>289.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>212.30</ENT>
            <ENT>318.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>231.50</ENT>
            <ENT>347.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>251.00</ENT>
            <ENT>376.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>270.20</ENT>
            <ENT>405.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>289.40</ENT>
            <ENT>434.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>308.90</ENT>
            <ENT>463.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>328.20</ENT>
            <ENT>492.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>347.40</ENT>
            <ENT>521.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <PRTPAGE P="101"/>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>366.60</ENT>
            <ENT>550.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>385.80</ENT>
            <ENT>579.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,10,10" COLS="3" OPTS="L2,i1">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December</E> 1987</TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$20.20</ENT>
            <ENT>$30.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>40.10</ENT>
            <ENT>60.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>60.30</ENT>
            <ENT>90.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>80.30</ENT>
            <ENT>120.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>100.40</ENT>
            <ENT>150.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>120.60</ENT>
            <ENT>181.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>140.70</ENT>
            <ENT>211.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>160.80</ENT>
            <ENT>241.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>180.90</ENT>
            <ENT>271.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>200.80</ENT>
            <ENT>301.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>221.20</ENT>
            <ENT>331.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>241.20</ENT>
            <ENT>362.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>261.50</ENT>
            <ENT>392.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>281.50</ENT>
            <ENT>422.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>301.50</ENT>
            <ENT>452.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>321.80</ENT>
            <ENT>483.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>341.90</ENT>
            <ENT>513.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>361.90</ENT>
            <ENT>543.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>381.90</ENT>
            <ENT>573.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>402.00</ENT>
            <ENT>603.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,10,10" COLS="3" OPTS="L2,i1">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December</E> 1988</TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$21.00</ENT>
            <ENT>$31.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>41.70</ENT>
            <ENT>62.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>62.70</ENT>
            <ENT>94.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>83.50</ENT>
            <ENT>125.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>104.40</ENT>
            <ENT>156.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>125.40</ENT>
            <ENT>188.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>146.30</ENT>
            <ENT>219.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>167.20</ENT>
            <ENT>251.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>188.10</ENT>
            <ENT>282.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>208.80</ENT>
            <ENT>313.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>230.00</ENT>
            <ENT>345.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>250.80</ENT>
            <ENT>376.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>271.90</ENT>
            <ENT>408.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>292.70</ENT>
            <ENT>439.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>313.50</ENT>
            <ENT>470.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>334.60</ENT>
            <ENT>502.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>355.50</ENT>
            <ENT>533.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>376.30</ENT>
            <ENT>564.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>397.10</ENT>
            <ENT>596.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>418.00</ENT>
            <ENT>627.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,10,10" COLS="3" OPTS="L2,i1">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December</E> 1989</TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$21.90</ENT>
            <ENT>$33.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>43.60</ENT>
            <ENT>65.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>65.60</ENT>
            <ENT>98.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>87.40</ENT>
            <ENT>131.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>109.30</ENT>
            <ENT>164.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>131.20</ENT>
            <ENT>197.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>153.10</ENT>
            <ENT>229.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>175.00</ENT>
            <ENT>262.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>196.90</ENT>
            <ENT>295.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>218.60</ENT>
            <ENT>328.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>240.80</ENT>
            <ENT>361.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>262.50</ENT>
            <ENT>394.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>284.60</ENT>
            <ENT>427.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>306.40</ENT>
            <ENT>460.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>328.20</ENT>
            <ENT>492.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>350.30</ENT>
            <ENT>525.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>372.20</ENT>
            <ENT>558.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>393.90</ENT>
            <ENT>591.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>415.70</ENT>
            <ENT>624.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>437.60</ENT>
            <ENT>656.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,10,10" COLS="3" OPTS="L2,i1">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December</E> 1990</TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$23.00</ENT>
            <ENT>$34.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>45.90</ENT>
            <ENT>69.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>69.10</ENT>
            <ENT>104.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>92.10</ENT>
            <ENT>138.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>115.20</ENT>
            <ENT>172.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>138.20</ENT>
            <ENT>207.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>161.30</ENT>
            <ENT>242.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>184.40</ENT>
            <ENT>276.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>207.50</ENT>
            <ENT>311.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>230.40</ENT>
            <ENT>345.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>253.80</ENT>
            <ENT>380.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>276.60</ENT>
            <ENT>415.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>299.90</ENT>
            <ENT>450.30</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>322.90</ENT>
            <ENT>484.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>345.90</ENT>
            <ENT>519.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>369.20</ENT>
            <ENT>554.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>392.20</ENT>
            <ENT>588.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>415.10</ENT>
            <ENT>623.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>438.10</ENT>
            <ENT>657.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>461.20</ENT>
            <ENT>692.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,10,10" COLS="3" OPTS="L2,i1">
          <TTITLE>
            <E T="04">December</E> 1991</TTITLE>
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">I. Years of coverage</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">II. Primary insurance amount</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">III. Maximum family benefit</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">11</ENT>
            <ENT>$23.80</ENT>
            <ENT>$35.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12</ENT>
            <ENT>47.50</ENT>
            <ENT>71.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">13</ENT>
            <ENT>71.60</ENT>
            <ENT>107.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">14</ENT>
            <ENT>95.50</ENT>
            <ENT>143.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">15</ENT>
            <ENT>119.40</ENT>
            <ENT>179.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">16</ENT>
            <ENT>143.30</ENT>
            <ENT>215.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">17</ENT>
            <ENT>167.20</ENT>
            <ENT>251.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">18</ENT>
            <ENT>191.20</ENT>
            <ENT>287.00</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">19</ENT>
            <ENT>215.10</ENT>
            <ENT>322.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">20</ENT>
            <ENT>238.90</ENT>
            <ENT>358.60</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">21</ENT>
            <ENT>263.10</ENT>
            <ENT>394.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">22</ENT>
            <ENT>286.80</ENT>
            <ENT>430.50</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">23</ENT>
            <ENT>310.90</ENT>
            <ENT>466.90</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">24</ENT>
            <ENT>334.80</ENT>
            <ENT>502.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">25</ENT>
            <ENT>358.60</ENT>
            <ENT>538.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">26</ENT>
            <ENT>382.80</ENT>
            <ENT>574.70</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">27</ENT>
            <ENT>406.70</ENT>
            <ENT>610.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">28</ENT>
            <ENT>430.40</ENT>
            <ENT>646.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">29</ENT>
            <ENT>454.30</ENT>
            <ENT>682.20</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <PRTPAGE P="102"/>
            <ENT I="01">30</ENT>
            <ENT>478.20</ENT>
            <ENT>717.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <TNOTE>
            <E T="04">Note:</E> The amounts shown in the above table for years of coverage less than 19 are not payable for June 1981 through December 1981 because the corresponding values shown in column II are less than the $135.70 minimum primary insurance amount payable for that period. For months after December 1981, a special minimum primary insurance amount of $128.70 will be payable.</TNOTE>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 52 FR 8248, Mar. 17, 1987; 57 FR 44097, Sept. 24, 1992; 57 FR 45878, Oct. 5, 1992]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
      <APPENDIX>
        <EAR>Pt. 404, Subpt. C, App. VI</EAR>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Appendix VI of Subpart C of Part 404—Percentage of Automatic Increases in Primary Insurance Amounts Since 1978</E>
        </HD>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L2,i1">
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">Effective date</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">Percentage increase</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">06/79</ENT>
            <ENT>9.9</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">06/80</ENT>
            <ENT>14.3</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">06/81</ENT>
            <ENT>11.2</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">06/82</ENT>
            <ENT>7.4</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/83</ENT>
            <ENT>3.5</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/84</ENT>
            <ENT>3.5</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/85</ENT>
            <ENT>3.1</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/86</ENT>
            <ENT>1.3</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/87</ENT>
            <ENT>4.2</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/88</ENT>
            <ENT>4.0</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/89</ENT>
            <ENT>4.7</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/90</ENT>
            <ENT>5.4</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">12/91</ENT>
            <ENT>3.7</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <CITA>[57 FR 44097, Sept. 24, 1992]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
      <APPENDIX>
        <EAR>Pt. 404, Subpt. C, App. VII</EAR>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Appendix VII of Subpart C of Part 404—“Old-Law” Contribution and Benefit Base</E>
        </HD>
        <P>
          <E T="03">Explanation:</E> We use these figures to determine the earnings needed for a year of coverage for years after 1978 (see § 404.261 and appendix IV). This is the contribution and benefit base that would have been effective under the Social Security Act without the enactment of the 1977 amendments.</P>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L2,p6,6/7">
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">Year</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">Amount</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1979</ENT>
            <ENT>$18,900</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1980</ENT>
            <ENT>20,400</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1981</ENT>
            <ENT>22,200</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1982</ENT>
            <ENT>24,300</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1983</ENT>
            <ENT>26,700</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1984</ENT>
            <ENT>28,200</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1985</ENT>
            <ENT>29,700</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1986</ENT>
            <ENT>31,500</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1987</ENT>
            <ENT>32,700</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1988</ENT>
            <ENT>33,600</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1989</ENT>
            <ENT>35,700</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1990</ENT>
            <ENT>38,100</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1991</ENT>
            <ENT>39,600</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1992</ENT>
            <ENT>41,400</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <CITA>[52 FR 8248, Mar. 17, 1987, as amended at 57 FR 44097, Sept. 24, 1992; 57 FR 45878, Oct. 5, 1992]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
      <APPENDIX>
        <EAR>Pt. 404, Subpt. C, App. I</EAR>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Appendix I to Subpart C of Part 404—Average of the Total Wages for Years After 1950</E>
        </HD>
        <P>
          <E T="03">Explanation:</E> We use these figures to index your social security earnings (as described in § 404.211) for purposes of computing your average indexed monthly earnings.</P>
        <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L2">
          <BOXHD>
            <CHED H="1">Calendar year</CHED>
            <CHED H="1">Average of the total wages</CHED>
          </BOXHD>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1951</ENT>
            <ENT>$2,799.16</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1952</ENT>
            <ENT>2,973.32</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1953</ENT>
            <ENT>3,139.44</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1954</ENT>
            <ENT>3,155.64</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1955</ENT>
            <ENT>3,301.44</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1956</ENT>
            <ENT>3,532.36</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1957</ENT>
            <ENT>3,641.72</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1958</ENT>
            <ENT>3,673.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1959</ENT>
            <ENT>3,855.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1960</ENT>
            <ENT>4,007.12</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1961</ENT>
            <ENT>4,086.76</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1962</ENT>
            <ENT>4,291.40</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1963</ENT>
            <ENT>4,396.64</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1964</ENT>
            <ENT>4,576.32</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1965</ENT>
            <ENT>4,658.72</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1966</ENT>
            <ENT>4,938.36</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1967</ENT>
            <ENT>5,213.44</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1968</ENT>
            <ENT>5,571.76</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1969</ENT>
            <ENT>5,893.76</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1970</ENT>
            <ENT>6,186.24</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1971</ENT>
            <ENT>6,497.08</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1972</ENT>
            <ENT>7,133.80</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1973</ENT>
            <ENT>7,580.16</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1974</ENT>
            <ENT>8,030.76</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1975</ENT>
            <ENT>8,630.92</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1976</ENT>
            <ENT>9,226.48</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1977</ENT>
            <ENT>9,779.44</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1978</ENT>
            <ENT>10,556.03</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1979</ENT>
            <ENT>11,479.46</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1980</ENT>
            <ENT>12,513.46</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1981</ENT>
            <ENT>13,773.10</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1982</ENT>
            <ENT>14,531.34</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1983</ENT>
            <ENT>15,239.24</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1984</ENT>
            <ENT>16,135.07</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1985</ENT>
            <ENT>16,822.51</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1986</ENT>
            <ENT>17,321.82</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1987</ENT>
            <ENT>18,426.51</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1988</ENT>
            <ENT>19,334.04</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1989</ENT>
            <ENT>20,099.55</ENT>
          </ROW>
          <ROW>
            <ENT I="01">1990</ENT>
            <ENT>21,027.98</ENT>
          </ROW>
        </GPOTABLE>
        <CITA>[47 FR 30734, July 15, 1982, as amended at 52 FR 8247, Mar. 17, 1987; 57 FR 44096, Sept. 24, 1992]</CITA>
      </APPENDIX>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart D—Old-Age, Disability, Dependents' and Survivors' Insurance Benefits; Period of Disability</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 202, 203 (a) and (b), 205(a), 216, 223, 225, 228(a)-(e), and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 402, 403 (a) and (b), 405(a), 416, 423, 425, 428(a)-(e), and 902(a)(5)).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.301</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <P>This subpart sets out what requirements you must meet to qualify for social security benefits, how your benefit amounts are figured, when your right to benefits begins and ends, and how family relationships are determined. These benefits are provided by title II of the Social Security Act. They include—</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">For workers,</E> old-age and disability benefits and benefit protection during periods of disability;</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">For a worker's dependents,</E> benefits for a worker's wife, divorced wife, husband, divorced husband, and child;</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">For a worker's survivors,</E> benefits for a worker's widow, widower, divorced wife, child, and parent, and a lump-sum death payment; and</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">For uninsured persons age 72 or older,</E> special payments.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.302</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Other regulations related to this subpart.</SUBJECT>

          <P>This subpart is related to several others. Subpart H sets out what evidence you need to prove you qualify for benefits. Subpart P describes what is needed to prove you are disabled. Subpart E describes when your benefits may be reduced or stopped for a time. Subpart G describes the need for and the effect of an application for benefits. Part 410 describes when you may qualify for black lung benefits. Part 416 describes when you may qualify for supplemental security income. Also 42 CFR part 405 describes when you may <PRTPAGE P="103"/>qualify for hospital and medical insurance if you are aged, disabled, or have chronic kidney disease.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.303</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>As used in this subpart:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Apply</E> means to sign a form or statement that the Social Security Administration accepts as an application for benefits under the rules set out in subpart G.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Eligible</E> means that a person would meet all the requirements for entitlement to benefits for a period of time but has not yet applied.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Entitled</E> means that a person has applied and has proven his or her right to benefits for a period of time.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Insured person</E> or <E T="03">the insured</E> means someone who has enough earnings under social security to permit payment of benefits on his or her earnings record. The requirements for becoming insured are described in subpart B.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Permanent home</E> means the true and fixed home (legal domicile) of a person. It is the place to which a person intends to return whenever he or she is absent.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Primary insurance amount</E> means an amount that is determined from the average monthly earnings creditable to the insured person. This term and the manner in which it is computed are explained in subpart C.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">We</E> or <E T="03">Us</E> means the Social Security Administration.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">You</E> means the person who has applied for benefits or the person for whom someone else has applied.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.304</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General rules on benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>This subpart describes how the highest monthly benefit amount you ordinarily could qualify for under each type of benefit is determined. However, the highest monthly benefit amount you could qualify for may not be the amount that you actually are paid each month. In a particular month, your benefit amount may be reduced or not paid at all. Under some circumstances, your benefit amount may be increased. The most common reasons for a change in the amount of your benefit payments are listed below:</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Reductions based on age or earnings.</E> As explained in §§ 404.410 through 404.413, your old-age, wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's benefits may be reduced if you choose to receive them before age 65. Also, as explained in §§ 404.415 through 404.417, deductions may be made from your benefits if your earnings or the insured person's earnings go over certain limits.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Overpayments and underpayments.</E> Your benefits may be increased or decreased for a time to make up for any previous overpayment or underpayment that was made on the insured person's record. For more information about this, see subpart F.</P>
          <P>(c) [Reserved]</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Family maximum.</E> As explained in § 404.403, there is a maximum amount set for each insured person's earnings record that limits the total benefits payable on that record. If you are entitled to benefits as the insured's dependent or survivor, your benefits may be reduced to keep total benefits payable to the insured's family within these limits.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Government pension offset.</E> If you are entitled to wife's, husband's, mother's, father's, widow's or widower's benefits and receive a Government pension for work that was not covered under social security, your benefits may be reduced by the amount of that pension. Special age 72 payments are also reduced by the amount of a Government pension. For more information about this, see § 404.408(a) which covers benefits and § 404.384(c) which covers special age 72 payments.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Rounding.</E> After all other deductions or reductions, any monthly benefit which is not a multiple of $1 is reduced to the next lower multiple of $1.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 46148, Oct. 11, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.305</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you may not be entitled to benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In addition to the situations described in § 404.304 when you may not receive a benefit payment, there are special circumstances when you may not be entitled to benefits. These circumstances are—</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Waiver of benefits.</E> If you have waived benefits and been granted a tax exemption on religious grounds as described in §§ 404.1039 and 404.1075, no one may become entitled to any benefits or <PRTPAGE P="104"/>payments on your earnings record and you may not be entitled to benefits on anyone else's earnings record; and</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Person's death caused by an intentional act.</E> You may not become entitled to or continue to receive any survivor's benefits or payments on the earnings record of any person, or receive any underpayment due a person, if you were convicted of a felony or an act in the nature of a felony of intentionally causing that person's death. If you were subject to the juvenile justice system, you may not become entitled to or continue to receive survivor's benefits or payments on the earnings record of any person, or receive any underpayment due a person, if you were found by a court of competent jurisdiction to have intentionally caused that person's death by committing an act which, if committed by an adult, would have been considered a felony or an act in the nature of a felony.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 47 FR 42098, Sept. 24, 1982; 52 FR 19136, May 21, 1987, 52 FR 21410, June 5, 1987; 58 FR 64888, Dec. 10, 1993]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Old-Age and Disability Benefits</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.310</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to old-age benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You are entitled to old-age benefits if—</P>
          <P>(a) You are at least 62 years old;</P>
          <P>(b) You have enough social security earnings to be <E T="03">fully insured</E> as defined in §§ 404.110 through 404.115; and</P>
          <P>(c) You apply; or you are entitled to disability benefits up to the month you become 65 years old. At age 65, your disability benefits automatically become old-age benefits.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 51 FR 10616, Mar. 28, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.311</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When entitlement to old-age benefits begins and ends.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) You are entitled to old-age benefits at age 65 beginning with the first month covered by your application in which you meet all the requirements for entitlement.</P>
          <P>(b) You are entitled to old-age benefits if you have attained age 62, but are under age 65, beginning with the first month covered by your application throughout which you meet all the requirements for entitlement.</P>
          <P>(c) Your entitlement to benefits ends with the month before the month of your death.</P>
          <CITA>[48 FR 21926, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.312</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Old-age benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) If your old-age benefits begin at age 65, your monthly benefit is equal to the primary insurance amount.</P>
          <P>(b) If your old-age benefits begin after you become 65 years old, your monthly benefit is your primary insurance amount plus an increase for retiring after age 65. See § 404.313 for a description of these increases.</P>
          <P>(c) If your old-age benefits begin before you become 65 years old, your monthly benefit amount is the primary insurance amount minus a reduction for each month you are entitled before you become 65 years old. These reductions are described in §§ 404.410 through 404.413.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 51 FR 12604, Apr. 14, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.313</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Using delayed retirement credit to increase old-age benefit amount.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> (1) If you do not receive old-age benefits for the month you reach age 65 (retirement age) or for any later month before the month in which you reach age 70 (72 before 1984), you may earn delayed retirement credits which will increase your benefit amount when you retire. You earn delayed retirement credits for each of those months for which you are fully insured and are eligible for but do not receive old-age benefits, either because of your work or earnings, or because you have not applied for benefits. If you were entitled to old-age benefits before age 65 you may still earn delayed retirement credit for months beginning with age 65 in which your benefits were reduced to zero because of your work or earnings.</P>

          <P>(2) Retirement age is the age at which entitlement to full benefits may begin and is the age at which you may begin to earn delayed retirement credits. Age 65 is the retirement age for workers who reach that age before the year 2003. For workers who reach age 65 <PRTPAGE P="105"/>after 2002, retirement age will gradually increase from 65 to 67, depending on each person's date of birth.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">How we determine delayed retirement credits</E>—(1) <E T="03">General.</E> The amount of the delayed retirement credit depends on the year you reach retirement age, and the number of months you are eligible for and do not receive old-age benefits from retirement age to age 70 (72 before 1984). We total these months, which need not be consecutive, multiply the total by the applicable percent as provided in paragraphs (b)(2), (3), and (4) of this section, multiply your benefit amount by this product, and round to the next lowest multiple of $0.10 if the answer is not already a multiple of $0.10. The result is your delayed retirement credit which we add to your benefit amount. The supplementary medical insurance premium, if any, is then deducted and the result is rounded to the next lowest multiple of $1.00 if it is not already a multiple of $1.00.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Before 1982.</E> If you reach age 65 before 1982, your delayed retirement credit equals one-twelfth of one percent of your benefit amount times the number of months after 1970 in which you are age 65 or older and for which you are eligible but do not receive old-age benefits.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">After 1981 and before 1990.</E> If you reach age 65 after 1981 and before 1990, your delayed retirement credit equals one-fourth of one percent of your monthly benefit amount times the number of months in which you are age 65 or older and for which you are eligible but do not receive old-age benefits.</P>
          <P>(4) <E T="03">Beginning with 1990.</E> If you reach age 65 in 1990 or later, the rate of the delayed retirement credit (i.e., one-fourth of one percent as stated in paragraph (b)(3) of this section) is increased by one-twenty-fourth of one percent in each even year through 2008. Thus, depending on when you reach age 65, your delayed retirement credit percent will be as follows:</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s20,xs65" COLS="2" OPTS="L2,i1">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1">Year you reach age 65</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Delayed retirement credit percent</CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1990</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>7/24</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1991</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>7/24</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1992</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>1/3</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1993</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>1/3</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1994</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>3/8</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1995</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>3/8</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1996</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>5/12</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1997</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>5/12</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1998</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>11/24</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">1999</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>11/24</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2000</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>1/2</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2001</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>1/2</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2002</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>13/24</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2003</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>13/24</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2004</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>7/12</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2005</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>7/12</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2006</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>5/8</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2007</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>5/8</FR> of 1 percent.</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">2008 and later</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>2/3</FR> of 1 percent.
              </ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example.</HD>
            <P>Alan was qualified for old-age benefits when he reached age 65 in January 1983, but decided not to apply for old-age benefits immediately because he was still working. When he became age 66 in January 1984, he stopped working and applied for these benefits beginning with that month. Based on his earnings, his primary insurance amount was $226.60, and his monthly old-age benefit after deducting his supplemental medical insurance premium was $211.00 ($226.60 minus $15.50 SMI premium equals $211.10, rounded to $211.00), if no delayed retirement credits were added. However, he did not receive benefits for the 12 months from the month in which he became 65 (January 1983) until the first month in which he stopped working (January 1984). Therefore, his monthly old-age benefit of $226.60 was increased by three percent (one-quarter of one percent times 12 months) to yield a total $233.39, which rounded to the next lower multiple of $0.10 is $233.30. After deducting the SMI premium and rounding to the next lower multiple of $1, the benefit amount is $217.00.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Effective date of delayed retirement credit.</E> If you are entitled to benefits, we examine our records after the end of each calendar year to determine whether you have earned the delayed retirement credit (i.e., whether there were months in which you were fully insured and eligible for benefits, but did not receive them). Any increase in your benefit amount due to the delayed retirement credit is effective beginning with January of the year after the year the credit is earned. If you are age 65 or older and eligible for old-age benefits but have not applied, we compute the delayed retirement credit for the year(s) before you applied and pay it to you as part of your first benefit check. The delayed retirement credit for the year you applied and later years is added to your benefits beginning with <PRTPAGE P="106"/>the following January. However, in either case, in the year in which you attain age 70 (72 before 1984), we compute the credit through the month before the month you reach that age and add it to your benefit amount beginning with that month.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Delayed retirement credit and special minimum primary insurance amounts.</E> We do not add any delayed retirement credit to your old-age benefit if your benefit is based on the special minimum primary insurance amount described in § 404.260. We add the delayed retirement credit only to old-age benefits based on your regular primary insurance amount, i.e., as computed under one of the other provisions of subpart C of this part. If your benefit based on the regular primary insurance amount plus your delayed retirement credit is higher than the benefit based on your special minimum primary insurance amount, we pay the higher amount to you. However, if the special minimum primary insurance amount is higher than the regular primary insurance amount without the delayed retirement credit, we use the special minimum primary insurance amount to determine the family maximum and the benefits of others entitled on your earnings record.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Effect of delayed retirement credit on other benefits</E>—(1) <E T="03">Surviving spouse or surviving divorced spouse.</E> If you earned delayed retirement credits during your lifetime, we compute your surviving spouse's or surviving divorced spouse's benefit based on your regular primary insurance amount plus the amount of the delayed retirement credit. All delayed retirement credits, including credits in the year of death, can be used in computing your surviving spouse's or surviving divorced spouse's benefit beginning with the month of death. We compute the delayed retirement credit up to, but not including, the month of death.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Other family members.</E> We do not use your delayed retirement credits to increase the benefits of other family members entitled on your earnings record.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">Family maximum.</E> The delayed retirement credits are added to your benefit after we compute the family maximum. However, your delayed retirement credits which are used to compute your surviving spouse's or surviving divorced spouse's benefit are added to the spouse's benefits before we reduce for the family maximum.</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 12605, Apr. 14, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.315</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to disability benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> You are entitled to disability benefits while disabled before age 65 if—</P>
          <P>(1) You have enough social security earnings to be <E T="03">insured for disability,</E> as described in § 404.130;</P>
          <P>(2) You apply;</P>
          <P>(3) You have a disability, as defined in § 404.1505, or you are not disabled, but you had a disability that ended within the 12-month period before the month you applied; and</P>
          <P>(4) You have been disabled for 5 full consecutive months. This 5-month waiting period begins with a month in which you were both insured for disability and disabled. Your waiting period can begin no earlier than the 17th month before the month you apply—no matter how long you were disabled before then. No waiting period is required if you were previously entitled to disability benefits or to a period of disability under § 404.320 any time within 5 years of the month you again became disabled.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Prohibition against reentitlement to disability benefits if drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability.</E> You cannot be entitled to a period of disability payments if drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability and your earlier entitlement to disability benefits on the same basis terminated after you received benefits for 36 months during which treatment was available.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21930, May 16, 1983; 51 FR 10616, Mar. 28, 1986; 51 FR 16166, May 1, 1986; 53 FR 43681, Oct. 28, 1988; 57 FR 30119, July 8, 1992; 60 FR 8145, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.316</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When entitlement to disability benefits begins and ends.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) You are entitled to disability benefits beginning with the first month covered by your application in which <PRTPAGE P="107"/>you meet all the other requirements for entitlement. If a waiting period is required, your benefits cannot begin earlier than the first month following that period.</P>
          <P>(b) Your entitlement to disability benefits ends with the earliest of these months:</P>
          <P>(1) The month before the month of your death;</P>
          <P>(2) The month before the month you become 65 years old (at age 65 your disability benefits will be automatically changed to old-age benefits);</P>
          <P>(3) The second month after the month in which your disability ends as provided in § 404.1594(b)(1), unless continued subject to paragraph (c); or (4) subject to the provisions of paragraph (d) of this section, the month before your termination month (§ 404.325).</P>
          <P>(c)(1) Your benefits, and those of your dependents, may be continued after your impairment is no longer disabling if—</P>
          <P>(i) Your disability did not end before December 1980, the effective date of this provision of the law;</P>
          <P>(ii) You are participating in an appropriate program of vocational rehabilitation, that is, one that has been approved under a State plan approved under title I of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and which meets the requirements outlined in 34 CFR part 361 for a rehabilitation program;</P>
          <P>(iii) You began the program before your disability ended; and</P>

          <P>(iv) We have determined that your completion of the program, or your continuation in the program for a specified period of time, will significantly increase the likelihood that you will not have to return to the disability benefit rolls.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
            <P>While under a disability from a severe back impairment, “A” begins a vocational rehabilitation program under the direction of a State vocational rehabilitation agency with a vocational goal of jewelry repairman. “A” is 50 years old, has a high school education, and worked as a route salesman for a bread company for 6 years before becoming disabled. Before “A” completes his training, his disability status is reviewed and a determination is made that he is able to do light work. Considering his age, education and work experience, “A” is no longer disabled. However, if “A” is able to work as a jewelry repairman, he will be considered able to engage in substantial gainful activity even if he can do only sedentary work. Therefore, it is determined that “A's” completion of the vocational rehabilitation program will significantly increase the likelihood that he will be permanently removed from the disability rolls. “A” will continue to receive payments until he completes or stops his program, or until it is determined that continued participation will no longer significantly increase the likelihood of permanent removal from the disability rolls.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          
          <P>(2) Your benefits generally will be stopped with the month—</P>
          <P>(i) You complete the program;</P>
          <P>(ii) You stop participating in the program for any reason; or</P>
          <P>(iii) We determine that your continuing participation in the program will no longer significantly increase the likelihood that you will be permanently removed from the disability benefit rolls.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Exception:</E> In no case will your benefits be stopped with a month earlier than the second month after the month your disability ends.</P>
          <P>(d) If, after November 1980, you have a disabling impairment (§ 404.1511), you will be paid benefits for all months in which you do not do substantial gainful activity during the reentitlement period (§ 404.1592a) following the end of your trial work period (§ 404.1592). If you are unable to do substantial gainful activity in the first month following the reentitlement period, we will pay you benefits until you are able to do substantial gainful activity. (Earnings during your trial work period do not affect the payment of your benefit.) You will also be paid benefits for the first month after the trial work period in which you do substantial gainful activity and the two succeeding months, whether or not you do substantial gainful activity during those succeeding months. After those three months, you cannot be paid benefits for any months in which you do substantial gainful activity.</P>

          <P>(e) If drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability as described in § 404.1535, you may receive disability benefits on that basis for no more than 36 months regardless of the number of entitlement periods you may have. Not included in these 36 months are months in which treatment for your drug addiction or alcoholism <PRTPAGE P="108"/>is not available, months before March 1995, and months for which your benefit payments were suspended for any reason. Benefits to your dependents may continue after the 36 months of benefits if, but for the operation of this paragraph, you would otherwise be entitled to benefits based on disability. The 36-month limit is no longer effective for benefits for months beginning after September 2004.</P>
          <P>(f) If drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability as described in § 404.1535 and your disability benefits are suspended for 12 consecutive months because of your failure to comply with treatment requirements, your disability benefits will be terminated effective the first month after such 12-month period. Benefits to your dependents may continue after the 12-month period if, but for the operation of this paragraph, you would otherwise be entitled to benefits based on disability.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 47 FR 31542, July 21, 1982; 47 FR 52693, Nov. 23, 1982; 49 FR 22270, May 29, 1984; 51 FR 17617, May 14, 1986; 60 FR 8145, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.317</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disability benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Your monthly benefit is equal to the primary insurance amount. This amount is computed under the rules in subpart C as if it were an old-age benefit, and as if you were 62 years old at the beginning of the 5-month waiting period mentioned in § 404.315(d). If the 5-month waiting period is not required because of your previous entitlement, your primary insurance amount is figured as if you were 62 years old when you become entitled to benefits this time. Your monthly benefit amount may be reduced if you receive workmen's compensation payments before you become 62 years old as described in § 404.408. Your benefits may also be reduced if you were entitled to other retirement-age benefits before you became 65 years old.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.320</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to a period of disability.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> A period of disability is a continuous period of time during which you are disabled. If you become disabled, you may apply to have our records show how long your disability lasts. You may do this even if you do not qualify for disability benefits. If we establish a period of disability for you, the months in that period of time will not be counted in figuring your average earnings. If benefits payable on your earnings record would be denied or reduced because of a period of disability, the period of disability will not be taken into consideration.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Who is entitled.</E> You are entitled to a period of disability if you meet all the following conditions:</P>
          <P>(1) You have or had a disability as defined in § 404.1505.</P>
          <P>(2) You are <E T="03">insured for disability,</E> as defined in § 404.130 in the calendar quarter in which you became disabled, or in a later calendar quarter in which you were disabled.</P>
          <P>(3) You file an application while disabled, or no later than 12 months after the month in which your period of disability ended. If you were unable to apply within the 12-month period after your period of disability ended because of a physical or mental condition as described in § 404.322, you may apply not more than 36 months after the month your disability ended.</P>
          <P>(4) At least 5 consecutive months go by from the month in which your period of disability begins and before the month in which it would end.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21930, May 16, 1983; 51 FR 10616, Mar. 28, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.321</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a period of disability begins and ends.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When a period of disability begins.</E> Your period of disability begins on the day your disability begins if you are insured for disability on that day. If you are not insured for disability on that day, your period of disability will begin on the first day of the first calender quarter after your disability began in which you become insured for disability. Your period of disability may not begin after you become 65 years old.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">When disability ended before December 1, 1980.</E> Your period of disability ends on the last day of the month before the month in which you become 65 years old or, if earlier, the last day of the second month following the month in which your disability ended.<PRTPAGE P="109"/>
          </P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">When disability ends after November 1980.</E> Your period of disability ends with the close of whichever of the following is the earliest—</P>
          <P>(1) The month before the month in which you become 65 years old;</P>
          <P>(2) The month immediately preceding your termination month (§ 404.325); or</P>
          <P>(3) If you perform substantial gainful activity during the 15-month period following the end of your trial work period, the last month for which you received benefits.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">When drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability.</E> (1) Your entitlement to receive disability benefit payments ends the month following the month in which, regardless of the number of entitlement periods you may have had based on disability where drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability (as described in § 404.1535)—</P>
          <P>(i) You have received a total of 36 months of disability benefits. Not included in these 36 months are months in which treatment for your drug addiction or alcoholism is not available, months before March 1995, and months for which your benefits were suspended for any reason; or</P>
          <P>(ii) Your benefits have been suspended for 12 consecutive months because of your failure to comply with treatment requirements.</P>
          <P>(2) For purposes other than payment of your disability benefits, your period of disability continues until the termination month as explained in § 404.325.</P>
          <CITA>[49 FR 22271, May 29, 1984, as amended at 60 FR 8145, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.322</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you may apply for a period of disability after a delay due to a physical or mental condition.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If because of a physical or mental condition you did not apply for a period of disability within 12 months after your period of disability ended, you may apply not more than 36 months after the month in which your disability ended. Your failure to apply within the 12-month time period will be considered due to a physical or mental condition if during this time—</P>
          <P>(a) Your physical condition limited your activities to such an extent that you could not complete and sign an application; or</P>
          <P>(b) You were mentally incompetent.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.325</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The termination month.</SUBJECT>

          <P>If you do not have a disabling impairment, your termination month is the third month following the month in which your impairment is not disabling even if it occurs during the trial work period or the reentitlement period. If you continue to have a disabling impairment and complete 9 months of trial work, your termination month will be the third month following the earliest month you perform substantial gainful activity or are determined able to perform substantial gainful activity but in no event earlier than the first month after the 15th month following the end of your trial work period.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
            <P>You complete your trial work period in December 1980. You are then working at the substantial gainful activity level and continue to do so throughout the 15 months following completion of your trial work period and thereafter. Your termination month will be April 1982, which is the 16th month—that is, the first month in which you performed substantial gainful activity after the 15th month following your trial work period.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
            <P>You complete your trial work period in December 1980 but you are not able to work at the substantial gainful activity level until December 1982. Your termination month will be March 1983—that is, the third month after the earliest month you perform or are determined able to perform substantial gainful activity.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <CITA>[49 FR 22271, May 29, 1984]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Benefits for Spouses and Divorced Spouses</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.330</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to wife's or husband's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You are entitled to benefits as the wife or husband of an insured person who is entitled to old-age or disability benefits if—</P>
          <P>(a) You are the insured's wife or husband based upon a relationship described in §§ 404.345 through 404.346 and one of the following conditions is met:</P>

          <P>(1) Your relationship to the insured as a wife or husband has lasted at least 1 year. (You will be considered to meet the 1-year duration requirement throughout the month in which the <PRTPAGE P="110"/>first anniversary of the marriage occurs.)</P>
          <P>(2) You and the insured are the natural parents of a child; or</P>
          <P>(3) In the month before you married the insured you were entitled to, or if you had applied and been old enough you could have been entitled to, any of these benefits or payments: Wife's, husband's, widow's, widower's, or parent's benefits; disabled child's benefits; or annuity payments under the Railroad Retirement Act for widows, widowers, parents, or children 18 years old or older;</P>
          <P>(b) You apply;</P>

          <P>(c) You are age 62 or older throughout a month and you meet all other conditions of entitlement, or you are the insured's wife or husband and have <E T="03">in your care</E> (as defined in §§404.348 through 404.349), throughout a month in which all other conditions of entitlement are met, a child who is entitled to child's benefits on the insured's earnings record and the child is either under age 16 or disabled; and</P>
          <P>(d) You are not entitled to an old-age or disability benefit based upon a primary insurance amount that is equal to or larger than the full wife's or husband's benefit.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979; 44 FR 56691, Oct. 2, 1979, as amended at 45 FR 68932, Oct. 17, 1980; 48 FR 21926, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.331</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to wife's or husband's benefits as a divorced spouse.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You are entitled to wife's or husband's benefits as the divorced wife or divorced husband of an insured person who is entitled to old-age or disability benefits if you meet the requirements of paragraphs (a) through (e). You are entitled to these benefits even though the insured person is not yet entitled to benefits, if the insured person is at least age 62 and if you meet the requirements of paragraphs (a) through (f). The requirements are that—</P>
          <P>(a) You are the insured's divorced wife or divorced husband and—</P>
          <P>(1) You were validly married to the insured under State law as described in § 404.345 or you were deemed to be validly married as described in § 404.346; and</P>
          <P>(2) You were married to the insured for at least 10 years immediately before your divorce became final;</P>
          <P>(b) You apply;</P>
          <P>(c) You are not married. (For purposes of meeting this requirement, you will be considered not to be married throughout the month in which the divorce occurred);</P>
          <P>(d) You are age 62 or older throughout a month in which all other conditions of entitlement are met; and</P>
          <P>(e) You are not entitled to an old-age or disability benefit based upon a primary insurance amount that is equal to or larger than the full wife's or husband's benefit.</P>
          <P>(f) You have been divorced from the insured person for at least 2 years.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21926, May 16, 1983; 51 FR 11911, Apr. 8, 1986; 58 FR 64891, Dec. 10, 1993]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.332</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When wife's and husband's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) You are entitled to wife's or husband's benefits beginning with the first month covered by your application in which you meet all the other requirements for entitlement under § 404.330 or § 404.331. However, if you are entitled as a divorced spouse before the insured person becomes entitled, your benefits cannot begin before January 1985 based on an application filed no earlier than that month.</P>
          <P>(b) Your entitlement to benefits ends with the month before the month in which one of the following events first occurs:</P>
          <P>(1) You become entitled to an old-age or disability benefit based upon a primary insurance amount that is equal to or larger than the full wife's or husband's benefit.</P>
          <P>(2) You are the wife or husband and are divorced from the insured person unless you meet the requirements for benefits as a divorced wife or divorced husband as described in § 404.331.</P>

          <P>(3) You are the divorced wife or divorced husband and you marry someone, other than the insured who is entitled to old-age benefits, unless that other person is someone entitled to benefits as a wife, husband, widow, widower, father, mother, parent or disabled child. Your benefits will end if <PRTPAGE P="111"/>you remarry the insured who is not yet entitled to old-age benefits.</P>
          <P>(4) If you are under 62 years old, the child who was in your care becomes age 16 (unless disabled) or is otherwise no longer entitled to child's benefits. (See paragraph (c) of this section if you were entitled to wife's or husband's benefits for August 1981 on the basis of having a child in care.)</P>
          <P>(5) The insured person dies or is no longer entitled to old age or disability benefits. Exception: Your benefits will continue if the insured person was entitled to disability benefits based on a finding that drug addiction or alcoholism was a contributing factor material to the determination of his or her disability (as described in § 404.1535), the insured person's benefits ended after 36 months of benefits (see § 404.316(e)) or 12 consecutive months of suspension for noncompliance with treatment (see § 404.316(f)), and but for the operation of these provisions, the insured person would remain entitled to benefits based on disability.</P>
          <P>(6) If your benefits are based upon a deemed valid marriage and you have not divorced the insured, you marry someone other than the insured.</P>
          <P>(7) You die.</P>
          <P>(8) You became entitled as the divorced wife or the divorced husband before the insured person became entitled, but he or she is no longer insured.</P>
          <P>(c) If you were entitled to wife's or husband's benefits for August 1981 on the basis of having a child in care, your entitlement will continue until September 1983, until the child reaches 18 (unless disabled) or is otherwise no longer entitled to child's benefits, or until one of the events described in paragraph (b) (1), (2), (3), (5), (6) or (7) of this section occurs, whichever is earliest.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21926, May 16, 1983; 49 FR 24115, June 12, 1984; 51 FR 11911, Apr. 8, 1986; 58 FR 64891, Dec. 10, 1993; 60 FR 8145, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.333</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Wife's and husband's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Your wife's or husband's monthly benefit is equal to one-half the insured person's primary insurance amount. If you are entitled as a divorced wife or as a divorced husband before the insured person becomes entitled, we will compute the primary insurance amount as if he or she became entitled to old-age benefits in the first month you are entitled as a divorced wife or as a divorced husband. The amount of your monthly benefit may change as explained in § 404.304.</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 11912, Apr. 8, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.335</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to widow's or widower's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be entitled to benefits as the widow or widower of a person who was fully insured when he or she died. You are entitled to these benefits if—</P>
          <P>(a) You are the insured's widow or widower based upon a relationship described in §§ 404.345 through 404.346, and one of the following conditions is met:</P>
          <P>(1) Your relationship to the insured as a wife or husband lasted for at least 9 months immediately before the insured died.</P>
          <P>(2) Your relationship to the insured as a wife or husband did not last 9 months before the insured died, but at the time of your marriage the insured was reasonably expected to live for 9 months, and—</P>
          <P>(i) The death of the insured was accidental. The death is accidental if it was caused by an event that the insured did not expect; it was the result of bodily injuries received from violent and external causes; and as a direct result of these injuries, death occurred not later than 3 months after the day on which the bodily injuries were received. An intentional and voluntary suicide will not be considered an accidental death;</P>
          <P>(ii) The death of the insured occurred in the line of duty while he or she was serving on active duty as a member of the uniformed services as defined in § 404.1019; or</P>
          <P>(iii) You had been previously married to the insured for at least 9 months.</P>
          <P>(3) You and the insured were the natural parents of a child; or you were married to the insured when either of you adopted the other's child or when both of you adopted a child who was then under 18 years old.</P>

          <P>(4) In the month before you married the insured, you were entitled to or, if you had applied and had been old enough, could have been entitled to <PRTPAGE P="112"/>any of these benefits or payments: widow's, widower's, father's (based on the record of a fully insured individual), mother's (based on the record of a fully insured individual), wife's, husband's, parent's, or disabled child's benefits; or annuity payments under the Railroad Retirement Act for widows, widowers, parents, or children age 18 or older;</P>
          <P>(b) You apply, except that you need not apply again if—</P>
          <P>(1) You are entitled to wife's or husband's benefits for the month before the month in which the insured dies and you are 65 years old or you are not entitled to either old-age or disability benefits;</P>
          <P>(2) You are entitled to mother's or father's benefits for the month before the month in which you become 65 years old;</P>
          <P>(3) You are entitled to wife's or husband's benefits and to either old-age or disability benefits in the month before the month of the insured's death, you are under age 65 in the month of death, and you have filed a Certificate of Election in which you elect to receive reduced widow's or widower's benefits; or</P>
          <P>(4) You applied in 1990 for widow's or widower's benefits based on disability, and:</P>
          <P>(i) You were entitled to disability insurance benefits for December 1990, or eligible for supplemental security income or federally administered State supplementary payments, as specified in subparts B and T of part 416 of this chapter, respectively, for January 1991; and</P>
          <P>(ii) You were found not disabled for any month based on the definition of disability in §§ 404.1577 and 404.1578, as in effect prior to January 1991, but would have been entitled if the standard in § 404.1505(a) had applied. (This exception to the requirement for filing an application is effective only with respect to benefits payable for months after December 1990.);</P>
          <P>(c) You are at least 60 years old; or you are at least 50 years old and have a disability as defined in § 404.1505 and—</P>
          <P>(1) Your disability started not later than 7 years after the insured died or 7 years after you were last entitled to mother's or father's benefits or to widow's or widower's benefits based upon a disability, whichever occurred last;</P>
          <P>(2) Your disability continued during a waiting period of 5 full consecutive months, unless months beginning with the first month of eligibility for supplemental security income or federally administered State supplementary payments are counted, as explained in paragraph (c)(3) of this section. The waiting period may begin no earlier than the 17th month before you applied; the fifth month before the insured died; or if you were previously entitled to mother's, father's, widow's, or widower's benefits the 5th month before your entitlement to benefits ended. If you were previously entitled to widow's or widower's benefits based upon a disability, the waiting period is not required;</P>
          <P>(3) For monthly benefits payable for months after December 1990, if you were or have been eligible for supplemental security income or federally administered State supplementary payments, as specified in subparts B and T of part 416 of this chapter, respectively, your disability does not have to have continued through a separate, full 5-month waiting period before you may begin receiving benefits. We will include as months of the 5-month waiting period the months in a period beginning with the first month you received supplemental security income or a federally administered State supplementary payment and continuing through all succeeding months, regardless of whether the months in the period coincide with the months in which your waiting period would have occurred, or whether you continued to be eligible for supplemental security income or a federally administered State supplementary payment after the period began, or whether you met the nondisability requirements for entitlement to widow's or widower's benefits. However, we will not pay you benefits under this provision for any month prior to January 1991; and</P>

          <P>(4) You have not previously received 36 months of payments based on disability when drug addiction or alcoholism was a contributing factor material to the determination of disability (as described in § 404.1535), regardless of the number of entitlement periods you <PRTPAGE P="113"/>may have had, or your current application for widow(er)'s benefits is not based on a disability where drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability.</P>
          <P>(d) You are not entitled to an old-age benefit that is equal to or larger than the insured person's primary insurance amount; and</P>
          <P>(e) You are unmarried, unless—</P>
          <P>(1) You remarried after you became 60 years old; or</P>
          <P>(2) For benefits for months after 1983—</P>
          <P>(i) You are now age 60 or older;</P>
          <P>(ii) You remarried after attaining age 50 but before attaining age 60; and</P>
          <P>(iii) At the time of the remarriage, you were entitled to widow(er)'s benefits as a disabled widow(er); or</P>
          <P>(3) For benefits for months after 1983—</P>
          <P>(i) You are now at least age 50 but not yet age 60;</P>
          <P>(ii) You remarried after attaining age 50; and</P>
          <P>(iii) You met the disability requirements in paragraph (c) of this section at the time of your remarriage (i.e., your disability began within the specified time and before your remarriage).</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 47 FR 12162, Mar. 22, 1982; 49 FR 24115, June 12, 1984; 51 FR 4482, Feb. 5, 1986; 51 FR 10616, Mar. 28, 1986; 55 FR 25825, June 25, 1990; 57 FR 30119, July 8, 1992; 59 FR 14747, Mar. 30, 1994; 60 FR 8145, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.336</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to widow's or widower's benefits as a surviving divorced spouse.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be entitled to widow's or widower's benefits as the surviving divorced wife or the surviving divorced husband of a person who was fully insured when he or she died. You are entitled to these benefits if—</P>
          <P>(a) You are the insured's surviving divorced wife or surviving divorced husband and—</P>
          <P>(1) You were validly married to the insured under State law as described in § 404.345 or are deemed to be validly married as described in § 404.346; and</P>
          <P>(2) You were married to the insured for at least 10 years immediately before your divorce became final;</P>
          <P>(b) You apply, except that you need not apply again if—</P>
          <P>(1) You are entitled to wife's or husband's benefits for the month before the month in which the insured dies and you are 65 years old or you are not entitled to old-age or disability benefits;</P>
          <P>(2) You are entitled to mother's or father's benefits for the month before the month in which you become 65 years old;</P>
          <P>(3) You are entitled to wife's or husband's benefits and to either old-age or disability benefits in the month before the month of the insured's death, you are under age 65 in the month of death, and you have filed a Certificate of Election in which you elect to receive reduced widow's or widower's benefits; or</P>
          <P>(4) You applied in 1990 for widow's or widower's benefits based on disability, and:</P>
          <P>(i) You were entitled to disability insurance benefits for December 1990, or eligible for supplemental security income or federally administered State supplementary payments, as specified in subparts B and T of part 416 of this chapter, respectively, for January 1991; and</P>
          <P>(ii) You were found not disabled for any month based on the definition of disability in §§ 404.1577 and 404.1578, as in effect prior to January 1991, but would have been entitled if the standard in § 404.1505(a) had applied. (This exception to the requirement for filing an application is effective only with respect to benefits payable for months after December 1990.);</P>
          <P>(c) You are at least 60 years old; or you are at least 50 years old and have a disability as defined in § 404.1505 and—</P>
          <P>(1) Your disability started not later than 7 years after the insured died or 7 years after you were last entitled to mother's or father's benefits or to widow's or widower's benefits based upon a disability, whichever occurred last;</P>

          <P>(2) Your disability continued during a waiting period of 5 full consecutive months, unless months beginning with the first month of eligibility for supplemental security income or federally administered State supplementary payments are counted, as explained in paragraph (c)(3) of this section. This waiting period may begin no earlier <PRTPAGE P="114"/>than the 17th month before you applied; the fifth month before the insured died; or if you were previously entitled to mother's, father's, widow's, or widower's benefits, the 5th month before your previous entitlement to benefits ended. If you were previously entitled to widow's or widower's benefits based upon a disability, the waiting period is not required; and</P>
          <P>(3) For monthly benefits payable for months after December 1990, if you were or have been eligible for supplemental security income or a federally administered State supplementary payments, as specified in subparts B and T of part 416 of this chapter, respectively, your disability does not have to have continued through a separate, full 5-month waiting period before you may begin receiving benefits. We will include as months of the 5-month waiting period the months in a period beginning with the first month you received supplemental security income or a federally administered State supplementary payment and continuing through all succeeding months, regardless of whether the months in the period coincide with the months in which your waiting period would have occurred, or whether you continued to be eligible for supplemental security income or a federally administered State supplementary payment after the period began, or whether you met the nondisability requirements for entitlement to widow's or widower's benefits. However, we will not pay you benefits under this provision for any month prior to January 1991;</P>
          <P>(d) You are not entitled to an old-age benefit that is equal to or larger than the insured person's primary insurance amount; and</P>
          <P>(e) You are unmarried, unless for benefits for months after 1983—</P>
          <P>(1) You remarried after you became 60 years old; or</P>
          <P>(2)(i) You are now age 60 or older;</P>
          <P>(ii) You remarried after attaining age 50 but before attaining age 60; and</P>
          <P>(iii) At the time of the remarriage, you were entitled to widow(er)'s benefits as a disabled widow(er); or</P>
          <P>(3)(i) You are now at least age 50 but not yet age 60;</P>
          <P>(ii) You remarried after attaining age 50; and</P>
          <P>(iii) You met the disability requirements in paragraph (c) of this section at the time of your remarriage (i.e., your disability began within the specified time and before your remarriage).</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 47 FR 12162, Mar. 22, 1982; 51 FR 4482, Feb. 5, 1986; 55 FR 25300, June 21, 1990; 55 FR 25825, June 25, 1990; 57 FR 30119, July 8, 1992; 58 FR 64891, Dec. 10, 1993]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.337</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When widow's and widower's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) u are entitled to widow's or widower's benefits under § 404.335 or § 404.336 beginning with the first month covered by your application in which you meet all the other requirements for entitlement.</P>
          <P>(b) Your entitlement to benefits ends at the earliest of the following times:</P>
          <P>(1) The month before the month in which you become entitled to an old-age benefit that is equal to or larger than the insured's primary insurance amount.</P>
          <P>(2) If your widow's or widower's benefit is based upon a disability, the second month after the month your disability ends or, where disability ends on or after December 1, 1980, the month before your termination month (§ 404.325). However payments are subject to the provisions of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. You may remain eligible for payment of benefits if you became 65 years old before your termination month and you met the other requirements for widow's or widower's benefits. If your widow's or widower's benefit is based on a finding that drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability as described in § 404.1535, your entitlement to benefits will terminate the month after the 12th consecutive month of suspension for noncompliance with treatment or after 36 months of benefits on that basis when treatment is available regardless of the number of entitlement periods you may have had, unless you are otherwise disabled without regard to drug addiction or alcoholism.</P>
          <P>(3) The month before the month in which you die.</P>

          <P>(c)(1) Your benefits may be continued after your impairment is no longer disabling if—<PRTPAGE P="115"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) Your disability did not end before December 1980, the effective date of this provision of the law;</P>
          <P>(ii) You are participating in an appropriate program of vocational rehabilitation as described in § 404.316(c)(1)(ii);</P>
          <P>(iii) You began the program before your disability ended; and</P>
          <P>(iv) We have determined that your completion of the program, or your continuation in the program for a specified period of time, will significantly increase the likelihood that you will not have to return to the disability benefit rolls.</P>
          <P>(2) Your benefits generally will be stopped with the month—</P>
          <P>(i) You complete the program;</P>
          <P>(ii) You stop participating in the program for any reason; or</P>

          <P>(iii) We determine that your continuing participation in the program will no longer significantly increase the likelihood that you will be permanently removed from the disability benefit rolls.
          </P>
          <FP>
            <E T="03">Exception:</E> In no case will your benefits be stopped with a month earlier than the second month after the month your disability ends.</FP>
          
          <P>(d) If, after November 1980, you have a disabling impairment (§ 404.1511), you will be paid benefits for all months in which you do not do substantial gainful activity during the reentitlement period (§ 404.1592a) following the end of your trial work period (§ 404.1592). If you are unable to do substantial gainful activity in the first month following the reentitlement period, we will pay you benefits until you are able to do substantial gainful activity. (Earnings during your trial work period do not affect the payment of your benefits.) You will also be paid benefits for the first month after the trial work period in which you do substantial gainful activity and the two succeeding months, whether or not you do substantial gainful activity during those succeeding months. After those three months, you cannot be paid benefits for any months in which you do substantial gainful activity.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 47 FR 31542, July 21, 1982; 49 FR 22271, May 29, 1984; 51 FR 4482, Feb. 5, 1986; 51 FR 17617, May 14, 1986; 58 FR 64891, Dec. 10, 1993; 60 FR 8146, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.338</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Widow's and widower's benefits amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Your widow's or widower's monthly benefit is equal to the insured person's primary insurance amount. If the insured person died before reaching age 62 and you are first eligible after 1984, we may compute a special primary insurance amount for the purpose of determining the amount of your monthly benefit (see § 404.212(b)). We may increase your monthly benefit amount if the insured person earned delayed retirement credit after age 65 by working or by delaying filing for benefits (see § 404.313). The amount of your monthly benefit may change as explained in § 404.304. In addition, your monthly benefit will be reduced if the insured person had been entitled to old-age benefits that were reduced for age because he or she chose to receive them before becoming 65 years old. In this instance, your benefit is reduced, if it would otherwise be higher, to either the amount the insured would have been entitled to if still alive or 82<FR>1/2</FR> percent of his or her primary insurance amount, whichever is larger.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 51 FR 4482, Feb. 5, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.339</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to mother's or father's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be entitled as the widow or widower to mother's or father's benefits on the earnings record of someone who was fully or currently insured when he or she died. You are entitled to these benefits if—</P>
          <P>(a) You are the widow or widower of the insured and meet the conditions described in § 404.335(a)(1);</P>
          <P>(b) You apply for these benefits; or you were entitled to wife's benefits for the month before the insured died;</P>
          <P>(c) You are unmarried;<PRTPAGE P="116"/>
          </P>
          <P>(d) You are not entitled to widow's or widower's benefits, or to an old-age benefit that is equal to or larger than the full mother's or father's benefit; and</P>
          <P>(e) You have <E T="03">in your care</E> the insured's child who is entitled to child's benefits and he or she is under 16 years old or is disabled. Sections 404.348 and 404.349 describe when a child is <E T="03">in your care.</E>
          </P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.340</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to mother's or father's benefits as a surviving divorced spouse.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be entitled to mother's or father's benefits as the suviving divorced wife or the surviving divorced husband of someone who was fully or currently insured when he or she died. You are entitled to these benefits if—</P>
          <P>(a) You were validly married to the insured under State law as described in § 404.345 or you were deemed to be validly married as described in § 404.346 but the marriage ended in a final divorce and—</P>
          <P>(1) You are the mother or father of the insured's child; or</P>
          <P>(2) You were married to the insured when either of you adopted the other's child or when both of you adopted a child and the child was then under 18 years old;</P>
          <P>(b) You apply for these benefits; or you were entitled to wife's or husband's benefits for the month before the insured died;</P>
          <P>(c) You are unmarried;</P>
          <P>(d) You are not entitled to widow's or widower's benefits, or to an old-age benefit that is equal to or larger than the full mother's or father's benefit; and</P>
          <P>(e) You have <E T="03">in your care</E> the insured's child who is under age 16 or disabled, is your natural or adopted child, and is entitled to child's benefits on the insured person's record. Sections 404.348 and 404.349 describe when a child is <E T="03">in your care.</E>
          </P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 45 FR 68932, Oct. 17, 1980; 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983; 58 FR 64891, Dec. 10, 1993]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.341</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When mother's and father's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) You are entitled to mother's or father's benefits beginning with the first month covered by your application in which you meet all the other requirements for entitlement.</P>
          <P>(b) Your entitlement to benefits ends with the month before the month in which one of the following events first occurs:</P>
          <P>(1) You become entitled to a widow's or widower's benefit or to an old-age benefit that is equal to or larger than the full mother's or father's benefit.</P>
          <P>(2) The child <E T="03">in your care</E> becomes age 16 and not disabled or is otherwise no longer entitled to child's benefits. (See paragraph (c) of this section if you were entitled to mother's or father's benefits for August 1981.)</P>
          <P>(3) You remarry. Your benefits will not end, however, if you marry someone entitled to old-age, disability, wife's, husband's, widow's, widower's, father's, mother's, parent's or disabled child's benefits.</P>
          <P>(4) You die.</P>
          <P>(c) If you were entitled to spouse's benefits on the basis of having a child in care, or to mother's or father's benefits for August 1981, your entitlement will continue until September 1983, until the child reaches 18 (unless disabled) or is otherwise no longer entitled to child's benefits, or until one of the events described in paragraph (b) (1), (3), or (4) of this section occurs, whichever is earliest.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983; 49 FR 24115, June 12, 1984; 58 FR 64891, Dec. 10, 1993]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.342</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Mother's and father's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Your mother's or father's monthly benefit is equal to 75 percent of the insured person's primary insurance amount. The amount of your monthly benefit may change as explained in § 404.304.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.344</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your relationship by marriage to the insured.</SUBJECT>

          <P>You may be eligible for benefits if you are related to the insured person as a wife, husband, widow, or widower. To decide your relationship to the insured, we look first to State laws. The <PRTPAGE P="117"/>State laws that we use are discussed in § 404.345. If your relationship cannot be established under State law, you may still be eligible for benefits if your relationship as the insured's wife, husband, widow, or widower is based upon a <E T="03">deemed valid marriage</E> as described in § 404.346.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.345</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your relationship as wife, husband, widow, or widower under State law.</SUBJECT>
          <P>To decide your relationship as the insured's wife or husband, we look to the laws of the State where the insured had a permanent home when you applied for wife's or husband's benefits. To decide your relationship as the insured's widow or widower, we look to the laws of the State where the insured had a permanent home when he or she died. If the insured's permanent home is not or was not in one of the 50 States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, or American Samoa, we look to the laws of the District of Columbia. For a definition of permanent home, see § 404.303. If you and the insured were validly married under State law at the time you apply for wife's or husband's benefits or at the time the insured died if you apply for widow's, widower's, mother's, or father's benefits, the relationship requirement will be met. The relationship requirement will also be met if under State law you would be able to inherit a wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's share of the insured's personal property if he or she were to die without leaving a will.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.346</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your relationship as wife, husband, widow, or widower based upon a deemed valid marriage.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> If your relationship as the insured's wife, husband, widow, or widower cannot be established under State law as explained in § 404.345, you may be eligible for benefits based upon a deemed valid marriage. You will be deemed to be the wife, husband, widow, or widower of the insured if, in good faith, you went through a marriage ceremony with the insured that would have resulted in a valid marriage except for a legal impediment. A legal impediment includes only an impediment which results because a previous marriage had not ended at the time of the ceremony or because there was a defect in the procedure followed in connection with the intended marriage. For example, a defect in the procedure may be found where a marriage was performed through a religious ceremony in a country that requires a civil ceremony for a valid marriage. Good faith means that at the time of the ceremony you did not know that a legal impediment existed, or if you did know, you thought that it would not prevent a valid marriage.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Entitlement based upon a deemed valid marriage.</E> To be entitled to benefits as a wife, husband, widow or widower as the result of a deemed valid marriage, you and the insured must have been living in the same household (see § 404.347) at the time the insured died or, if the insured is living, at the time you apply for benefits. However, a marriage that had been deemed valid, shall continue to be deemed valid if the insured individual and the person entitled to benefits as the wife or husband of the insured individual are no longer living in the same household at the time of death of the insured individual.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 45 FR 65540, Oct. 3, 1980; 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983; 58 FR 64892, Dec. 10, 1993]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.347</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>“Living in the same household” defined.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Living in the same household means that you and the insured customarily lived together as husband and wife in the same residence. You may be considered to be living in the same household although one of you is temporarily absent from the residence. An absence will be considered temporary if:</P>
          <P>(a) It was due to service in the U.S. Armed Forces;</P>
          <P>(b) It was 6 months or less and neither you nor the insured were outside of the United States during this time and the absence was due to business, employment, or confinement in a hospital, nursing home, other medical institution, or a penal institution;</P>

          <P>(c) It was for an extended separation, regardless of the duration, due to the confinement of either you or the insured in a hospital, nursing home, or <PRTPAGE P="118"/>other medical institution, if the evidence indicates that you were separated solely for medical reasons and you otherwise would have resided together; or</P>
          <P>(d) It was based on other circumstances, and it is shown that you and the insured reasonably could have expected to live together in the near future.</P>
          <CITA>[61 FR 41330, Aug. 8, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.348</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a child living with you is “in your care”.</SUBJECT>

          <P>To become entitled to wife's benefits before you become 62 years old or to mother's or father's benefits, you must have the insured's child <E T="03">in your care.</E> A child who has been living with you for at least 30 days is in your care unless—</P>
          <P>(a) The child is in active military service;</P>
          <P>(b) The child is 16 years old or older and not disabled;</P>
          <P>(c) The child is 16 years old or older with a mental disability, but you do not actively supervise his or her activities and you do not make important decisions about his or her needs, either alone or with help from your spouse; or</P>
          <P>(d) The child is 16 years old or older with a physical disability, but it is not necessary for you to perform personal services for him or her. Personal services are services such as dressing, feeding, and managing money that the child cannot do alone because of a disability.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.349</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a child living apart from you is “in your care”.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">In your care.</E> A child living apart from you is in your care if—</P>
          <P>(1) The child lived apart from you for not more than 6 months, or the child's current absence from you is not expected to last over 6 months;</P>
          <P>(2) The child is under 16 years old, you supervise his or her activities and make important decisions about his or her needs, and one of the following circumstances exist:</P>
          <P>(i) The child is living apart because of school but spends at least 30 days vacation with you each year unless some event makes having the vacation unreasonable; and if you and the child's other parent are separated, the school looks to you for decisions about the child's welfare;</P>

          <P>(ii) The child is living apart because of your employment but you make regular and substantial contributions to his or her support; see § 404.366(a) for a definition of <E T="03">contributions for support</E>;</P>
          <P>(iii) The child is living apart because of a physical disability that the child has or that you have; or</P>
          <P>(3) The child is 16 years old or older, is mentally disabled, and you supervise his or her activities, make important decisions about his or her needs, and help in his or her upbringing and development.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Not in your care.</E> A child living apart from you is not in your care if—</P>
          <P>(1) The child is in active military service;</P>
          <P>(2) The child is living with his or her other parent;</P>
          <P>(3) The child is removed from your custody and control by a court order;</P>
          <P>(4) The child is 16 years old or older, is mentally competent, and either has been living apart from you for 6 months or more or begins living apart from you and is expected to be away for more than 6 months;</P>
          <P>(5) You gave your right to have custody and control of the child to someone else; or</P>
          <P>(6) You are mentally disabled.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Child's Benefits</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.350</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to child's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> You are entitled to child's benefits on the earnings record of an insured person who is entitled to old-age or disability benefits or who has died if—</P>
          <P>(1) You are the insured person's child, based upon a relationship described in §§ 404.355 through 404.359;</P>
          <P>(2) You are dependent on the insured, as defined in §§ 404.360 through 404.365;</P>
          <P>(3) You apply;</P>
          <P>(4) You are unmarried; and</P>

          <P>(5) You are under age 18; you are 18 years old or older and have a disability that began before you became 22 years old; or you are 18 years or older and <PRTPAGE P="119"/>qualify for benefits as a full-time student as described in § 404.367.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Entitlement preclusion for certain disabled children.</E> If you are a disabled child as referred to in paragraph (a)(5) of this section, and your disability was based on a finding that drug addiction or alcoholism was a contributing factor material to the determination of disability (as described in § 404.1535) and your benefits ended after your receipt of 36 months of benefits, you will not be entitled to benefits based on disability for any month following such 36 months regardless of the number of entitlement periods you have had if, in such following months, drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the later determination of disability (as described in § 404.1535).</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983; 60 FR 8146, Feb. 10, 1995; 61 FR 38363, July 24, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.351</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who may be reentitled to child's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If your entitlement to child's benefits has ended, you may be reentitled on the same earnings record if you have not married and if you apply for reentitlement. Your reentitlement may begin with—</P>
          <P>(a) The first month in which you qualify as a full-time student. (See § 404.367.)</P>
          <P>(b) The first month in which you are disabled, if your disability began before you became 22 years old; or</P>
          <P>(c) The first month you are under a disability that began before the end of the 84th month following the month in which your benefits had ended because an earlier disability had ended.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983; 61 FR 38363, July 24, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.352</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When child's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When benefits begin.</E> (1) If the insured is deceased, you are entitled to child's benefits beginning with the first month covered by your application in which you meet all other requirements for entitlement.</P>
          <P>(2) If the insured is living, you are entitled to child's benefits beginning with the first month covered by your application:</P>
          <P>(i) <E T="03">Throughout</E> which you meet all the other requirements for entitlement if your first month of entitlement is September 1981 or later; or</P>
          <P>(ii) <E T="03">In</E> which you meet all the other requirements for entitlement if your first month of entitlement is before September 1981.</P>
          <P>(b) Your entitlement to benefits ends with the month before the month in which one of the following events first occurs:</P>
          <P>(1) You become 18 years old, unless you are disabled or a full-time student. If you become 18 years old and you are disabled, your entitlement to disability benefits ends with the second month following the month in which your disability ends. If your disability ends on or after December 1, 1980, your entitlement to disability benefits continues, subject to the provisions of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section, until the month before your termination month (§ 404.325). If you become 18 years old and you qualify as a full-time student who is not disabled, your entitlement ends with the last month you are a full-time student or, if earlier, the month before the month you become age 19. If you become age 19 in a month in which you have not completed the requirements for, or received, a diploma or equivalent certificate from an elementary or secondary school, your entitlement will end with the month in which the quarter or semester in which you are enrolled ends if you are required to enroll for each quarter or semester. If the school you are attending does not have a quarter or semester system which requires reenrollment, your benefits will end with the month you complete the course or, if earlier, the first day of the third month following the month in which you become 19 years old.</P>
          <P>(2) You marry. Your benefits will not end, however, if you are age 18 or older, disabled, and you marry a person entitled to child's benefits based on disability or person entitled to old-age, divorced wife's, divorced husband's, widow's, widower's, mother's, father's, parent's, or disability benefits.</P>

          <P>(3) The insured's entitlement to old-age or disability benefits ends for a <PRTPAGE P="120"/>reason other than death or the attainment of age 65. Exception: Your benefits will continue if the insured person was entitled to disability benefits based on a finding that drug addiction or alcoholism was a contributing factor material to the determination of his or her disability (as described in § 404.1535), the insured person's benefits ended after 36 months of payment (see § 404.316(e)) or 12 consecutive months of suspension for noncompliance with treatment (see § 404.316(f)), and the insured person remains disabled.</P>
          <P>(4) You die.</P>
          <P>(c) If you are entitled to benefits as a disabled child age 18 or over and your disability is based on a finding that drug addiction or alcoholism was a contributing factor material to the determination of disability (as described in § 404.1535), your benefits also will terminate under the following conditions:</P>
          <P>(1) If your benefits have been suspended for a period of 12 consecutive months for failure to comply with treatment, your benefits will terminate with the month following the 12 months unless you are otherwise disabled without regard to drug addiction or alcoholism (see § 404.470(c)).</P>
          <P>(2) If you have received 36 months of benefits on that basis when treatment is available, regardless of the number of entitlement periods you may have had, your benefits will terminate with the month following such 36-month payment period unless you are otherwise disabled without regard to drug addiction or alcoholism.</P>
          <P>(d)(1) Your benefits may be continued after your impairment is no longer disabling if—</P>
          <P>(i) Your disability did not end before December 1980, the effective date of this provision of the law;</P>
          <P>(ii) You are participating in an appropriate program of vocational rehabilitation as described in § 404.316(c)(1)(ii);</P>
          <P>(iii) You began the program before your disability ended; and</P>
          <P>(iv) We have determined that your completion of the program, or your continuation in the program for a specified period of time, will significantly increase the likelihood that you will not have to return to the disability benefit rolls.</P>
          <P>(2) Your benefits generally will be stopped with the month—</P>
          <P>(i) You complete the program;</P>
          <P>(ii) You stop participating in the program for any reason; or</P>

          <P>(iii) We determine that your continuing participation in the program will no longer significantly increase the likelihood that you will be permanently removed from the disability benefit rolls.
          </P>
          <FP>
            <E T="03">Exception:</E> In no case will your benefits be stopped with a month earlier than the second month after the month your disability ends.</FP>
          
          <P>(e) If, after November 1980, you have a disabling impairment (§404.1511), you will be paid benefits for all months in which you do not do substantial gainful activity during the reentitlement period (§ 404.1592a) following the end of your trial work period (§ 404.1592). If you are unable to do substantial gainful activity in the first month following the reentitlement period, we will pay you benefits until you are able to do substantial gainful activity. (Earnings during your trial work period do not affect the payment of your benefits during that period.) You will also be paid benefits for the first month after the trial work period in which you do substantial gainful activity and the two succeeding months, whether or not you do substantial gainful activity during those succeeding months. After those three months, you cannot be paid benefits for any months in which you do substantial gainful activity.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 47 FR 31543, July 21, 1982; 48 FR 21927, May 16, 1983; 49 FR 22271, May 29, 1984; 49 FR 24115, June 12, 1984; 51 FR 17617, May 14, 1987; 60 FR 8146, Feb. 10, 1995; 61 FR 38363, July 24, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.353</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Child's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> Your child's monthly benefit is equal to one-half of the insured person's primary insurance amount if he or she is alive and three-fourths of the primary insurance amount if he or she has died. The amount of your monthly benefit may change as explained in § 404.304.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Entitlement to more than one benefit.</E> If you are entitled to a child's benefit on more than one person's earnings record, you will ordinarily receive only <PRTPAGE P="121"/>the benefit payable on the record with the highest primary insurance amount. If your benefit before any reduction would be larger on an earnings record with a lower primary insurance amount and no other person entitled to benefits on any earnings record would receive a smaller benefit as a result of your receiving benefits on the record with the lower primary insurance amount, you will receive benefits on that record. See § 404.407(d) for a further explanation. If you are entitled to a child's benefit and to other dependent's or survivor's benefits, you can receive only the highest of the benefits.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979; 44 FR 56691, Oct. 2, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21928, May 16, 1983; 51 FR 12606, Apr. 14, 1986; 61 FR 38363, July 24, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.354</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your relationship to the insured.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> You may be related to the insured person in one of several ways and be entitled to benefits as his or her child—as a natural child, legally adopted child, stepchild, grandchild, stepgrandchild, or equitably adopted child.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Use of State laws.</E> To decide your relationship to the insured, we look to the laws that are in effect in the State where the insured has his or her permanent home when you apply for benefits. If the insured is deceased, we look to the laws that were in effect at the time the insured worker died in the State where the insured had his or her permanent home. If the insured's permanent home is not or was not in one of the 50 States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, or American Samoa, we will look at the laws of the District of Columbia. For a definition of permanent home, see § 404.303. The State laws we use are the ones the courts would use to decide whether you could inherit a child's share of the insured's personal property if he or she were to die without leaving a will. If these laws would not permit you to inherit the insured's personal property as his or her child, you may still be eligible for child's benefits if you are related to the insured in one of the other ways described in §§ 404.355 through 404.359.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 49 FR 21513, May 22, 1984]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.355</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's natural child.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be eligible for benefits as the insured's natural child if one of the following conditions is met:</P>
          <P>(a) You could inherit the insured's personal property as his or her natural child under State inheritance laws as described in § 404.354.</P>

          <P>(b) You are the insured's natural child, and the insured and your mother or father went through a ceremony which would have resulted in a valid marriage between them except for a <E T="03">legal impediment</E> described in § 404.346(a).</P>
          <P>(c) You are the insured's natural child and your mother or father has not married the insured, but the insured has either acknowledged in writing that you are his or her child, been decreed by a court to be your father or mother, or been ordered by a court to contribute to your support because you are his or her child. In the case where the insured is deceased, the acknowledgement, court decree, or court order must have been made before his or her death. For purposes of determining whether the conditions of entitlement are met throughout the first month as stated in § 404.352(a), the written acknowledgement, court decree, or court order will be considered to have occurred on the first day of the month in which it actually occurred.</P>

          <P>(d) Your mother or father has not married the insured but you have evidence other than the evidence described in paragraph (c) of this section to show that the insured is your natural father or mother. Additionally, you must have evidence to show that the insured was either living with you or contributing to your support at the time you applied for benefits. See § 404.366 for an explanation of the terms <E T="03">living with</E> and <E T="03">contributing to your support.</E> If the insured is not alive at the time of your application you must have evidence to show that the insured was <PRTPAGE P="122"/>either living with you or contributing to your support when he or she died.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 45 FR 65540, Oct. 3, 1980; 49 FR 24115, June 12, 1984]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.356</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's legally adopted child.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be eligible for benefits as the insured's child if you were legally adopted by the insured. If you were legally adopted after the insured's death by his or her surviving spouse you may also be considered the insured's legally adopted child.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.357</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's stepchild.</SUBJECT>

          <P>You may be eligible for benefits as the insured's stepchild if, after your birth, your natural or adopting parent married the insured. The marriage between the insured and your parent must be a valid marriage under State law or a marriage which would be valid except for a <E T="03">legal impediment</E> described in § 404.346(a). If the insured is alive when you apply, you must have been his or her stepchild for at least 1 year immediately preceding the day you apply. For purposes of determining whether the conditions of entitlement are met <E T="03">throughout</E> the first month as stated in § 404.352(a)(2)(i), you will be considered to meet the one year duration requirement throughout the month in which the anniversary of the marriage occurs. If the insured is not alive when you apply, you must have been his or her stepchild for at least 9 months immediately preceding the day the insured died. This 9-month requirement will not have to be met if the marriage between the insured and your parent lasted less than 9 months under the conditions described in §404.335(a)(2).</P>
          <CITA>[48 FR 21928, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.358</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's grandchild or stepgrandchild.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Grandchild and stepgrandchild defined.</E> You may be eligible for benefits as the insured's grandchild or stepgrandchild if you are the natural child, adopted child, or stepchild of a person who is the insured's child as defined in §§ 404.355 through 404.357, or § 404.359. Additionally, for you to be eligible as a grandchild or stepgrandchild, your natural or adoptive parents must have been either deceased or under a disability, as defined in § 404.1501(a), at the time your grandparent or stepgrandparent became entitled to old-age or disability benefits or died; or if your grandparent or stepgrandparent had a period of disability that continued until he or she became entitled to benefits or died, at the time the period of disability began. If your parent is deceased, for purposes of determining whether the conditions of entitlement are met <E T="03">throughout</E> the first month as stated in § 404.352(a)(2)(i), your parent will be considered to be deceased as of the first day of the month of death.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Legally adopted grandchild or stepgrandchild.</E> If you are the insured's grandchild or stepgrandchild and you are legally adopted by the insured or by the insured's surviving spouse after his or her death, you are considered an adopted child and the dependency requirements of § 404.362 must be met.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21928, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.359</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is the insured's equitably adopted child.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be eligible for benefits as an equitably adopted child if the insured had agreed to adopt you as his or her child but the adoption did not occur. The agreement to adopt you must be one that would be recognized under State law so that you would be able to inherit a child's share of the insured's personal property if he or she were to die without leaving a will. The agreement must be in whatever form, and you must meet whatever requirements for performance under the agreement, that State law directs. If you apply for child's benefits after the insured's death, the law of the State where the insured had his or her permanent home at the time of his or her death will be followed. If you apply for child's benefits during the insured's life, the law of the State where the insured has his or her permanent home at the time or your application will be followed.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.360</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a child is dependent upon the insured person.</SUBJECT>

          <P>One of the requirements for entitlement to child's benefits is that you be <PRTPAGE P="123"/>dependent upon the insured. The evidence you need to prove your dependency is determined by how you are related to the insured. To prove your dependency you may be asked to show that at a specific time you lived with the insured, that you received contributions for your support from the insured, or that the insured provided at least one-half of your support. These dependency requirements, and the time at which they must be met, are explained in §§ 404.361 through 404.365. The terms <E T="03">living with, contributions for support,</E> and <E T="03">one-half support</E> are defined in § 404.366.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.361</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a natural child is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are the insured's natural child, as defined in § 404.355, you are considered dependent upon him or her. However, if you are legally adopted by someone else during the insured's lifetime and after the adoption you apply for child's benefits on the insured's earnings record, you will be considered dependent upon the insured (your natural parent) only if he or she was either living with you or contributing to your support at one of these times—</P>
          <P>(a) When you applied;</P>
          <P>(b) When the insured died; or</P>
          <P>(c) If the insured had a period of disability that lasted until he or she died or became entitled to disability or old-age benefits, at the beginning of the period of disability or at the time he or she became entitled to benefits.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.362</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a legally adopted child is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> If you were legally adopted by the insured before he or she became entitled to old-age or disability benefits, you are considered dependent upon him or her. If you were legally adopted by the insured after he or she became entitled to old-age or disability benefits and you apply for child's benefits during the life of the insured, you must meet the dependency requirements stated in paragraph (b) of this section. If you were legally adopted by the insured after he or she became entitled to old-age or disability benefits and you apply for child's benefits after the death of the insured, you are considered dependent upon him or her. If you were adopted after the insured's death by his or her surviving spouse, you may be considered dependent upon the insured only under the conditions described in paragraph (c) of this section.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Adoption by the insured after he or she became entitled to benefits.</E> (1) <E T="03">General.</E> If you are legally adopted by the insured after he or she became entitled to benefits and you are not the insured's natural child or stepchild, you are considered dependent on the insured during his or her lifetime only if—</P>
          <P>(i) You had not attained age 18 when adoption proceedings were started, and your adoption was issued by a court of competent jurisdiction within the United States; or</P>
          <P>(ii) You had attained age 18 before adoption proceedings were started; your adoption was issued by a court of competent jurisdiction within the United States; and you were living with or receiving at least one-half of your support from the insured for the year immediately preceding the month in which your adoption was issued.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Natural child and stepchild.</E> If you were legally adopted by the insured after he or she became entitled to benefits and you are the insured's natural child or stepchild, you are considered dependent upon the insured.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Adoption by the insured's surviving spouse</E>—(1) <E T="03">General.</E> If you are legally adopted by the insured's surviving spouse after the insured's death, you are considered dependent upon the insured as of the date of his or her death if—</P>
          <P>(i) You were either living with or receiving at least one-half of your support from the insured at the time of his or her death; and,</P>
          <P>(ii) The insured had started adoption proceedings before he or she died; or if the insured had not started the adoption proceedings before he or she died, his or her surviving spouse began and completed the adoption within 2 years of the insured's death.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Grandchild or stepgrandchild adopted by the insured's surviving spouse.</E> If you are the grandchild or stepgrandchild of the insured and any time after the death of the insured you are legally adopted by the insured's <PRTPAGE P="124"/>surviving spouse, you are considered the dependent child of the insured as of the date of his or her death if—</P>
          <P>(i) Your adoption took place in the United States;</P>
          <P>(ii) At the time of the insured's death, your natural, adopting or stepparent was not living in the insured's household and making regular contributions toward your support; and</P>
          <P>(iii) You meet the dependency requirements stated in § 404.364.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979; 44 FR 56691, Oct. 2, 1979, as amended at 56 FR 24000, May 28, 1991; 57 FR 3938, Feb. 3, 1992]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.363</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a stepchild is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are the insured's stepchild, as defined in § 404.357, you are considered dependent upon him or her if you were either living with or receiving at least one-half of your support from him or her at one of these times—</P>
          <P>(a) When you applied;</P>
          <P>(b) When the insured died; or</P>
          <P>(c) If the insured had a period of disability that lasted until his or her death or entitlement to disability or old-age benefits, at the beginning of the period of disability or at the time the insured became entitled to benefits.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.364</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When a grandchild or stepgrandchild is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are the insured's grandchild or stepgrandchild, as defined in § 404.358(a), you are considered dependent upon the insured if—</P>
          <P>(a) You began living with the insured before you became 18 years old; and</P>

          <P>(b) You were living with the insured in the United States and receiving at least one-half of your support from him for the year before he or she became entitled to old-age or disability benefits or died; or if the insured had a period of disability that lasted until he or she became entitled to benefits or died, for the year immediately before the month in which the period of disability began. If you were born during the 1-year period, the insured must have lived with you and provided at least one-half of your support for <E T="03">substantially all</E> of the period that begins on the date of your birth. The term <E T="03">substantially all</E> is defined in § 404.362(b)(1)(iii).</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.365</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When an equitably adopted child is dependent.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are the insured's equitably adopted child, as defined in § 404.359, you are considered dependent upon him or her if you were either living with or receiving contributions for your support from the insured at the time of his or her death. If your equitable adoption is found to have occurred after the insured became entitled to old-age or disability benefits, your dependency cannot be established during the insured's life. If your equitable adoption is found to have occurred before the insured became entitled to old-age or disability benefits, you are considered dependent upon him or her if you were either living with or receiving contributions for your support from the insured at one of these times—</P>
          <P>(a) When you applied; or</P>
          <P>(b) If the insured had a period of disability that lasted until he or she became entitled to old-age or disability benefits, at the beginning of the period of disability or at the time the insured became entitled to benefits.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.366</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>“Contributions for support,” “one-half support,” and “living with” the insured defined—determining first month of entitlement.</SUBJECT>

          <P>To be eligible for child's or parent's benefits, and in certain Government pension offset cases, you must be dependent upon the insured person at a particular time or be assumed dependent upon him or her. What it means to be a dependent child is explained in §§ 404.360 through 404.365; what it means to be a dependent parent is explained in § 404.370(f); and the Government pension offset is explained in § 404.408a. Your dependency upon the insured person may be based upon whether at a specified time you were receiving <E T="03">contributions for your support</E> or <E T="03">one-half of your support</E> from the insured person, or whether you were <E T="03">living with</E> him or her. These terms are defined in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section.</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Contributions for support.</E> The insured makes a contribution for your support if the following conditions are met:<PRTPAGE P="125"/>
          </P>
          <P>(1) The insured gives some of his or her own cash or goods to help support you. Support includes food, shelter, routine medical care, and other ordinary and customary items needed for your maintenance. The value of any goods the insured contributes is the same as the cost of the goods when he or she gave them for your support. If the insured provides services for you that would otherwise have to be paid for, the cash value of his or her services may be considered a contribution for your support. An example of this would be work the insured does to repair your home. The insured person is making a contribution for your support if you receive an allotment, allowance, or benefit based upon his or her military pay, veterans' pension or compensation, or social security earnings.</P>
          <P>(2) Contributions must be made regularly and must be large enough to meet an important part of your ordinary living costs. Ordinary living costs are the costs for your food, shelter, routine medical care, and similar necessities. If the insured person only provides gifts or donations once in a while for special purposes, they will not be considered contributions for your support. Although the insured's contributions must be made on a regular basis, temporary interruptions caused by circumstances beyond the insured person's control, such as illness or unemployment, will be disregarded unless during this interrruption someone else takes over responsibility for supporting you on a permanent basis.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">One-half support.</E> The insured person provides one-half of your support if he or she makes regular contributions for your ordinary living costs; the amount of these contributions equals or exceeds one-half of your ordinary living costs; and any income (from sources other than the insured person) you have available for support purposes is one-half or less of your ordinary living costs. We will consider any income which is available to you for your support whether or not that income is actually used for your ordinary living costs. Ordinary living costs are the costs for your food, shelter, routine medical care, and similar necessities. A contribution may be in cash, goods, or services. The insured is not providing at least one-half of your support unless he or she has done so for a reasonable period of time. Ordinarily, we consider a reasonable period to be the 12-month period immediately preceding the time when the one-half support requirement must be met under the rules in §§ 404.362 through 404.364 (for child's benefits), in § 404.370(f) (for parent's benefits) and in § 404.408a(c) (for benefits where the Government pension offset may be applied). A shorter period will be considered reasonable under the following circumstances:</P>
          <P>(1) At some point within the 12-month period, the insured either begins or stops providing at least one-half of your support on a permanent basis and this is a change in the way you had been supported up to then. In these circumstances, the time from the change up to the end of the 12-month period will be considered a reasonable period, unless paragraph (b)(2) of this section applies. The change in your source of support must be permanent and not temporary. Changes caused by seasonal employment or customary visits to the insured's home are considered temporary.</P>
          <P>(2) The insured provided one-half or more of your support for at least 3 months of the 12-month period, but was forced to stop or reduce contributions because of circumstances beyond his or her control, such as illness or unemployment, and no one else took over the responsibility for providing at least one-half of your support on a permanent basis. Any support you received from a public assistance program is not considered as a taking over of responsibility for your support by someone else. Under these circumstances, a reasonable period is that part of the 12-month period before the insured was forced to reduce or stop providing at least one-half of your support.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">“Living with” the insured.</E> You are living with the insured if you ordinarily live in the same home with the insured and he or she is exercising, or has the right to exercise, parental control and authority over your activities. You are living with the insured during temporary separations if you and the insured expect to live together in the <PRTPAGE P="126"/>same place after the separation. Temporary separations may include the insured's absence because of active military service or imprisonment if he or she still exercises parental control and authority. However, you are not considered to be living with the insured if you are in active military service or in prison. If <E T="03">living with</E> is used to establish dependency for your eligibility to child's benefits and the date your application is filed is used for establishing the point for determining dependency, you must have been living with the insured throughout the month your application is filed in order to be entitled to benefits for that month.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Determining first month of entitlement.</E> In evaluating whether dependency is established under paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section, for purposes of determining whether the conditions of entitlement are met <E T="03">throughout</E> the first month as stated in § 404.352(a)(2)(i), we will not use the temporary separation or temporary interruption rules.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 45 FR 65540, Oct. 3, 1980; 48 FR 21928, May 16, 1983; 52 FR 26955, July 17, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.367</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you are a “full-time elementary or secondary school student”.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be eligible for child's benefits if you are a full-time elementary or secondary school student. For the purposes of determining whether the conditions of entitlement are met throughout the first month as stated in § 404.352(a)(2)(i), if you are entitled as a student on the basis of attendance at an elementary or secondary school, you will be considered to be in full-time attendance for a month during any part of which you are in full-time attendance. You are a full-time elementary or secondary school student if you meet all the following conditions:</P>
          <P>(a) You attend a school which provides elementary or secondary education as determined under the law of the State or other jurisdiction in which it is located. Participation in the following programs also meets the requirements of this paragraph:</P>
          <P>(1) You are instructed in elementary or secondary education at home in accordance with a home school law of the State or other jurisdiction in which you reside; or</P>
          <P>(2) You are in an independent study elementary or secondary education program in accordance with the law of the State or other jurisdiction in which you reside which is administered by the local school or school district/jurisdiction.</P>
          <P>(b) You are in full-time attendance in a day or evening noncorrespondence course of at least 13 weeks duration and you are carrying a subject load which is considered full-time for day students under the institution's standards and practices. If you are in a home schooling program as described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, you must be carrying a subject load which is considered full-time for day students under standards and practices set by the State or other jurisdiction in which you reside;</P>
          <P>(c) To be considered in full-time attendance, your scheduled attendance must be at the rate of at least 20 hours per week unless one of the exceptions in paragraphs (c) (1) and (2) of this section applies. If you are in an independent study program as described in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, your number of hours spent in school attendance are determined by combining the number of hours of attendance at a school facility with the agreed upon number of hours spent in independent study. You may still be considered in full-time attendance if your scheduled rate of attendance is below 20 hours per week if we find that:</P>
          <P>(1) The school attended does not schedule at least 20 hours per week and going to that particular school is your only reasonable alternative; or</P>
          <P>(2) Your medical condition prevents you from having scheduled attendance of at least 20 hours per week. To prove that your medical condition prevents you from scheduling 20 hours per week, we may request that you provide appropriate medical evidence or a statement from the school.</P>
          <P>(d) You are not being paid while attending the school by an employer who has requested or required that you attend the school;</P>
          <P>(e) You are in grade 12 or below; and</P>

          <P>(f) You are not subject to the provisions in § 404.468 for nonpayment of <PRTPAGE P="127"/>benefits to certain prisoners and certain other inmates of publicly funded institutions.</P>
          <CITA>[48 FR 21928, May 16, 1983, as amended at 48 FR 55452, Dec. 13, 1983; 56 FR 35999, July 30, 1991; 61 FR 38363, July 24, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.368</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When you are considered a full-time student during a period of nonattendance.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are a full-time student, your eligibility may continue during a period of nonattendance (including part-time attendance) if all the following conditions are met:</P>
          <P>(a) The period of nonattendance is 4 consecutive months or less;</P>
          <P>(b) You show us that you intend to resume your studies as a full-time student at the end of the period or at the end of the period you are a full-time student; and</P>
          <P>(c) The period of nonattendance is not due to your expulsion or suspension from the school.</P>
          <CITA>[48 FR 21929, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Parent's Benefits</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.370</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to parent's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be entitled to parent's benefits on the earnings record of someone who has died and was fully insured. You are entitled to these benefits if all the following conditions are met:</P>
          <P>(a) You are related to the insured person as his or her parent in one of the ways described in § 404.374.</P>
          <P>(b) You are at least 62 years old.</P>
          <P>(c) You have not married since the insured person died.</P>
          <P>(d) You apply.</P>
          <P>(e) You are not entitled to an old-age benefit equal to or larger than the parent's benefit amount.</P>

          <P>(f) You were receiving at least one-half of your support from the insured at the time he or she died, or at the beginning of any period of disability he or she had that continued up to death. See § 404.366(b) for a definition of <E T="03">one-half support.</E> If you were receiving one-half of your support from the insured at the time of the insured's death, you must give us proof of this support within 2 years of the insured's death. If you were receiving one-half of your support from the insured at the time his or her period of disability began, you must give us proof of this support within 2 years of the month in which the insured filed his or her application for the period of disability. You must file the evidence of support even though you may not be eligible for parent's benefits until a later time. There are two exceptions to the 2-year filing requirement:</P>
          <P>(1) If there is a good cause for failure to provide proof of support within the 2-year period, we will consider the proof you give us as though it were provided within the 2-year period. Good cause does not exist if you were informed of the need to provide the proof within the 2-year period and you neglected to do so or did not intend to do so. Good cause will be found to exist if you did not provide the proof within the time limit due to—</P>
          <P>(i) Circumstances beyond your control, such as extended illness, mental or physical incapacity, or a language barrier;</P>
          <P>(ii) Incorrect or incomplete information we furnished you;</P>
          <P>(iii) Your efforts to get proof of the support without realizing that you could submit the proof after you gave us some other evidence of that support; or</P>
          <P>(iv) Unusual or unavoidable circumstances that show you could not reasonably be expected to know of the 2-year time limit.</P>
          <P>(2) The Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940 provides for extending the filing time.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.371</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When parent's benefits begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) You are entitled to parent's benefits beginning with the first month covered by your application in which you meet all the other requirements for entitlement.</P>
          <P>(b) Your entitlement to benefits ends with the month before the month in which one of the following events first occurs:</P>
          <P>(1) You become entitled to an old-age benefit equal to or larger than the parent's benefit.</P>

          <P>(2) You marry, unless your marriage is to someone entitled to wife's, husband's, widow's, widower's, mother's, father's, parent's or disabled child's <PRTPAGE P="128"/>benefits. If you marry a person entitled to these benefits, the marriage does not affect your benefits.</P>
          <P>(3) You die.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 49 FR 24116, June 12, 1984]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.373</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Parent's benefit amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Your parent's monthly benefit before any reduction that may be made as explained in § 404.304, is figured in one of the following ways:</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">One parent entitled.</E> Your parent's monthly benefit is equal to 82<FR>1/2</FR> percent of the insured person's primary insurance amount if you are the only parent entitled to benefits on his or her earnings record.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">More than one parent entitled.</E> Your parent's monthly benefit is equal to 75 percent of the insured person's primary insurance amount if there is another parent entitled to benefits on his or her earnings record.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.374</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Parent's relationship to the insured.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You may be eligible for benefits as the insured person's parent if—</P>
          <P>(a) You are the mother or father of the insured and would be considered his or her parent under the laws of the State where the insured had a permanent home when he or she died;</P>
          <P>(b) You are the adoptive parent of the insured and legally adopted him or her before the insured person became 16 years old; or</P>

          <P>(c) You are the stepparent of the insured and you married the insured's parent or adoptive parent before the insured became 16 years old. The marriage must be valid under the laws of the State where the insured had his or her permanent home when he or she died. See § 404.303 for a definition of <E T="03">permanent home.</E>
          </P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">
          <E T="05">Special Payments at Age 72</E>
        </HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.380</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>

          <P>Some older persons had little or no chance to become fully insured for regular social security benefits during their working years. For those who became 72 years old several years ago but are not fully insured, a <E T="03">special payment</E> may be payable as described in the following sections.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.381</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to special age 72 payments.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You are entitled to a special age 72 payment if—</P>
          <P>(a) You have attained the age of 72; and</P>
          <P>(1) You attained such age before 1968; or</P>
          <P>(2) You attained such age after 1967—or, for applications filed after November 5, 1990, you attained age 72 after 1967 and before 1972—and have at least 3 quarters of coverage for each calendar year elapsing after 1966 and before the year in which you attained age 72 (see subpart B for a description of quarters of coverage);</P>
          <P>(b) You reside in one of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, or the Northern Mariana Islands;</P>
          <P>(c) You apply; and</P>
          <P>(d) You are a U.S. citizen or a citizen of the Northern Mariana Islands; or you are an alien who was legally admitted for permanent residence in the United States and who has resided here continuously for 5 years. Residence in the United States includes residence in the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, American Samoa, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 57 FR 21598, May 21, 1992]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.382</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When special age 72 payments begin and end.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Your entitlement to the special age 72 payment begins with the first month covered by your application in which you meet all the other requirements for entitlement.</P>
          <P>(b) Your entitlement to this payment ends with the month before the month of your death.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.383</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Special age 72 payment amounts.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Payment from May 1983 on.</E> If you are entitled to special age 72 payments from May 1983 on, you will receive a monthly payment of $125.60. If your spouse is also entitled to special age 72 payments, he or she will also receive $125.60. This amount, first payable for June 1982, will be increased when <E T="03">cost-of-living</E> adjustments of Social Security benefits occur. This special payment may be reduced, suspended or not paid at all as explained in § 404.384.<PRTPAGE P="129"/>
          </P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Payment prior to May 1983.</E> If a husband or a single individual is entitled to special age 72 payments for months prior to May 1983, the amount payable was $125.60 for the months since June 1982. The wife received an amount approximiately one-half the husband's amount (i.e., $63.00 for months in the period June 1982-April 1983).</P>
          <CITA>[49 FR 24116, June 12, 1984]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.384</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reductions, suspensions, and nonpayments of special age 72 payments.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> Special age 72 payments may not be paid for any month you receive public assistance payments. The payment may be reduced if you or your spouse are eligible for a government pension. In some instances, the special payment may not be paid while you are outside the United States. The rules on when special payments may be suspended, reduced, or not paid are provided in paragraphs (b) through (e) of this section.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Suspension of special age 72 payments when you receive certain assistance payments.</E> You cannot receive the special payment if supplemental security income or aid to families with dependent children (AFDC) payments are payable to you, or if your needs are considered in setting the amounts of these assistance payments made to someone else. However, if these assistance payments are stopped, you may receive the special payment beginning with the last month for which the assistance payments were paid.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Reduction of special age 72 payments when you or your spouse are eligible for a government pension.</E> Special payments are reduced for any regular government pension (or lump-sum payment given instead of a pension) that you or your spouse are eligible for at retirement. A government pension is any annuity, pension, or retirement pay from the Federal Government, a State government or political subdivision, or any organization wholly owned by the Federal or State government. Also included as a government pension is any social security benefit. The term government pension does not include workmen's compensation payments or Veterans Administration payments for a service-connected disability or death.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Amount of reduction because of a government pension.</E> If you are eligible for a government pension, the amount of the pension will be subtracted from your special age 72 payment. If your spouse is eligible for a government pension but is not entitled to the special payment, your special payment is reduced (after any reduction due to your own government pension) by the difference between the pension amount and the full special payment amount. If both you and your spouse are entitled to the special payment, each spouse's payment is first reduced by the amount of his or her own government pension (if any). Then, the wife's special payment is reduced by the amount that the husband's government pension exceeds the full special payment. The husband's special payment is also reduced by the amount that the wife's government pension exceeds the full special payment.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Nonpayment of special age 72 payments when you are not residing in the United States.</E> No special payment is due you for any month you are not a resident of one of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, or the Northern Mariana Islands. Also, payment to you may not be permitted under the rules in § 404.463 if you are an alien living outside the United States.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 49 FR 24116, June 12, 1984]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Lump-Sum Death Payment</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.390</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>General.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If a person is fully or currently insured when he or she dies, a lump-sum death payment of $255 may be paid to the widow or widower of the deceased if he or she was living in the same household with the deceased at the time of his or her death. If the insured is not survived by a widow(er) who meets this requirement, all or part of the $255 payment may be made to someone else as described in § 404.392.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21929, May 16, 1983; 61 FR 41330, Aug. 8, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <PRTPAGE P="130"/>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.391</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to the lump-sum death payment as a widow or widower who was living in the same household.</SUBJECT>
          <P>You are entitled to the lump-sum death payment as a widow or widower who was living in the same household if—</P>
          <P>(a) You are the widow or widower of the deceased insured individual based upon a relationship described in § 404.345 or § 404.346;</P>
          <P>(b) You apply for this payment within two years after the date of the insured's death. You need not apply again if, in the month prior to the death of the insured, you were entitled to wife's or husband's benefits on his or her earnings record; and</P>

          <P>(c) You were living in the same household with the insured at the time of his or her death. The term <E T="03">living in the same household</E> is defined in § 404.347.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 34481, June 15, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21929, May 16, 1983]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.392</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who is entitled to the lump-sum death payment when there is no widow(er) who was living in the same household.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> If the insured individual is not survived by a widow(er) who meets the requirements of § 404.391, the lump-sum death payment shall be paid as follows:</P>
          <P>(1) To a person who is entitled (or would have been entitled had a timely application been filed) to widow's or widower's benefits (as described in § 404.335) or mother's or father's benefits (as described in § 404.339) on the work record of the deceased worker for the month of that worker's death; or</P>
          <P>(2) If no person described in (1) survives, in equal shares to each person who is entitled (or would have been entitled had a timely application been filed) to child's benefits (as described in § 404.350) on the work record of the deceased worker for the month of that worker's death.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Application requirement.</E> A person who meets the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of this section need not apply to receive the lump-sum death payment if, for the month prior to the death of the insured, that person was entitled to wife's or husband's benefits on the insured's earnings record. Otherwise, an application must be filed within 2 years of the insured's death.</P>
          <CITA>[48 FR 21929, May 16, 1983; 61 FR 41330, Aug. 8, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart E—Deductions; Reductions; and Nonpayments of Benefits</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 202, 203, 204 (a) and (e), 205 (a) and (c), 222(b), 223(e), 224, 225, and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 402, 403, 404 (a) and (e), 405 (a) and (c), 422(b), 423(e), 424a, 425, and 902(a)(5)).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.401</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deduction, reduction, and nonpayment of monthly benefits or lump-sum death payments.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Under certain conditions the amount of a monthly insurance benefit (see §§ 404.377 through 404.380 for provisions concerning special payments at age 72) or the lump-sum death payment as calculated under the pertinent provisions of sections 202 and 203 of the Act (including reduction for age under section 202(q) of a monthly benefit) must be increased or decreased to determine the amount to be actually paid to a beneficiary. Increases in the amount of a monthly benefit or lump-sum death payment are based upon recomputation and recalculations of the primary insurance amount (see subpart C of this part). A decrease in the amount of a monthly benefit or lump-sum death payment is required in the following instances:</P>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Reductions.</E> A reduction of a person's monthly benefit is required where:</P>
        <P>(1) The total amount of the monthly benefits payable on an earnings record exceeds the maximum that may be paid (see § 404.403);</P>
        <P>(2) An application for monthly benefits is effective for a month during a retroactive period, and the maximum has already been paid for that month or would be exceeded if such benefit were paid for that month (see § 404.406);</P>

        <P>(3) An individual is entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits in addition to any other monthly benefit (see § 404.407);<PRTPAGE P="131"/>
        </P>
        <P>(4) An individual under age 65 is concurrently entitled to disability insurance benefits and to certain public disability benefits (see § 404.408);</P>
        <P>(5) An individual is entitled in a month to a widow's or widower's insurance benefit that is reduced under section 202 (e)(4) or (f)(5) of the Act and to any other monthly insurance benefit other than an old-age insurance benefit (see § 404.407(b)); or</P>
        <P>(6) An individual is entitled in a month to old-age, disability, wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's insurance benefit and reduction is required under section 202(q) of the Act (see § 404.410).</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Deductions.</E> A deduction from a monthly benefit or a lump-sum death payment may be required because of:</P>
        <P>(1) An individual's earnings or work (see §§ 404.415 and 404.417);</P>
        <P>(2) Failure of certain beneficiaries receiving wife's or mother's insurance benefits to have a child in her care (see § 404.421);</P>
        <P>(3) The earnings or work of an old-age insurance beneficiary where a wife, husband, or child is also entitled to benefits (see §§ 404.415 and 404.417);</P>
        <P>(4) Failure to report within the prescribed period either certain work outside the United States or not having the care of a child (see § 404.451);</P>
        <P>(5) Failure to report within the prescribed period earnings from work in employment or self-employment (see § 404.453);</P>
        <P>(6) Refusal to accept rehabilitation services in certain cases (see § 404.422); or</P>
        <P>(7) Certain taxes which were neither deducted from the wages of maritime employees nor paid to the Federal Government (see § 404.457).</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Adjustments.</E> Adjustments may be required because an error has been made in payments to an individual (see subpart F of this part).</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Nonpayments.</E> Nonpayment of monthly benefits may be required because:</P>
        <P>(1) The individual is an alien who has been outside the United States for more than 6 months (see § 404.460);</P>
        <P>(2) The individual on whose earnings record entitlement is based has been deported (see § 404.464);</P>
        <P>(3) The individual is engaged in substantial gainful activity while entitled to disability insurance benefits based on “statutory blindness” (see § 404.467); or</P>
        <P>(4) The individual has not provided satisfactory proof that he or she has a Social Security number or has not properly applied for a Social Security number (see § 404.469).</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Recalculation.</E> A reduction by recalculation of a benefit amount may be prescribed because an individual has been convicted of certain offenses (see § 404.465) or because the primary insurance amount is recalculated (see subpart C of this part).</P>
        <P>(f) <E T="03">Suspensions.</E> Suspension of monthly benefits may be required pursuant to section 203(h)(3) of the Act (the Social Security Administration has information indicating that work deductions may reasonably be expected for the year), or pursuant to section 225 of the Act (the Social Security Administration has information indicating a beneficiary is no longer disabled).</P>
        <CITA>[40 FR 30813, July 23, 1975, as amended at 48 FR 37016, Aug. 16, 1983; 56 FR 41789, Aug. 23, 1991]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.401a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When we do not pay benefits because of a disability beneficiary's work activity.</SUBJECT>
        <P>If you are receiving benefits because you are disabled or blind as defined in title II of the Social Security Act, we will stop your monthly benefits even though you have a disabling impairment (§ 404.1511), if you engage in substantial gainful activity during the reentitlement period (§ 404.1592a) following completion of the trial work period (§ 404.1592). You will, however, be paid benefits for the first month after the trial work period in which you do substantial gainful activity and the two succeeding months, whether or not you do substantial gainful activity in those two months. If anyone else is receiving monthly benefits based on your earnings record, that individual will not be paid benefits for any month for which you cannot be paid benefits during the reentitlement period. Earnings from work activity during a trial work period will not stop your benefits.</P>
        <CITA>[49 FR 22271, May 29, 1984, as amended at 58 FR 64883, Dec. 10, 1993]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <PRTPAGE P="132"/>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.402</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Interrelationship of deductions, reductions, adjustments, and nonpayment of benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Deductions, reductions, adjustment.</E> Deductions because of earnings or work (see §§ 404.415 and 404.417); failure to have a child “in her care” (see § 404.421); refusal to accept rehabilitation services (see § 404.422); as a penalty for failure to timely report noncovered work outside the United States, failure by a woman to report that she no longer has a child “in her care,” or failure to timely report earnings (see §§ 404.451 and 404.453); because of unpaid maritime taxes (see § 404.457); or nonpayments because of drug addiction and alcoholism to individuals other than an insured individual who are entitled to benefits on the insured individual's earnings record are made:</P>
        <P>(1) Before making any reductions because of the <E T="03">maximum</E> (see § 404.403),</P>
        <P>(2) Before applying the benefit <E T="03">rounding</E> provisions (see § 404.304(f)), and,</P>
        <P>(3) Except for deductions imposed as a penalty (see §§ 404.451 and 404.453), before making any adjustment necessary because an error has been made in the payment of benefits (see subpart F). However, for purposes of charging excess earnings for taxable years beginning after December 1960 or ending after June 1961, see paragraph (b) of this section and § 404.437 for reductions that apply before such charging.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Reductions, nonpayments.</E> (1) Reduction because of the <E T="03">maximum</E> (see § 404.403) is made:</P>
        <P>(i) Before reduction because of simultaneous entitlement to old-age or disability insurance benefits and to other benefits (see § 404.407);</P>
        <P>(ii) Before reduction in benefits for age (see §§ 404.410 through 404.413);</P>
        <P>(iii) Before adjustment necessary because an error has been made in the payment of benefits (see subpart F of this part);</P>
        <P>(iv) Before reduction because of entitlement to certain public disability benefits provided under Federal, State, or local laws or plans (see § 404.408);</P>
        <P>(v) Before nonpayment of an individual's benefits because he is an alien living outside the United States for 6 months (see § 404.460), or because of deportation (see § 404.464); and</P>
        <P>(vi) Before the redetermination of the amount of benefit payable to an individual who has been convicted of certain offenses (see § 404.465).</P>
        <P>(2) Reduction of benefits because of entitlement to certain public disability benefits (see § 404.408) is made before deduction:</P>
        <P>(i) Under section 203 of the Act relating to work (see §§ 404.415, 404.417, 404.451, and 404.453) and failure to have care of a child (see §§ 404.421 and 404.451), and</P>
        <P>(ii) Under section 222(b) of the Act on account of refusal to accept rehabilitation services (see § 404.422).</P>
        <P>(3) Reduction of the benefit of a spouse who is receiving a Government pension (see § 404.408(a)) is made after the withholding of payments as listed in paragraph (d)(1) of this section and after reduction because of receipt of certain public disability benefits (paragraph (b)(2) of this section).</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Alien outside the United States; deportation nonpayment—deduction.</E> If an individual is subject to nonpayment of a benefit for a month under § 404.460 or § 404.464, no deduction is made from his benefit for that month under § 404.415, § 404.417, or § 404.421, and no deduction is made because of that individual's work from the benefit of any person entitled or deemed entitled to benefits under § 404.420, on his earnings record, for that month.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Order of priority—deductions and other withholding provisions.</E> Deductions and other withholding provisions are applied in accordance with the following order of priority:</P>
        <P>(1) Current nonpayments under §§ 404.460, 404.464, 404.465, 404.467, and 404.469;</P>
        <P>(2) Current reductions under § 404.408;</P>
        <P>(3) Current reductions under § 404.408a;</P>
        <P>(4) Current deductions under §§ 404.417, 404.421, and 404.422;</P>
        <P>(5) Current withholding of benefits under § 404.456;</P>
        <P>(6) Unpaid maritime tax deductions (§ 404.457);</P>

        <P>(7) Withholdings to recover overpayments (see subpart F of this part);<PRTPAGE P="133"/>
        </P>
        <P>(8) Penalty deductions under §§ 404.451 and 404.453.</P>
        <CITA>[40 FR 30813, July 23, 1975, as amended at 44 FR 29047, May 18, 1979; 48 FR 37016, Aug. 16, 1983; 48 FR 46148, Oct. 11, 1983; 56 FR 41789, Aug. 23, 1991; 60 FR 8146, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.403</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction where total monthly benefits exceed maximum family benefits payable.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> (1) The Social Security Act limits the amount of monthly benefits that can be paid for any month based on the earnings of an insured individual. If the total benefits to which all persons are entitled on one earnings record exceed a maximum amount prescribed by law, then those benefits must be reduced so that they do not exceed that maximum.</P>

        <P>(2) The method of determining the total benefits payable (the <E T="03">family maximum</E>) depends on when the insured individual died or became eligible, whichever is earlier. For purposes of this section, the year in which the insured individual becomes eligible refers generally to the year in which the individual attains age 62 or becomes disabled. However, where eligibility or death is in 1979 or later, the year of death, attainment of age 62, or beginning of current disability does not control if the insured individual was entitled to a disability benefit within the 12 month period preceding current eligibility or death. Instead the year in which the individual became eligible for the former disability insurance benefit is the year of eligibility.</P>
        <P>(3) The benefits of an individual entitled as a divorced spouse or surviving divorced spouse will not be reduced pursuant to this section. The benefits of all other individuals entitled on the same record will be determined under this section as if no such divorced spouse or surviving divorced spouse were entitled to benefits.</P>
        <P>(4) In any case where more than one individual is entitled to benefits as the spouse or surviving spouse of a worker for the same month, and at least one of those individuals is entitled based on a marriage not valid under State law (see §§ 404.345 and 404.346), the benefits of the individual whose entitlement is based on a valid marriage under State law will not be reduced pursuant to this section. The benefits of all other individuals entitled on the same record (unless excluded by paragraph (a)(3) of this section) will be determined under this section as if such validly married individual were not entitled to benefits.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Eligibility or death before 1979.</E> Where more than one individual is entitled to monthly benefits for the same month on the same earnings record, a reduction in the total benefits payable for that month may be required (except in cases involving a <E T="03">saving clause</E>—see § 404.405) if the maximum family benefit is exceeded. The maximum is exceeded if the total of the monthly benefits exceeds the amount appearing in column V of the applicable table in section 215(a) of the Act on the line on which appears in column IV the primary insurance amount of the insured individual whose earnings record is the basis for the benefits payable. Where the maximum is exceeded, the total benefits for each month after 1964 are reduced to the amount appearing in column V. However, when any of the persons entitled to benefits on the insured individual's earnings would, except for the limitation described in § 404.353(b), be entitled to child's insurance benefits on the basis of the earnings record of one or more other insured individuals, the total benefits payable may not be reduced to less than the smaller of—</P>
        <P>(1) The sum of the maximum amounts of benefits payable on the basis of the earnings records of all such insured individuals, or</P>

        <P>(2) The last figure in column V of the applicable table in (or deemed to be in) section 215(a) of the Act. The <E T="03">applicable</E> table refers to the table which is effective for the month the benefit is payable.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Eligible for old-age insurance benefits or dies in 1979.</E> If an insured individual becomes eligible for old-age insurance benefits or dies in 1979, the monthly maximum is as follows—</P>
        <P>(1) 150 percent of the first $230 of the individual's primary insurance amount, plus</P>

        <P>(2) 272 percent of the primary insurance amount over $230 but not over $332, plus<PRTPAGE P="134"/>
        </P>
        <P>(3) 134 percent of the primary insurance amount over $332 but not over $433, plus</P>
        <P>(4) 175 percent of the primary insurance amount over $433.</P>
        <FP>If the total of this computation is not a multiple of $0.10, it will be rounded to the next lower multiple of $0.10.</FP>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Eligible for old-age insurance benefits or dies after 1979.</E> (1) If an insured individual becomes eligible for old-age insurance benefits or dies after 1979, the monthly maximum is computed as in paragraph (c) of this section. However, the dollar amounts shown there will be updated each year as average earnings rise. This updating is done by first dividing the average of the total wages (see § 404.203(m)) for the second year before the individual dies or becomes eligible, by the average of the total wages for 1977. The result of that computation is then multiplied by each dollar amount in the formula in paragraph (c) of this section. Each updated dollar amount will be rounded to the nearer dollar; if the amount is an exact multiple of $0.50 (but not of $1), it will be rounded to the next higher $1.</P>

        <P>(2) Before November 2 of each calendar year after 1978, the Commissioner will publish in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> the formula and updated dollar amounts to be used for determining the monthly maximum for the following year.</P>
        <P>(d-1) <E T="03">Entitled to disability insurance benefits after June 1980.</E> If you first become eligible for old-age or disability insurance benefits after 1978 and first entitled to disability insurance benefits after June 1980, we compute the monthly family maximum under a formula which is different from that in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. The computation under the new formula is as follows:</P>
        <P>(1) We take 85 percent of your average indexed monthly earnings (as computed in § 404.212a of this part) and compare that figure with your primary insurance amount (as computed in § 404.212). We work with the larger of these two amounts.</P>
        <P>(2) We take 150 percent of your primary insurance amount.</P>
        <P>(3) We compare the results of paragraphs (d-1) (1) and (2) of this section. The smaller amount is the monthly family maximum. As a result of this rule, the entitled spouse and children of some workers will not be paid any benefits because the family maximum does not exceed the primary insurance amount.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Person entitled on more than one record during years after 1978 and before 1984.</E> (1) If any of the persons entitled to monthly benefits on the earnings record of an insured individual would, except for the limitation described in § 404.353(b), be entitled to child's insurance benefits on the earnings record of one or more other insured individuals, the total benefits payable may not be reduced to less than the smaller of—(i) the sum of the maximum amounts of benefits payable on the earnings records of all the insured individuals, or (ii) 1.75 times the highest primary insurance amount possible for that month based on the average indexed monthly earnings equal to one-twelfth of the contribution and benefit base determined for that year.</P>
        <P>(2) If benefits are payable on the earnings of more than one individual and the primary insurance amount of one of the insured individuals was computed under the provisions in effect before 1979 and the primary insurance amount of the others was computed under the provisions in effect after 1978, the maximum monthly benefits cannot be more than the amount computed under paragraph (e)(1) of this section.</P>
        <P>(f) <E T="03">Person entitled on more than one record for years after 1983.</E> (1) If any person for whom paragraphs (c) and (d) would apply is entitled to monthly benefits on the earnings record of an insured individual would, except for the limitation described in § 404.353(b), be entitled to child's insurance benefits on the earnings record of one or more other insured individuals, the total benefits payable to all persons on the earnings record of any of those insured individuals may not be reduced to less than the smaller of:</P>
        <P>(i) The sum of the maximum amounts of benefits payable on the earnings records of all the insured individuals, or</P>

        <P>(ii) 1.75 times the highest primary insurance amount possible for January 1983, or if later, January of the year <PRTPAGE P="135"/>that the person becomes entitled or reentitled on more than one record.</P>
        <FP>This highest primary insurance amount possible for that year will be based on the average indexed monthly earnings equal to one-twelfth of the contribution and benefit base determined for that year. Thereafter, the total monthly benefits payable to persons on the earnings record of those insured individuals will then be increased only when monthly benefits are increased because of cost-of-living adjustments (see § 404.270ff).</FP>
        <P>(2) If benefits are payable on the earnings of more than one individual and the primary insurance amount of one of the insured individuals was computed under the provisions in effect before 1979 and the primary insurance amount of the other was computed under the provisions in effect after 1978, the maximum monthly benefits cannot be more than the amount computed under paragraph (f)(1) of this section.</P>
        <CITA>[45 FR 1611, Jan. 8, 1980, as amended at 46 FR 25601, May 8, 1981; 48 FR 46148, Oct. 11, 1983; 51 FR 12606, Apr. 14, 1986; 58 FR 64892, Dec. 10, 1993; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.404</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>How reduction for maximum affects insured individual and other persons entitled on his earnings record.</SUBJECT>
        <P>If a reduction of monthly benefits is required under the provisions of § 404.403, the monthly benefit amount of each of the persons entitled to a monthly benefits on the same earnings record (with the exception of the individual entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits) is proportionately reduced so that the total benefits that can be paid in 1 month (including an amount equal to the primary insurance amount of the old-age or disability insurance beneficiary, when applicable) does not exceed the maximum family benefit (except as provided in § 404.405 where various savings clause provisions are described).</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.405</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Situations where total benefits can exceed maximum because of “savings clause.”</SUBJECT>
        <P>The following provisions are <E T="03">savings clauses</E> and describe exceptions to the rules concerning the maximum amount payable on an individual's earnings record in a month as described in § 404.403. The effect of a <E T="03">savings clause</E> is to avoid lowering benefit amounts or to guarantee minimum increases to certain persons entitled on the earnings record of the insured individual when a statutory change has been made that would otherwise disadvantage them. The reduction described in § 404.403 does not apply in the following instances:</P>
        <P>(a)-(m) [Reserved]</P>
        <P>(n) <E T="03">Months after August 1972.</E> The reduction described in § 404.403(a) shall not apply to benefits for months after August 1972 where two or more persons were entitled to benefits for August 1972 based upon the filing of an application in August 1972 or earlier and the total of such benefits was subject to reduction for the maximum under § 404.403 (or would have been subject to such reduction except for this paragraph) for January 1971. In such a case, maximum family benefits on the insured individual's earnings record for any month after August 1972 may not be less than the larger of:</P>

        <P>(1) The maximum family benefits for such month determined under the applicable table in section 215(a) of the Act (the <E T="03">applicable</E> table in section 215(a) is that table which is effective for the month the benefit is payable or in the case of a lump-sum payment, the month the individual died); or</P>
        <P>(2) The total obtained by multiplying each benefit for August 1972 after reduction for the maximum but before deduction or reduction for age, by 120 percent and raising each such increased amount, if it is not a multiple of 10 cents, to the next higher multiple of 10 cents.</P>
        <P>(o) <E T="03">Months after December 1972.</E> The reduction described in § 404.403 shall not apply to benefits for months after December 1972 in the following cases:</P>
        <P>(1) In the case of a redetermination of widow's or widower's benefits, the reduction described in § 404.403 shall not apply if:</P>

        <P>(i) Two or more persons were entitled to benefits for December 1972 on the <PRTPAGE P="136"/>earnings records of a deceased individual and at least one such person is entitled to benefits as the deceased individual's widow or widower for December 1972 and for January 1973; and</P>
        <P>(ii) The total of benefits to which all persons are entitled for January 1973 is reduced (or would be reduced if deductions were not applicable) for the maximum under § 404.403.</P>
        <FP>In such case, the benefit of each person referred to in paragraph (o)(1)(i) of this section for months after December 1972 shall be no less than the amount it would have been if the widow's or widower's benefit had not been redetermined under the Social Security Amendments of 1972.</FP>
        <P>(2) In the case of entitlement to child's benefits based upon disability which began between ages 18 and 22 the reduction described in § 404.403 shall not apply if:</P>
        <P>(i) One or more persons were entitled to benefits on the insured individual's earnings record for December 1972 based upon an application filed in that month or earlier; and</P>
        <P>(ii) One or more persons not included in paragraph (o)(2)(i) of this section are entitled to child's benefits on that earnings record for January 1973 based upon disability which began in the period from ages 18 to 22; and</P>
        <P>(iii) The total benefits to which all persons are entitled on that record for January 1973 is reduced (or would be reduced if deductions were not applicable) for the maximum under § 404.403.</P>
        <FP>In such case, the benefit of each person referred to in paragraph (o)(2)(i) of this section for months after December 1972 shall be no less than the amount it would have been if the person entitled to child's benefits based upon disability in the period from ages 18 to 22 were not so entitled.</FP>
        <P>(3) In the case of entitlement of certain surviving divorced mothers, the reduction described in § 404.403 shall not apply if:</P>
        <P>(i) One or more persons were entitled to benefits on the insured individual's earnings record for December 1972 based upon an application filed in December 1972 or earlier; and</P>
        <P>(ii) One or more persons not included in paragraph (o)(3)(i) of this section are entitled to benefits on that earnings record as a surviving divorced mother for a month after December 1972; and</P>
        <P>(iii) The total of benefits to which all persons are entitled on that record for any month after December 1972 is reduced (or would be reduced if deductions were not applicable) for the maximum under § 404.403.</P>
        <FP>In such case, the benefit of each such person referred to in paragraph (o)(3)(i) of this section for months after December 1972 in which any person referred to in paragraph (o)(3)(ii) of this section is entitled shall be no less than it would have been if the person(s) referred to in paragraph (o)(3)(ii) of this section had not become entitled to benefits.</FP>
        <P>(p) <E T="03">Months after December 1973.</E> The reduction described in § 404.403 shall not apply to benefits for months after December 1973 where two or more persons were entitled to monthly benefits for January 1971 or earlier based upon applications filed in January 1971 or earlier, and the total of such benefits was subject to reduction for the maximum under § 404.403 for January 1971 or earlier. In such a case, maximum family benefits payable on the insured individual's earnings record for any month after January 1971 may not be less than the larger of:</P>

        <P>(1) The maximum family benefit for such month shown in the applicable table in section 215(a) of the Act (the <E T="03">applicable</E> table in section 215(a) of the Act is that table which is effective for the month the benefit is payable or in the case of a lump-sum payment, the month the individual died); or</P>
        <P>(2) The largest amount which has been determined payable for any month for persons entitled to benefits on the insured individual's earnings records; or</P>

        <P>(3) In the case of persons entitled to benefits on the insured individual's earnings record for the month immediately preceding the month of a general benefit or cost-of-living increase after September 1972, an amount equal to the sum of the benefit amount for each person (excluding any part of an old-age insurance benefit increased because of delayed retirement under the provisions of § 404.305(a) for the month immediately before the month of increase in the primary insurance amount (after reduction for the family <PRTPAGE P="137"/>maximum but before deductions or reductions for age) multiplied by the percentage of increase. Any such increased amount, if it is not a multiple of $0.10, will be raised to the next higher multiple of $0.10 for months before June 1982 and reduced to the next lower multiple of $0.10 for months after May 1982.</P>
        <P>(q) <E T="03">Months after May 1978.</E> The <E T="03">family maximum</E> for months after May 1978 is figured for all benefici-aries just as it would have been if none of them had gotten a benefit increase because of the retirement credit if:</P>
        <P>(1) One or more persons were entitled (without the reduction required by § 404.406) to monthly benefits for May 1978 on the wages and self-employment income of a deceased wage earner;</P>
        <P>(2) The benefit for June 1978 of at least one of those persons is increased by reason of a delayed retirement credit (see § 404.330(b)(4) or § 404.333(b)(4)); and</P>
        <P>(3) The total amount of monthly benefits to which all those persons are entitled is reduced because of the maximum or would be so reduced except for certain restrictions (see § 404.403 and § 404.402(a)).</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 40 FR 30814, July 23, 1975; 43 FR 8132, Feb. 28, 1978; 43 FR 29277, July 7, 1978; 48 FR 46148, Oct. 11, 1983]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.406</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction for maximum because of retroactive effect of application for monthly benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Under the provisions described in § 404.403, beginning with the month in which a person files an application and becomes entitled to benefits on an insured individual's earnings record, the benefit rate of other persons entitled on the same earnings record (aside from the individual on whose earnings record entitlement is based) are adjusted downward, if necessary, so that the maximum benefits payable on one earnings record will not be exceeded. An application may also be effective (retroactively) for benefits for months before the month of filing (see § 404.607). For any month before the month of filing, however, benefits that have been previously certified by the Administration for payment to other persons (on the same earnings record) are not changed. Rather, the benefit payment of the person filing the application in the later month is reduced for each month of the retroactive period to the extent that may be necessary, so that no earlier payment to some other person is made erroneous. This means that for each month of the retroactive period the amount payable to the person filing the later application is the difference, if any, between (a) the total amount of benefits actually certified for payment to other persons for that month, and (b) the maximum amount of benefits payable for that month to all persons, including the person filing later.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.407</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction because of entitlement to other benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Entitlement to old-age or disability insurance benefit and other monthly benefit.</E> If an individual is entitled to an old-age insurance benefit or disability insurance benefit for any month after August 1958 and to any other monthly benefit payable under the provisions of title II of the Act (see subpart D of this part) for the same month, such other benefit for the month, after any reduction under section 202(q) of the Act because of entitlement to such benefit for months before retirement age and any reduction under section 203(a) of the Act, is reduced (but not below zero) by an amount equal to such old-age insurance benefit (after reduction under section 202(q) of the Act) or such disability insurance benefit, as the case may be.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Entitlement to widow's or widower's benefit and other monthly benefit.</E> If an individual is entitled for any month after August 1965 to a widow's or widower's insurance benefit under the provisions of section 202 (e)(4) or (f)(5) of the Act and to any other monthly benefit payable under the provisions of title II of the Act (see subpart D) for the same month, except an old-age insurance benefit, such other insurance benefit for that month, after any reduction under paragraph (a) of this section, any reduction for age under section 202(q) of the Act, and any reduction under the provisions described in section 203(a) of the Act, shall be reduced, but not below zero, by an <PRTPAGE P="138"/>amount equal to such widow's or widower's insurance benefit after any reduction or reductions under paragraph (a) of this section or section 203(a) of the Act.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Entitlement to old-age insurance benefit and disability insurance benefit.</E> Any individual who is entitled for any month after August 1965 to both an old-age insurance benefit and a disability insurance benefit shall be entitled to only the larger of such benefits for such month, except that where the individual so elects, he or she shall instead be entitled to only the smaller of such benefits for such month. Only a person defined in § 404.612 (a), (c), or (d) may make the above described election.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Child's insurance benefits.</E> A child may, for any month, be simultaneously entitled to a child's insurance benefit on more than one individual's earnings if all the conditions for entitlement described in § 404.350 are met with respect to each claim. Where a child is simultaneously entitled to child's insurance benefits on more than one earnings record, the general rule is that the child will be paid an amount which is based on the record having the highest primary insurance amount. However, the child will be paid a higher amount which is based on the earnings record having a lower primary insurance amount if no other beneficiary entitled on any record would receive a lower benefit because the child is paid on the record with the lower primary insurance amount. (See § 404.353(b).)</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Entitlement to more than one benefit where not all benefits are child's insurance benefits and no benefit is an old-age or disability insurance benefit.</E> If an individual (other than an individual to whom section 202 (e)(4) or (f)(5) of the Act applies) is entitled for any month to more than one monthly benefit payable under the provisions of this subpart, none of which is an old-age or disability insurance benefit and all of which are not child's insurance benefits, only the greater of the monthly benefits to which he would (but for the provisions of this paragraph) otherwise be entitled is payable for such month. For months after August 1965, an individual who is entitled for any month to more than one widow's or widower's insurance benefit to which section 202 (e)(4) or (f)(5) of the Act applies is entitled to only one such benefit for such month, such benefit to be the largest of such benefits.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 51 FR 12606, Apr. 14, 1986; 54 FR 5603, Feb. 6, 1989]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.408</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction of benefits based on disability on account of receipt of certain other disability benefits provided under Federal, State, or local laws or plans.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">When reduction required.</E> Under section 224 of the Act, a disability insurance benefit to which an individual is entitled under section 223 of the Act for a month (and any monthly benefit for the same month payable to others under section 202 on the basis of the same earnings record) is reduced (except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section) by an amount determined under paragraph (c) of this section if:</P>
        <P>(1) The individual first became entitled to disability insurance benefits after 1965 but before September 1981 based on a period of disability that began after June 1, 1965, and before March 1981, and</P>
        <P>(i) The individual entitled to the disability insurance benefit is also entitled to periodic benefits under a workers' compensation law or plan of the United States or a State for that month for a total or partial disability (whether or not permanent), and</P>
        <P>(ii) The Commissioner has, in a month before that month, received a notice of the entitlement, and</P>
        <P>(iii) The individual has not attained age 62, or</P>
        <P>(2) The individual first became entitled to disability insurance benefits after August 1981 based on a disability that began after February 1981, and</P>

        <P>(i) The individual entitled to the disability insurance benefit is also, for that month, concurrently entitled to a periodic benefit (including workers' compensation or any other payments based on a work relationship) on account of a total or partial disability (whether or not permanent) under a law or plan of the United States, a State, a political subdivision, or an instrumentality of two or more of these entities, and<PRTPAGE P="139"/>
        </P>
        <P>(ii) The individual has not attained age 65.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">When reduction not made.</E> (1) The reduction of a benefit otherwise required by paragraph (a)(1) of this section is not made if the workers' compensation law or plan under which the periodic benefit is payable provides for the reduction of such periodic benefit when anyone is entitled to a benefit under title II of the Act on the basis of the earnings record of an individual entitled to a disability insurance benefit under section 223 of the Act.</P>
        <P>(2) The reduction of a benefit otherwise required by paragraph (a)(2) of this section is not to be made if:</P>
        <P>(i) The law or plan under which the periodic public disability benefit is payable provides for the reduction of that benefit when anyone is entitled to a benefit under title II of the Act on the basis of the earnings record of an individual entitled to a disability insurance benefit under section 223 of the Act and that law or plan so provided on February 18, 1981. (The reduction required by paragraph (a)(2) of this section will not be affected by public disability reduction provisions not actually in effect on this date or by changes made after February 18, 1981, to provisions that were in effect on this date providing for the reduction of benefits previously not subject to a reduction); or</P>
        <P>(ii) The benefit is a Veterans Administration benefit, a public disability benefit (except workers' compensation) payable to a public employee based on employment covered under Social Security, a public benefit based on need, or a wholly private pension or private insurance benefit.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Amount of reduction—</E>(1) <E T="03">General.</E> The total of benefits payable for a month under sections 223 and 202 of the Act to which paragraph (a) of this section applies is reduced monthly (but not below zero) by the amount by which the sum of the monthly disability insurance benefits payable on the disabled individual's earnings record and the other public disability benefits payable for that month exceeds the higher of:</P>
        <P>(i) Eighty percent of his <E T="03">average current earnings,</E> as defined in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, or</P>
        <P>(ii) The total of such individual's disability insurance benefit for such month and all other benefits payable for such month based on such individual's earnings record, prior to reduction under this section.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Limitation on reduction.</E> In no case may the total of monthly benefits payable for a month to the disabled worker and to the persons entitled to benefits for such month on his earnings record be less than:</P>
        <P>(i) The total of the benefits payable (after reduction under paragraph (a) of this section) to such beneficiaries for the first month for which reduction under this section is made, and</P>
        <P>(ii) Any increase in such benefits which is made effective for months after the first month for which reduction under this section is made.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Average current earnings defined.</E> (i) Beginning January 1, 1979, for purposes of this section, an individual's <E T="03">average current earnings</E> is the largest of either paragraph (c)(3)(i) (<E T="03">a</E>), (<E T="03">b</E>) or (<E T="03">c</E>) of this section (after reducing the amount to the next lower multiple of $1 when the amount is not a multiple of $1):</P>
        <P>(A) The average monthly wage (determined under section 215(b) of the Act as in effect prior to January 1979) used for purposes of computing the individual's disability insurance benefit under section 223 of the Act;</P>
        <P>(B) One-sixtieth of the total of the individual's wages and earnings from self-employment, without the limitations under sections 209(a) and 211(b)(1) of the Act (see paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section), for the 5 consecutive calendar years after 1950 for which the wages and earnings from self-employment were highest; or</P>

        <P>(C) One-twelfth of the total of the individual's wages and earnings from self-employment, without the limitations under sections 209(a) and 211(b)(1) of the Act (see paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section), for the calendar year in which the individual had the highest wages and earnings from self-employment during the period consisting of the calendar year in which the individual became disabled and the 5 years immediately preceding that year. Any amount so computed which is not a multiple of $1 is reduced to the next lower multiple of $1.<PRTPAGE P="140"/>
        </P>
        <P>(ii) <E T="03">Method of determining calendar year earnings in excess of the limitations under sections 209(a) and 211(b)(1) of the Act.</E> For the purposes of paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section, the extent by which the wages or earnings from self-employment of an individual exceed the maximum amount of earnings creditable under sections 209(a) and 211(b)(1) of the Act in any calendar year after 1950 and before 1978 will ordinarily be estimated on the basis of the earnings information available in the records of Administration. (See subpart I of this part.) If an individual provides satisfactory evidence of his actual earnings in any year, the extent, if any, by which his earnings exceed the limitations under sections 209(a) and 211(b)(1) of the Act shall be determined by the use of such evidence instead of by the use of estimates.</P>
        <P>(4) <E T="03">Reentitlement to disability insurance benefits.</E> If an individual's entitlement to disability insurance benefits terminates and such individual again becomes entitled to disability insurance benefits, the amount of the reduction is again computed based on the figures specified in this paragraph (c) applicable to the subsequent entitlement.</P>
        <P>(5) <E T="03">Computing disability insurance benefits.</E> When reduction is required, the total monthly Social Security disability insurance benefits payable after reduction can be more easily computed by subtracting the monthly amount of the other public disability benefit from the higher of paragraph (c)(1) (i) or (ii). This is the method employed in the examples used in this section.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Items not counted for reduction.</E> Amounts paid or incurred, or to be incurred, by the individual for medical, legal, or related expenses in connection with the claim for public disability payments (see § 404.408 (a) and (b)) or the injury or occupational disease on which the public disability award or settlement agreement is based, are excluded in computing the reduction under paragraph (a) of this section to the extent they are consonant with the applicable Federal, State, or local law or plan and reflect either the actual amount of expenses already incurred or a reasonable estimate, given the circumstances in the individual's case, of future expenses. Any expenses not established by evidence required by the Administration or not reflecting a reasonable estimate of the individual's actual future expenses will not be excluded. These medical, legal, or related expenses may be evidenced by the public disability award, compromise agreement, a court order, or by other evidence as the Administration may require. This other evidence may consist of:</P>
        <P>(1) A detailed statement by the individual's attorney, physician, or the employer's insurance carrier; or</P>
        <P>(2) Bills, receipts, or canceled checks; or</P>
        <P>(3) Other clear and convincing evidence indicating the amount of expenses; or</P>
        <P>(4) Any combination of the foregoing evidence from which the amount of expenses may be determinable.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Certification by individual concerning eligibility for public disability benefits.</E> Where it appears that an individual may be eligible for a public disability benefit which would give rise to a reduction under paragraph (a) of this section, the individual may be required, as a condition of certification for payment of any benefit under section 223 of the Act to any individual for any month, and of any benefit under section 202 of the Act for any month based on such individual's earnings record, to furnish evidence as requested by the Administration and to certify as to:</P>
        <P>(1) Whether he or she has filed or intends to file any claim for a public disability benefit, and</P>
        <P>(2) If he or she has so filed, whether there has been a decision on the claim. The Commissioner may rely, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, upon a certification that he or she has not filed and does not intend to file such a claim, or that he or she has filed and no decision has been made, in certifying any benefit for payment pursuant to section 205(i) of the Act.</P>
        <P>(f) <E T="03">Verification of eligibility or entitlement to a public disability benefit under paragraph (a).</E> Section 224 of the Act requires the head of any Federal agency to furnish the Commissioner information from the Federal agency's records which is needed to determine the reduction amount, if any, or verify other information to carry out the provisions <PRTPAGE P="141"/>of this section. The Commissioner is authorized to enter into agreements with States, political subdivisions, and other organizations that administer a law or plan of public disability benefits in order to obtain information that may be required to carry out the provisions of this section.</P>
        <P>(g) <E T="03">Public disability benefit payable on other than a monthly basis.</E> Where public disability benefits are paid periodically but not monthly, or in a lump sum as a commutation of or a substitute for periodic benefits, such as a compromise and release settlement, the reduction under this section is made at the time or times and in the amounts that the Administration determines will approximate as nearly as practicable the reduction required under paragraph (a) of this section.</P>
        <P>(h) <E T="03">Priorities.</E> (1) For an explanation of when a reduction is made under this section where other reductions, deductions, etc., are involved, see § 404.402.</P>

        <P>(2) Whenever a reduction in the total of benefits for any month based on an individual's earnings record is made under paragraph (a) of this section, each benefit, except the disability insurance benefit, is first proportionately decreased. Any excess reduction over the sum of all the benefits, other than the disability insurance benefit, is then applied to the disability insurance benefit.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 1:</HD>
          <P>Effective September 1981, Harold is entitled to a monthly disability primary insurance amount of $507.90 and a monthly public disability benefit of $410.00 from the State. Eighty percent of Harold's average current earnings is $800.00. Because this amount ($800.00) is higher than Harold's disability insurance benefit ($507.90), we subtract Harold's monthly public disability benefit ($410.00) from eighty percent of his average current earnings ($800.00). This leaves Harold a reduced monthly disability benefit of $390.00.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 2:</HD>
          <P>In September 1981, Tom is entitled to a monthly disability primary insurance amount of $559.30. His wife and two children are also entitled to monthly benefits of $93.20 each. The total family benefit is $838.90. Tom is also receiving a monthly workers' compensation benefit of $500.00 from the State. Eighty percent of Tom's average current earnings is $820.10. Because the total family benefit ($838.90) is higher than 80 percent of the average current earnings ($820.10), we subtract the monthly workers' compensation benefit ($500.00) from the total family benefit ($838.90), leaving $338.90 payable. This means the monthly benefits to Tom's wife and children are reduced to zero, and Tom's monthly disability benefit is reduced to $338.90.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(i) <E T="03">Effect of changes in family composition.</E> The addition or subtraction in the number of beneficiaries in a family may cause the family benefit to become, or cease to be, the applicable limit for reduction purposes under this section. When the family composition changes, the amount of the reduction is recalculated as though the new number of beneficiaries were entitled for the first month the reduction was imposed. If the applicable limit both before and after the change is 80 percent of the average current earnings and the limitation on maximum family benefits is in effect both before and after the change, the amount payable remains the same and is simply redistributed among the beneficiaries entitled on the same earnings record.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 1:</HD>
          <P>Frank is receiving $500.00 a month under the provisions of a State workers' compensation law. He had a prior period of disability which terminated in June 1978. In September 1981, Frank applies for a second period of disability and is awarded monthly disability insurance benefits with a primary insurance amount of $370.20. His child, Doug, qualifies for benefits of $135.10 a month on Frank's earnings record. The total family benefits is $505.30 monthly.</P>
          <P>Frank's average monthly wage (as used to compute the primary insurance amount) is $400.00; eighty percent of his average current earnings (computed by using the 5 consecutive years in which his earnings were highest) is $428.80 (80% of $536.00); eighty percent of Frank's average current earnings (computed by using the 1 calendar year in which his earnings were highest) is $509.60 (80% of $637.00). The highest value for 80 percent of average current earnings is therefore $509.60 (80%). Since this is higher than the total family benefit ($505.30), the $509.60 is the applicable limit in determining the amount of the reduction (or offset). The amount payable after the reduction is—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">80% of Frank's average current earnings</ENT>
              <ENT>$509.60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Frank's monthly workers' compensation benefit</ENT>
              <ENT>−500.00</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="02">Monthly benefit payable to Frank</ENT>
              <ENT>9.60</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>

          <P>No monthly benefits are payable to Doug because the reduction is applied to Doug's benefit first. In December 1981, another child, Mike, becomes entitled on Frank's earnings record. The monthly benefit to each <PRTPAGE P="142"/>child before reduction is now $109.10, the amount payable when there are two beneficiaries in addition to the wage earner. Thus, the total family benefit becomes $588.40. Because this is now higher than $509.60 (80% of Frank's average current earnings), $588.40 becomes the applicable limit in determining the amount of reduction. The amount payable after the increase in the total family benefit is—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">The new total family benefit</ENT>
              <ENT>$588.40</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Frank's monthly workers' compensation rate</ENT>
              <ENT>−500.00</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="02">Monthly benefit payable to Frank</ENT>
              <ENT>88.40</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <FP>No monthly benefits are payable to either child because the reduction (or offset) is applied to the family benefits first.</FP>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 2:</HD>
          <P>Jack became entitled to disability insurance benefits in December 1973 (12/73), with a primary insurance amount (PIA) of $220.40. He was also receiving a workers' compensation benefit. An offset was imposed against the disability insurance benefit. By June 1977 (6/77), Jack's PIA had increased to $298.00 because of several statutory benefit increases. In December 1977 (12/77), his wife, Helen, attained age 65 and filed for unreduced wife's benefits. (She was not entitled to a benefit on her own earnings record.) This benefit was terminated in May 1978 (5/78), at her death. Helen's benefit was computed back to 12/73 as though she were entitled in the first month that offset was imposed against Jack. Since there were no other beneficiaries entitled and Helen's entire monthly benefit amount is subject to offset, the benefit payable to her for 12/77 through April 1978 (4/78), would be $38.80. This gives Helen the protected statutory benefit increases since 12/73. The table below shows how Helen's benefit was computed beginning with the first month offset was imposed.</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,7,9,8" COLS="4" OPTS="L2">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1">Month of entitlement/statutory increase</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Jack's PIA</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Helen's benefit prior to offset</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Helen's statutory increase</CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">December 1973</ENT>
              <ENT>$220.40</ENT>
              <ENT>$110.20</ENT>
              <ENT/>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">March 1974</ENT>
              <ENT>236.00</ENT>
              <ENT>118.00</ENT>
              <ENT>$7.80</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">June 1974</ENT>
              <ENT>244.80</ENT>
              <ENT>122.40</ENT>
              <ENT>+4.40</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">June 1975</ENT>
              <ENT>264.40</ENT>
              <ENT>132.20</ENT>
              <ENT>+9.80</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">June 1976</ENT>
              <ENT>281.40</ENT>
              <ENT>140.70</ENT>
              <ENT>+8.50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">June 1977</ENT>
              <ENT>298.00</ENT>
              <ENT>149.00</ENT>
              <ENT>+8.30</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">December 1977 through April 1978 <SU>1</SU>
              </ENT>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT>38.80</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>1</SU> Monthly benefit payable to Helen.</TNOTE>
          </GPOTABLE>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(j) <E T="03">Effect of social security disability insurance benefit increases.</E> Any increase in benefits due to a recomputation or a statutory increase in benefit rates is not subject to the reduction for public disability benefits under paragraph (a) and does not change the amount to be deducted from the family benefit. The increase is simply added to what amount, if any, is payable. If a new beneficiary becomes entitled to monthly benefits on the same earnings record after the increase, the amount of the reduction is redistributed among the new beneficiaries entitled under section 202 of the Act and deducted from their current benefit rate.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
          <P>In March 1981, Chuck became entitled to disability insurance benefits with a primary insurance amount of $362.40 a month. He has a wife and two children who are each entitled to a monthly benefit of $60.40. Chuck is receiving monthly disability compensation from a worker's compensation plan of $410.00. Eighty percent of his average current earnings is $800.00. Because this is higher than the total family benefit ($543.60), $800.00 is the applicable limit in computing the amount of reduction. The amount of monthly benefits payable after the reduction is—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Applicable limit</ENT>
              <ENT>$800.00</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Chuck's monthly disability compensation</ENT>
              <ENT>−410.00</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Total amount payable to Chuck and the family after reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>$390.00</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Amount payable to Chuck</ENT>
              <ENT>−362.40</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Total amount payable to the family</ENT>
              <ENT>$27.60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">$9.20 payable to each family member equals</ENT>
              <ENT>$27.60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="11"/>
              <ENT O="oi0">3</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>In June 1981, the disability benefit rates were raised to reflect an increase in the cost-of-living. Chuck is now entitled to $403.00 a month and each family member is entitled to $67.20 a month (an increase of $6.80 to each family member). The monthly amounts payable after the cost-of-living increase are now $403.00 to Chuck and $16.00 to each family member ($9.20 plus the $6.80 increase).</P>
          <P>In September 1981, another child becomes entitled to benefits based on Chuck's earnings record. The monthly amount payable to the family (excluding Chuck) must now be divided by 4:</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">$6.90 payable to each family member equals</ENT>
              <ENT>$27.60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="11"/>
              <ENT O="oi0">4
              </ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>The June 1981 cost-of-living increase is added to determine the amount payable. Chuck continues to receive $403.00 monthly. Each family member receives a cost-of-living increase of $5.10. Thus, the amount payable to each is $12.00 in September 1981 ($6.90 plus the $5.10 increase). (See Example 2 under (i).)</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(k) <E T="03">Effect of changes in the amount of the public disability benefit.</E> Any change <PRTPAGE P="143"/>in the amount of the public disability benefit received will result in a recalculation of the reduction under paragraph (a) and, potentially, an adjustment in the amount of such reduction. If the reduction is made under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, any increased reduction will be imposed effective with the month after the month the Commissioner received notice of the increase in the public disability benefit (it should be noted that only workers' compensation can cause this reduction). Adjustments due to a decrease in the amount of the public disability benefit will be effective with the actual date the decreased amount was effective. If the reduction is made under paragraph (a)(2) of this section, any increase or decrease in the reduction will be imposed effective with the actual date of entitlement to the new amount of the public disability benefit.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>

          <P>In September 1981, based on a disability which began March 12, 1981, Theresa became entitled to Social Security disability insurance benefits with a primary insurance amount of $445.70 a month. She had previously been entitled to Social Security disability insurance benefits from March 1967 through July 1969. She is receiving a temporary total workers' compensation payment of $227.50 a month. Eighty percent of her average current earnings is $610.50. The amount of monthly disability insurance benefit payable after reduction is—
          </P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s100,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">80 percent of Theresa's average current earnings</ENT>
              <ENT>$610.50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Theresa's monthly workers' compensation payment</ENT>
              <ENT>−227.50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="02">Total amount payable to Theresa after reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>383.00
              </ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>

          <P>On November 15, 1981, the Commissioner was notified that Theresa's workers' compensation rate was increased to $303.30 a month effective October 1, 1981. This increase reflected a cost-of-living adjustment granted to all workers' compensation recipients in her State. The reduction to her monthly disability insurance benefit is recomputed to take this increase into account—
          </P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">80 percent of Theresa's average current earnings</ENT>
              <ENT>$610.50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Theresa's monthly workers' compensation payment beginning October 1, 1981</ENT>
              <ENT>−303.30</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="02">Total new amount payable to Theresa beginning October 1981 after recalculation of the reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>$307.20</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>Effective January, 1, 1982, Theresa's workers' compensation payment is decreased to $280.10 a month when she begins to receive a permanent partial payment. The reduction to her monthly disability insurance benefit is again recalculated to reflect her decreased workers' compensation amount—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">80 percent of Theresa's average current earnings</ENT>
              <ENT>$610.50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Theresa's monthly workers' compensation payment beginning January 1, 1982</ENT>
              <ENT>−280.10</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="02">Total new amount payable to Theresa beginning January 1982 after recalculation of the reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>$330.40</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>If, in the above example, Theresa had become entitled to disability insurance benefits in August 1981, the increased reduction to her benefit, due to the October 1, 1981 increase in her workers' compensation payment, would have been imposed beginning with December 1981, the month after the month she notified the Social Security Administration of the increase. The later decrease in her workers' compensation payment would still affect her disability insurance benefit beginning with January 1982.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(l) <E T="03">Redetermination of benefits—</E>(1) <E T="03">General.</E> In the second calendar year after the year in which reduction under this section in the total of an individual's benefits under section 223 of the Act and any benefits under section 202 of the Act based on his or her wages and self-employment income is first required (in a continuous period of months), and in each third year thereafter, the amount of those benefits which are still subject to reduction under this section are redetermined, provided this redetermination does not result in any decrease in the total amount of benefits payable under title II of the Act on the basis of the workers' wages and self-employment income. The redetermined benefit is effective with the January following the year in which the redetermination is made.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Average current earnings.</E> In making the redetermination required by paragraph (l)(1) of this section, the individual's average current earnings (as defined in paragraph (c)(3) of this section) is deemed to be the product of his average current earnings as initially determined under paragraph (c)(3) of this section and:</P>

        <P>(i) The ratio of the average of the total wages (as defined in § 404.1049) of <PRTPAGE P="144"/>all persons for whom wages were reported to the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate for the calendar year before the year in which the redetermination is made, to the average of the total wages of all person reported to the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate for calendar year 1977 or, if later, the calendar year before the year in which the reduction was first computed (but not counting any reduction made in benefits for a previous period of disability); and</P>
        <P>(ii) In any case in which the reduction was first computed before 1978, the ratio of the average of the taxable wages reported to the Commissioner of Social Security for the first calendar quarter of 1977 to the average of the taxable wages reported to the Commissioner of Social Security for the first calendar quarter of the calendar year before the year in which the reduction was first computed (but not counting any reduction made in benefits for a previous period of disability). Any amount determined under the preceding two sentences which is not a multiple of $1 is reduced to the next lower multiple of $1.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Effect of redetermination.</E> Where the applicable limit on total benefits previously used was 80 percent of the average current earnings, a redetermination under this paragraph may cause an increase in the amount of benefits payable. Also, where the limit previously used was the total family benefit, the redetermination may cause the average current earnings to exceed the total family benefit and thus become the new applicable limit. If for some other reason (such as a statutory increase or recomputation) the benefit has already been increased to a level which equals or exceeds the benefit resulting from a redetermination under this paragraph, no additional increase is made. A redetermination is designed to bring benefits into line with current wage levels when no other change in payments has done so.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
          <P>In October 1978, Alice became entitled to disability insurance benefits with a primary insurance amount of $505.10. Her two children were also entitled to monthly benefits of $189.40 each. Alice was also entitled to monthly disability compensation benefits of $667.30 from the State. Eighty percent of Alice's average current earnings is $1340.80, and that amount is the applicable limit. The amount of monthly benefits payable after the reduction is—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Applicable limit</ENT>
              <ENT>$1,340.80</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Alice's State disability compensation benefit</ENT>
              <ENT>−667.30</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Total benefits payable to Alice and both children after reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>$673.50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Alice's disability insurance benefit</ENT>
              <ENT>−505.10</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Payable to the children</ENT>
              <ENT>$168.40</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">$84.20 payable to each child after reduction equals</ENT>
              <ENT>$168.40</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="11"/>
              <ENT O="oi0">2</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>In June 1979 and June 1980, cost-of-living increases in Social Security benefits raise Alice's benefit by $50.10 (to $555.20) and $79.40 (to $634.60) respectively. The children's benefits (before reduction) are each raised by $18.80 (to $208.20) and $29.80 (to $238.00). These increases in Social Security benefits are not subject to the reduction (i.e., offset).</P>
          <P>In 1980, Alice's average current earnings are redetermined as required by law. The offset is recalculated, and if the amount payable to the family is higher than the current amount payable to the family, that higher amount becomes payable the following January (i.e., January 1981). The current amount payable to the family after the reduction is recalculated—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Alice's 1978 benefit after reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>$505.10</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Alice's cost-of-living increase in June 1979</ENT>
              <ENT>+50.10</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Alice's cost-of-living increase in June 1980</ENT>
              <ENT>+79.40</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">One child's 1978 benefit after reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>+84.20</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">That child's cost-of-living increase in June 1979</ENT>
              <ENT>+18.70</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">That child's cost-of-living increase in June 1980</ENT>
              <ENT>+29.70</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">The other child's 1978 benefit after reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>+84.20</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">The other child's cost-of-living increase in June 1979</ENT>
              <ENT>+18.70</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">The other child's cost-of-living increase in June 1980</ENT>
              <ENT>+29.70</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Total amount payable to the family after reduction in January 1981</ENT>
              <ENT>899.80</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>The amount payable to the family after reduction is then recalculated using the redetermined average current earnings—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,10" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Average current earnings before redetermination</ENT>
              <ENT>$1,676.00</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Redetermination ratio effective for January 1981</ENT>
              <ENT>×1.174</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Redetermined average current earnings</ENT>
              <ENT>$1,967.00</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01"/>
              <ENT>×80%</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">80% of the redetermined average current earnings</ENT>
              <ENT>$1,573.60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Alice's State disability compensation benefit</ENT>
              <ENT>−667.30</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Total benefits payable to the family after offset</ENT>
              <ENT>$906.30<PRTPAGE P="145"/>
              </ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
          <P>We then compare the total amount currently being paid to the family ($899.80) to the total amount payable after the redetermination ($906.30). In this example, the redetermination yields a higher amount and, therefore, becomes payable the following January (i.e., January 1981). Additional computations are required to determine the amount that will be paid to each family member—</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,8" COLS="2" OPTS="L0,6/7,g1,t1">
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Total benefits payable to the family using the redetermined average current earnings</ENT>
              <ENT>$906.30</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Total cost-of-living increases to both children</ENT>
              <ENT>−96.80</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Balance payable</ENT>
              <ENT>809.50</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Alice's current benefit amount before reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>−634.60</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Payable to the children</ENT>
              <ENT>174.90</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Total cost-of-living increases to both children</ENT>
              <ENT>+96.80</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Total payable to children after reduction</ENT>
              <ENT>271.70</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">$135.90 (rounded from $135.85) payable to each child equals</ENT>
              <ENT>$271.70</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="11"/>
              <ENT O="oi0">2</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967; 33 FR 3060, Feb. 16, 1968, as amended at 37 FR 3425, Feb. 16, 1972; 48 FR 37017, Aug. 16, 1983; 48 FR 38814, Aug. 26, 1983; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.408a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction where spouse is receiving a Government pension.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">When reduction is required.</E> Unless you meet one of the exceptions in paragraph (b) of this section, your monthly Social Security benefits as a wife, husband, widow, widower, mother, or father will be reduced each month you are receiving a monthly pension from a Federal, State, or local government agency (Government pension) for which you were employed in work not covered by Social Security on the last day of such employment. Your monthly Social Security benefit as a spouse will always be reduced because of your Government pension even if you afterwards return to work for a government agency and that work is covered by Social Security. For purposes of this section, Federal Government employees are not considered to be covered by Social Security if they are covered for Medicare but are not otherwise covered by Social Security. If the government pension is not paid monthly or is paid in a lump-sum, we will determine how much the pension would be if it were paid monthly and then reduce the monthly Social Security benefit accordingly. The number of years covered by a lump-sum payment, and thus the period when the Social Security benefit will be reduced, will generally be clear from the pension plan. If one of the alternatives to a lump-sum payment is a life annuity, and the amount of the monthly benefit for the life annuity can be determined, the reduction will be based on that monthly benefit amount. Where the period or the equivalent monthly pension benefit is not clear it may be necessary for us to determine the reduction period on an individual basis.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Exceptions.</E> The reduction does not apply:</P>
        <P>(1) If you are receiving a Government pension based on employment for an interstate instrumentality.</P>
        <P>(2) If you received or are eligible to receive a Government pension for one or more months in the period December 1977 through November 1982 and you meet the requirements for Social Security benefits that were applied in January 1977, even though you don't claim benefits, and you don't actually meet the requirements for receiving benefits until a later month. The January 1977 requirements are, for a man, a one-half support test (see paragraph (c) of this section), and, for a woman claiming benefits as a divorced spouse, marriage for at least 20 years to the insured worker. You are considered eligible for a Government pension for any month in which you meet all the requirements for payment except that you are working or have not applied.</P>
        <P>(3) If you were receiving or were eligible (as defined in paragraph (b)(2) of this section) to receive a Government pension for one or more months before July 1983, and you meet the dependency test of one-half support that was applied to claimants for husband's and widower's benefits in 1977, even though you don't claim benefits, and you don't actually meet the requirements for receiving benefits until a later month. If you meet the exception in this paragraph but you do not meet the exception in paragraph (b)(2), December 1982 is the earliest month for which the reduction will not affect your benefits.</P>

        <P>(4) If you would have been eligible for a pension in a given month except for a requirement which delayed eligibility <PRTPAGE P="146"/>for such pension until the month following the month in which all other requirements were met, we will consider you to be eligible in that given month for the purpose of meeting one of the exceptions in paragraphs (b) (2) and (3) of this section. If you meet an exception solely because of this provision, your benefits will be unreduced for months after November 1984 only.</P>
        <P>(5) If, with respect to monthly benefits payable for months after December 1994, you are receiving a Government pension based wholly upon service as a member of a uniformed service, regardless of whether on active or inactive duty and whether covered by social security. However, if the earnings on the last day of employment as a military reservist were not covered, January 1995 is the earliest month for which the reduction will not affect your benefits.</P>
        <P>(c) The <E T="03">one-half support test.</E> For a man to meet the January 1977 requirement as provided in the exception in paragraph (b)(2) and for a man or a woman to meet the exception in paragraph (b)(3) of this section, he or she must meet a one-half support test. One-half support is defined in § 404.366 of this part. One-half support must be met at one of the following times:</P>
        <P>(1) If the insured person had a period of disability which did not end before he or she became entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits, or died, you must have been receiving at least one-half support from the insured either—</P>
        <P>(i) At the beginning of his or her period of disability;</P>
        <P>(ii) At the time he or she became entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits; or</P>
        <P>(iii) If deceased, at the time of his or her death.</P>
        <P>(2) If the insured did not have a period of disability at the time of his or her entitlement or death, you must have been receiving at least one-half support from the insured either—</P>
        <P>(i) At the time he or she became entitled to old-age insurance benefits; or</P>
        <P>(ii) If deceased, at the time of his or her death.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Amount and priority of reduction.</E> (1) If you became eligible for a Government pension after June 1983, we will reduce (to zero, if necessary) your monthly Social Security benefits as a spouse by two-thirds the amount of your monthly pension. If the reduction is not a multiple of 10 cents, we will round it to the next higher multiple of 10 cents.</P>
        <P>(2) If you became eligible for a Government pension before July 1983 and do not meet one of the exceptions in paragraph (b) of this section, we will reduce (to zero, if necessary) your monthly Social Security benefits as a spouse by the full amount of your pension for months before December 1984 and by two-thirds the amount of your monthly pension for months after November 1984. If the reduction is not a multiple of 10 cents, we will round it to the next higher multiple of 10 cents.</P>
        <P>(3) Your benefit as a spouse will be reduced, if necessary, for age and for simultaneous entitlement to other Social Security benefits before it is reduced because you are receiving a Government pension. In addition, this reduction follows the order of priority as stated in § 404.402(b).</P>
        <P>(4) If the monthly benefit payable to you after the required reduction(s) is not a multiple of $1.00, we will reduce it to the next lower multiple of $1.00 as required by § 404.304(f).</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">When effective.</E> This reduction was put into the Social Security Act by the Social Security Amendments of 1977. It only applies to applications for benefits filed in or after December 1977 and only to benefits for December 1977 and later.</P>
        <CITA>[49 FR 41245, Oct. 22, 1984; 50 FR 20902, May 21, 1985, as amended at 51 FR 23052, June 25, 1986; 60 FR 56513, Nov. 9, 1995]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.408b</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction of retroactive monthly social security benefits where supplemental security income (SSI) payments were received for the same period.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">When reduction is required.</E> We will reduce your retroactive social security benefits if—</P>
        <P>(1) You are entitled to monthly social security benefits for a month or months before the first month in which those benefits are paid; and</P>

        <P>(2) SSI payments (including federally administered State supplementary payments) which were made to you for the same month or months would have <PRTPAGE P="147"/>been reduced or not made if your social security benefits had been paid when regularly due instead of retroactively.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Amount of reduction.</E> Your retroactive monthly social security benefits will be reduced by the amount of the SSI payments (including federally administered State supplementary payments) that would not have been paid to you, if you had received your monthly social security benefits when they were regularly due instead of retroactively.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Benefits subject to reduction.</E> The reduction described in this section applies only to monthly social security benefits. Social security benefits which we pay to you for any month after you have begun receiving recurring monthly social security benefits, and for which you did not have to file a new application, are not subject to reduction. The lump-sum death payment, which is not a monthly benefit, is not subject to reduction.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Refiguring the amount of the reduction.</E> We will refigure the amount of the reduction if there are subsequent changes affecting your claim which relate to the reduction period described in paragraph (a) of this section. Refiguring is generally required where there is a change in your month of entitlement or the amount of your social security benefits or SSI payments (including federally administered State supplementary payments) for the reduction period.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Reimbursement of reduced retroactive monthly social security benefits.</E> The amount of the reduction will be—</P>
        <P>(1) First used to reimburse the States for the amount of any federally administered State supplementary payments that would not have been made to you if the monthly social security benefits had been paid when regularly due instead of retroactively; and</P>
        <P>(2) The remainder, if any, shall be covered into the general fund of the U.S. Treasury for the amount of SSI benefits that would not have been paid to you if the monthly social security benefits had been paid to you when regularly due instead of retroactively.</P>
        <CITA>[47 FR 4988, Feb. 3, 1982]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.409</SECTNO>
        <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.410</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction in benefits for age—general.</SUBJECT>
        <P>An individual's old-age insurance benefit, wife's or husband's benefit or widow's or widower's benefit is reduced if he or she is entitled to the benefit for a month before the month he or she reaches retirement age. For purposes of this section and §§404.411 through 404.413, retirement age is age 65; except that for months prior to January 1973, retirement age for widows and widowers is age 62. However, in the case of an individual entitled to wife's or husband's benefits, there is no reduction in benefits for any month he or she has in his or her care a child of the insured individual on whose earnings record he or she is entitled if the child is entitled to child's insurance benefits. Similarly, in the case of an individual entitled to widow's or widower's benefits, such benefits will not be reduced below the amount an individual entitled to mother's or father's benefits would receive for any month he or she has in his or her care a child of the insured individual on whose earnings record he or she is entitled if the child is entitled to child's benefits. Reductions in benefits are, subject to §§404.411 through 404.413, made in the amounts described below:</P>
        <P>(a) In the case of old-age insurance benefits, the individual's primary insurance amount is reduced by <FR>5/9</FR> of 1 percent multiplied by the number of months preceding the month in which he or she attains retirement age for which he or she is entitled to such benefits;</P>

        <P>(b) In the case of wife's or husband's benefits, the individual's benefit amount before any reduction (see §§ 404.304 and 404.333) is reduced first (if necessary) for the family maximum under § 404.403, and then further reduced by <FR>25/36</FR> of 1 percent multiplied by the number of months preceding the month in which he or she attains retirement age for which he or she is entitled to such benefits (but not including any month in which such wife or husband has in his or her care a child of the insured individual on whose earnings record he or she is entitled if the child is entitled to child's benefits);<PRTPAGE P="148"/>
        </P>
        <P>(c)(1) In the case of widow's or widower's benefits, the individual's benefit amount (for months after December 1972, the amount equal to the insured person's primary insurance amount and for earlier months, the amounts described in §§ 404.304 and 404.338), after any reduction for the family maximum under § 404.403, is reduced or further reduced by <FR>19/40</FR> of 1 percent multiplied by the number of months in the period beginning with the month of attainment of age 60 and ending with the month immediately before the month of attainment of age 65, for which he or she is entitled to such benefits (but not including any month in which such widow or widower has a child of the insured individual in his or her care if the child is entitled to child's benefits). For months prior to January 1973, the widow's or widower's benefit is reduced in the way described in the preceding sentence except that the percentage rate is <FR>5/9</FR> of 1 percent multiplied by the number of months from age 60 to 62 instead of <FR>19/40</FR> of 1 percent multiplied by the number of months from age 60 to 65.</P>
        <P>(2) For those widows and widowers receiving benefits based on disability and whose entitlement begins prior to their attaining age 60, their benefits are—</P>
        <P>(i) For months after December 1983, not subject to any reduction of their benefits in addition to that under paragraph (c)(1) of this section;</P>
        <P>(ii) For the period January 1, 1973-December 31, 1983, subject to a reduction under paragraph (c)(1) of this section and an additional reduction formula of <FR>43/240</FR> of 1 percent multiplied by: (A) The benefit before any reduction for age and (B) the number of months of entitlement to such benefit in the period beginning with month of attainment of age 50 and ending with the month preceding month of attainment of age 60; and</P>
        <P>(iii) For months prior to January 1973, subject to the reduction formula described in paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section with, however, the percentage rate set at <FR>43/198</FR> of 1 percent.</P>
        <P>(d) Benefits reduced under this section may be later adjusted to eliminate reduction for certain months of entitlement prior to retirement age as provided in § 404.412. For special provisions on reducing benefits for months prior to retirement age involving entitlement to two or more benefits and for reducing widow's and widower's benefits on the earnings record of a deceased individual previously entitled to old-age insurance benefits, see §§ 404.411 and 404.338, respectively.</P>
        <CITA>[49 FR 24116, June 12, 1984]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.411</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Special reduction in benefits for age involving entitlement to two or more benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> (1) Except as specifically provided in this section, benefits of an individual entitled to more than one benefit will be reduced for months of entitlement before retirement age according to the provisions of § 404.410. Such age reductions are made before any reduction under the provisions of § 404.407.</P>
        <P>(2) If an individual was born after January 1, 1928 and becomes disabled after December 31, 1989, his or her disability insurance benefits are reduced in accordance with paragraph (b)(1) of this section. In other situations involving prior receipt of widow's or widower's insurance benefits, disability insurance benefits are reduced in accordance with paragraph (b)(2) of this section.</P>
        <P>(3) If an individual was born after January 1, 1928, his or her old-age insurance benefits are reduced in accordance with § 404.410(a). In other situations involving prior receipt of widow's or widower's insurance benefits, old-age insurance benefits are reduced in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Reduction in disability insurance benefits after entitlement to old-age insurance benefits, widow's or widower's benefits.</E> An individual's disability insurance benefits are reduced following entitlement to old-age insurance benefits, widow's or widower's insurance benefits (or following the month in which all conditions for entitlement to widow's or widower's insurance benefits are met except that the individual is entitled to an old-age insurance benefit which equals or exceeds the primary insurance amount on which the widow's or widower's insurance benefit <PRTPAGE P="149"/>is based) in accordance with the following provisions:</P>
        <P>(1) In the case of an individual entitled to disability insurance benefits for a month after the month in which he becomes entitled to an old-age insurance benefit which is reduced for age under § 404.410, the disability insurance benefit is reduced by the amount by which the old-age insurance benefit would be reduced under § 404.410 if he attained age 65 in the first month of his most recent period of entitlement to disability insurance benefits.</P>
        <P>(2) In the case of an individual who is first entitled to disability insurance benefits for a month in which or after which he or she attains age 62 and for which he or she is first entitled to a widow's or widower's insurance benefit (or would be so entitled except for entitlement to an equal or higher old-age insurance benefit as explained in the material preceding paragraph (b) of this section) before retirement age, the disability insurance benefits are reduced by the larger of:</P>
        <P>(i) The amount the disability insurance benefit would have been reduced under paragraph (b)(1) of this section; or</P>
        <P>(ii) The amount equal to the sum of the amount the widow's or widower's benefit would have been reduced under the provisions of § 404.410 if retirement age were 62 (instead of 65) plus the amount by which the disability insurance benefit would have been reduced under paragraph (b)(1) of this section if the benefit were equal to the excess of such benefit over the amount of the widow's or widower's benefit (without consideration of this paragraph (b)(2)) of this section.</P>
        <P>(3) In the case of an individual who is first entitled to disability insurance benefits for a month before the month in which he or she attains age 62 and he or she is also entitled to a widow's or widower's insurance benefit (or would be so entitled except for entitlement to an equal or higher old-age insurance benefit as explained in the material preceding paragraph (b) of this section), the disability insurance benefit is reduced as if the widow or widower attained retirement age in the month immediately preceding the first month of his or her most recent period of entitlement to disability insurance benefits;</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Reduction in old-age insurance benefits after entitlement to widow's or widower's insurance benefits.</E> An individual's old-age insurance benefit is reduced if, in his or her first month of entitlement to that benefit, he or she is also entitled to a widow's or widower's insurance benefit to which he or she was first entitled for a month before attainment of retirement age or if, before attainment of retirement age, he or she met all conditions for entitlement to widow's or widower's benefits in or before the first month for which he or she was entitled to old-age insurance benefits except that the old-age insurance benefit equals or exceeds the primary insurance amount on which the widow's or widower's insurance benefit would be based. Under these circumstances, the old-age insurance benefit is reduced by the larger of the following:</P>
        <P>(1) The amount by which the old-age insurance benefit would be reduced under the regular age reduction provisions of § 404.410; or</P>
        <P>(2) An amount equal to the sum of:</P>
        <P>(i) The amount by which the widow's or widower's insurance benefit would be reduced under § 404.410 for months prior to age 62; and</P>
        <P>(ii) The amount by which the old-age insurance benefit would be reduced under § 404.410 if it were equal to the excess of the individual's primary insurance amount over the widow's or widower's insurance benefit before any reduction for age (but after any reduction for the family maximum under § 404.403).</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Reduction in wife's or husband's insurance benefits when entitled to reduced old-age insurance benefits in the same month.</E> A wife's or husband's insurance benefit to which a person is first entitled in or after the month of attainment of age 62 is reduced if, in his or her first month of entitlement to that benefit, he or she is also entitled to an old-age insurance benefit (but is not entitled to a disability insurance benefit) to which he or she was first entitled for a month before attainment of age 65. Under these circumstances, the wife's or husband's insurance benefit is reduced by the sum of:<PRTPAGE P="150"/>
        </P>
        <P>(1) The amount by which the old-age insurance benefit would be reduced under the provisions of § 404.410; and</P>
        <P>(2) The amount by which the wife's or husband's insurance benefit would be reduced under the provisions of § 404.410 if it were equal to the excess of such benefit (before any reduction for age but after reduction for the family maximum under § 404.403) over the individual's own primary insurance amount.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Reduction in wife's, husband's, widow's or widower's insurance benefit because of entitlement to disability insurance benefits in the same month.</E> A wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's insurance benefit to which a person is first entitled in or after the month of attainment of age 62 (or in the case of widow's or widower's insurance benefits, age 50) is reduced if, in his or her first month of entitlement to that benefit, he or she is also entitled to a disability insurance benefit. Under these circumstances, the wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's insurance benefit is reduced by the sum of:</P>
        <P>(1) The amount (if any) by which the disability insurance benefit is reduced under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, and</P>
        <P>(2) The amount by which the wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's insurance benefit would be reduced under § 404.410 if it were equal to the excess of such benefit (before any reduction for age but after reduction for the family maximum under § 404.403) over the disability insurance benefit (before any reduction under paragraph (b) of this section).</P>
        <CITA>[40 FR 30816, July 23, 1975, as amended at 55 FR 50551, Dec. 7, 1990]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.412</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Adjustments in benefit reductions for age.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> The following months are not counted for purposes of reducing benefits in accordance with § 404.410;</P>
        <P>(1) Months subject to deduction under § 404.415, § 404.417, or § 404.422;</P>
        <P>(2) In the case of wife's or husband's insurance benefits, any month in which she or he had a child of the insured individual in her or his care and for which the child was entitled to child's benefits;</P>
        <P>(3) In the case of wife's or husband's insurance benefits, any month for which entitlement to such benefits is precluded because the insured person's disability ceased (and, as a result, the insured individual's entitlement to disability insurance benefits ended);</P>
        <P>(4) In the case of widow's or widower's insurance benefits, any month in which she or he had in her or his care a child of the deceased insured individual and for which the child was entitled to child's benefits;</P>
        <P>(5) In the case of widow's or widower's insurance benefits, any month before attainment of age 62 and any month between age 62 and attainment of age 65 for which he or she was not entitled to such benefits;</P>
        <P>(6) In the case of old-age insurance benefits, any month for which the individual was entitled to disability insurance benefits.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Adjustment by Social Security Administration.</E> Adjustments in benefits to exclude those months of entitlement which are described in paragraphs (a) (1) through (6) of this section from consideration in determining the amount by which such benefits are reduced are made automatically. Each year the Social Security Administration examines beneficiary records to identify those instances in which an individual has attained age 65 (or age 62 in the case of widow's or widower's insurance benefits) and one or more months described in paragraphs (a) (1) through (6) of this section occurred prior to such age during the period of entitlement to benefits reduced for age. Increases in benefit amounts based upon this adjustment are effective with the month of attainment of age 65, or in the case of widow's and widower's insurance benefits, the month of attainment of age 65 or age 62 (whichever applies).</P>
        <CITA>[40 FR 30817, July 23, 1975, as amended at 49 FR 24117, June 12, 1984]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.413</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reduction in benefits for age following an increase in primary insurance amounts.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> When an individual's benefits have been reduced for age under the provisions of §§ 404.410 through 404.411, the primary insurance amount on which such benefits are based may be subsequently increased because of recomputation, a general benefit increase pursuant to an amendment of <PRTPAGE P="151"/>the Act, or increases based upon rises in the cost-of-living under section 215(i) of the Social Security Act. Where the individual's benefits are increased because of an increase in the primary insurance amount, such benefits are reduced separately under §§ 404.410 and 404.411. The benefit amount for months before the effective date of the increase in the primary insurance amount is reduced under § 404.410 (and § 404.411, if applicable) and added to the amount of increase in benefit amount which has been reduced for months of entitlement to the increase prior to the individual's retirement age; the resulting sum will be the total benefit amount to which the individual is entitled for the month of such increase and months thereafter.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Subsequent reduction of increases in reduced benefit after 1977 applies as or original entitlement.</E> When an individual's benefits have been reduced for age and the benefit is increased after 1977 due to a rise in the primary insurance amount, the amount of the increase to which the individual is entitled is proportionately reduced as provided in paragraph (c) of this section. When an individual is entitled to more than one benefit which is reduced for age, the rules for reducing the benefit increases apply to each reduced benefit.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">How reduction is computed</E>—(1) <E T="03">Entitlement to reduced benefits after 1977.</E> If an individual becomes entitled after 1977 to a benefit reduced for age, and the primary insurance amount on which the reduced benefit is based is increased, the amount of the increase payable to the individual is reduced by the same percentage as used to reduce the benefit in the month of initial entitlement. Where the reduced benefit of an individual has been adjusted at age 65 (age 62 and 65 for widows) any increase to which the individual becomes entitled thereafter is reduced by the adjusted percentage.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Entitlement to reduced benefits before 1978.</E> An individual who became entitled to a benefit reduced for age before 1978, and whose benefit may be increased as a result of an increase in the primary insurance amount after 1977, shall have the amount of the benefit to which he or she is entitled increased by the same percentage as the increase in the primary insurance amount.</P>
        <CITA>[40 FR 30817, July 23, 1975, as amended at 43 FR 33706, Aug. 1, 1978]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.415</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions because of excess earnings; annual earnings test.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Deductions because of beneficiary's earnings.</E> Under the annual earnings test, deductions are made from monthly benefits (except disability insurance benefits, child's insurance benefits based on the child's disability, or widow's or widower's insurance benefits based on the widow's or widower's disability) payable to a beneficiary for each month in a taxable year (whether a calendar year or a fiscal year) beginning after December 1954 in which the beneficiary is under age 72 (age 70 after December 1982) and to which excess earnings are charged under the provisions described in § 404.434.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Deductions from husband's, wife's, or child's benefits because of excess earnings of the insured individual.</E> Deductions are made from the wife's, husband's, or child's insurance benefits payable (or deemed payable—see § 404.420) on the insured individual's earnings record because of the excess earnings of the insured individual under the provisions described in § 404.416. However, beginning with January 1985, deductions will not be made from the benefits payable to a divorced wife or a divorced husband who has been divorced from the insured individual for at least 2 years.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 48 FR 4281, Jan. 31, 1983; 51 FR 11912, Apr. 8, 1986]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.416</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Amount of deduction because of excess earnings.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Deductions because of excess earnings of insured individual.</E> For taxable years beginning after 1960, or ending after June 1961, if excess earnings (as described in § 404.430) of an insured individual are chargeable under the annual earnings test to a month, a deduction is made from the total of the benefits payable to him and to all other persons entitled (or deemed entitled—see § 404.420) on his earnings record for that month. This deduction is an amount equal to that amount of the excess <PRTPAGE P="152"/>earnings so charged. (See § 404.434 concerning the manner of charging such excess earnings.) However, beginning with January 1985, deductions will not be made from the benefits payable to a divorced wife or a divorced husband who has been divorced from the insured individual for at least 2 years, and the divorced spouse will be considered as not entitled for purposes of computing the amount of deductions from other beneficiaries.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Deductions because of excess earnings of other beneficiary.</E> For taxable years beginning after 1960, or ending after June 1961, if benefits are payable to a person entitled (or deemed entitled—see § 404.420) on the earnings record of the insured individual, and such person has excess earnings (as described in § 404.430) charged to a month, a deduction is made from his benefits only for that month. This deduction is an amount equal to the amount of the excess earnings so charged. (See § 404.434 for charging of excess earnings where both the insured individual and such person have excess earnings.)</P>
        <CITA>[43 FR 8132, Feb. 28, 1978, as amended at 51 FR 11912, Apr. 8, 1986]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.417</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions because of noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States; 45 hour and 7-day work test.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Deductions because of individual's activity—</E>(1) <E T="03">Prior to May 1983.</E> For months prior to May 1983, a 7-day work test applies in a month before benefit deductions are made for noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States. A deduction is made from any monthly benefit (except disability insurance benefits, child's insurance benefits based on the child's disability, or widow's or widower's insurance benefits based on the widow's or widower's disability) payable to an individual for each month in a taxable year beginning after December 1954 in which the beneficiary, while under age 72 (age 70 after December 1982), engages in noncovered remunerative activity (see § 404.418) outside the United States on 7 or more different calendar days. The deduction is for an amount equal to the benefit payable to the individual for that month.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">From May 1983 on.</E> Effective May 1983, a 45-hour work test applies before a benefit deduction is made for the non-covered remunerative activity performed outside the United States in a month by the type of beneficiary described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Deductions from benefits because of the earnings or work of an insured individual—</E>(1) <E T="03">Prior to September 1984.</E> Where the insured individual entitled to old-age benefits works on 7 or more days in a month prior to September 1984 while under age 72 (age 70 after December 1982), a deduction is made for that month from any:</P>
        <P>(i) Wife's, husband's, or child's insurance benefit payable on the insured individual's earnings record; and</P>
        <P>(ii) Mother's, father's, or child's insurance benefit based on child's disability, which under § 404.420 is deemed payable on the insured individual's earnings record because of the beneficiary's marriage to the insured individual.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">From September 1984 on.</E> Effective September 1984, a benefit deduction is made for a month from the benefits described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section only if the insured individual, while under age 70, has worked in excess of 45 hours in that month.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Amount of deduction.</E> The amount of the deduction required by this paragraph (b) is equal to the wife's, husband's or child's benefit.</P>
        <P>(4) <E T="03">From January 1985 on.</E> Effective January 1985, no deduction will be made from the benefits payable to a divorced wife or a divorced husband who has been divorced from the insured individual for at least 2 years.</P>
        <CITA>[49 FR 24117, June 12, 1984, as amended at 51 FR 11912, Apr. 21, 1986; 52 FR 26145, July 13, 1987]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.418</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>“Noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States,” defined.</SUBJECT>
        <P>An individual is engaged in noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States for purposes of deductions described in § 404.417 if:</P>

        <P>(a) He performs services outside the United States as an employee and the services do not constitute employment as defined in subpart K of this part <PRTPAGE P="153"/>and, for taxable years ending after 1955, the services are not performed in the active military or naval service of the United States; or</P>

        <P>(b) He carries on a trade or business outside the United States (other than the performance of services as an employee) the net income or loss of which is not includable in computing his net earnings from self-employment (as defined in § 404.1050) for a taxable year and would not be excluded from net earnings from self-employment (see § 404.1052) if the trade or business were carried on in the United States. When used in the preceding sentence with respect to a trade or business, the term <E T="03">United States</E> does not include the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and, with respect to taxable years beginning after 1960, Guam or American Samoa, in the case of an alien who is not a resident of the United States (including the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and, with respect to taxable years beginning after 1960, Guam and American Samoa), and the term <E T="03">trade or business</E> shall have the same meaning as when used in section 162 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.420</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Persons deemed entitled to benefits based on an individual's earnings record.</SUBJECT>
        <P>For purposes of imposing deductions under the annual earnings test (see § 404.415) and the foreign work test (see § 404.417), a person who is married to an old-age insurance beneficiary and who is entitled to a mother's or father's insurance benefit or a child's insurance benefit based on the child's disability (and all these benefits are based on the earnings record of some third person) is deemed entitled to such benefit based on the earnings record of the old-age insurance beneficiary to whom he or she is married. This section is effective for months in any taxable year of the old-age insurance beneficiary that begins after August 1958.</P>
        <CITA>[49 FR 24117, June 12, 1984]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.421</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions because beneficiary failed to have a child in his or her care.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Deductions for failure to have a child in care (as defined in subpart D of this part) are made as follows:</P>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Wife's or husband's insurance benefits.</E> A deduction is made from the wife's or husband's insurance benefit to which he or she is entitled for any month if he or she is under age 65 and does not have in his or her care a child of the insured entitled to a child's insurance benefit. However, a deduction is not made for any month in which he or she is age 62 or over, but under age 65, and there is in effect a certificate of election for him or her to receive an actuarially reduced wife's or husband's insurance benefit for such month (see subpart D of this part).</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Mother's or father's insurance benefits—</E>(1) <E T="03">Widow or Widower.</E> A deduction is made from the mother's or father's insurance benefit to which he or she is entitled as the widow or widower (see subpart D of this part) of the deceased individual upon whose earnings such benefit is based, for any month in which he or she does not have in his or her care a child who is entitled to a child's insurance benefit based on the earnings of the deceased insured individual.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Surviving divorced mother or father.</E> A deduction is made from the mother's or father's insurance benefit to which he or she is entitled as the surviving divorced mother or father (see subpart D of this part) of the deceased individual upon whose earnings record such benefit is based, for any month in which she or he does not have in care a child of the deceased individual who is her or his son, daughter, or legally adopted child and who is entitled to a child's insurance benefit based on the earnings of the deceased insured individual.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Amount to be deducted.</E> The amount deducted from the benefit, as described in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, is equal to the amount of the benefit which is otherwise payable for the month in which she or he does not have a child in his or her care.<PRTPAGE P="154"/>
        </P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">When child is considered not entitled to benefits.</E> For purposes of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section a person is considered not entitled to a child's insurance benefit for any month in which he is age 18 or over, and:</P>
        <P>(1) Is entitled to a child's insurance benefit based on his own disability and a deduction is made from the child's insurance benefit because of his refusal of rehabilitation services as described in § 404.422(b); or</P>
        <P>(2) Is entitled to a child's insurance benefit because he is a full-time student at an educational institution. This paragraph applies to benefits for months after December 1964.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 49 FR 24117, June 12, 1984]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.422</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions because of refusal to accept rehabilitation services.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Deductions because individual entitled to disability insurance benefits refuses rehabilitation services—</E>(1) <E T="03">Disability insurance beneficiary.</E> A deduction is made from any benefit payable to a disability insurance beneficiary for each month in which he refuses without good cause to accept rehabilitation services available to him under a State plan approved under the Vocational Rehabilitation Act.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Other beneficiaries.</E> For each month in which a deduction is made from an individual's disability insurance benefit because of his refusal to accept rehabilitation services (as described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section), a deduction is also made from:</P>
        <P>(i) Any wife's, husband's, or child's insurance benefit payable for that month on the earnings record of the individual entitled to disability insurance benefits;</P>
        <P>(ii) Benefits payable for that month to the disability insurance beneficiary's spouse who is entitled (on the earnings record of a third person) to a mother's insurance benefit or to a child's insurance benefit based on disability.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Deductions because individual entitled to a child's insurance benefit based on disability refuses rehabilitation services.</E> A deduction is made from any benefit payable to an individual who has attained age 18 and is entitled to a child's insurance benefit based on disability, for each month in which he refuses without good cause to accept rehabilitation services available to him under a State plan approved under the Vocational Rehabilitation Act unless, in that month, he is a full-time student at an educational institution.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Deductions because individual entitled to widow's or widower's insurance benefit based on disability refuses rehabilitation services—</E>(1) <E T="03">Widow's insurance beneficiary.</E> A deduction is made from any benefits payable to an individual entitled to a widow's insurance benefit based on disability for each month in which she is under age 60 and refuses without good cause to accept rehabilitation services available to her under a State plan approved under the Vocational Rehabilitation Act.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Widower's insurance beneficiary.</E> A deduction is made from any benefits payable to an individual entitled to a widower's insurance benefit based on disability for each month in which he is under age 60 (age 62 for months prior to January 1973) and refuses without good cause to accept rehabilitation services available to him under a State plan approved under the Vocational Rehabilitation Act.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Amount of deduction.</E> The amount deducted from an individual's benefit for a month under the provisions of paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section is an amount equal to the benefit otherwise payable for that month.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Good cause for refusal of rehabilitation services.</E> An individual may refuse to accept rehabilitation services (for the purposes of paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section) if his refusal is based on good cause. In determining whether an individual has good cause for refusing rehabilitation services, we will take into account any physical, mental, educational, or linguistic limitations (including any lack of facility with the English language) the individual may have which may have caused the individual to refuse such services. We also consider other factors that may have caused an individual to refuse such services. For example, an individual has good cause for refusing rehabilitation services where:<PRTPAGE P="155"/>
        </P>
        <P>(1) The individual is a member or adherent of any recognized church or religious sect which teaches its members or adherents to rely solely, in the treatment and care of any physical or mental impairment, on prayer or spiritual means through the application and use of the tenets or teachings of such church or sect; and</P>
        <P>(2) His refusal to accept rehabilitation services was due solely to his adherence to the teachings or tenets of his church or sect.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 38 FR 9429, Apr. 16, 1973; 59 FR 1633, Jan. 12, 1994]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.423</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Manner of making deductions.</SUBJECT>

        <P>Deductions provided for in §§ 404.415, 404.417, 404.421, and 404.422 (as modified in § 404.458) are made by withholding benefits (in whole or in part, depending upon the amount to be withheld) for each month in which an event causing a deduction occurred. If the amount to be deducted is not withheld from the benefits payable in the month in which the event causing the deduction occurred, such amount constitutes a <E T="03">deduction overpayment</E> and is subject to adjustment or recovery in accordance with the provisions of subpart F of this part.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.424</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Total amount of deductions where more than one deduction event occurs in a month.</SUBJECT>
        <P>If more than one of the deduction events specified in §§ 404.415, 404.417, and 404.421 occurred in any 1 month, each of which would occasion a deduction equal to the benefit for such month, only an amount equal to such benefit is deducted.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.425</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Total amount of deductions where deduction events occur in more than 1 month.</SUBJECT>
        <P>If a deduction event described in §§ 404.415, 404.417, 404.421, and 404.422 occurs in more than 1 month, the total amount deducted from an individual's benefits is equal to the sum of the deductions for all months in which any such event occurred.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.428</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Earnings in a taxable year.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> (1) In applying the annual earnings test (see § 404.415(a)) under this subpart, all of a beneficiary's earnings (as defined in § 404.429) for all months of the beneficiary's taxable year are used even though the individual may not be entitled to benefits during all months of the taxable year. (See, however, § 404.430 for the rule which applies to earnings of a beneficiary who attains age 72 during the taxable year (age 70 for months after December 1982)).</P>
        <P>(2) The taxable year of an employee is presumed to be a calendar year until it is shown to the satisfaction of the Social Security Administration that the individual has a different taxable year. A self-employed individual's taxable year is a calendar year unless the individual has a different taxable year for the purposes of subtitle A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. In either case, the number of months in a taxable year is not affected by—(i) The time a claim for social security benefits is filed, (ii) attainment of any particular age, (iii) marriage or the termination of marriage, or (iv) adoption. For beneficiaries who die on or before November 10, 1988, a taxable year ends with the month of the death of the beneficiary. The month of death is counted as a month of the deceased beneficiary's taxable year in determining whether the beneficiary had excess earnings for the year under § 404.430. For beneficiaries who die after November 10, 1988, the number of months used in determining whether the beneficiary had excess earnings for the year under § 404.430 is 12.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">When derived.</E> Wages as defined in § 404.429(c) are derived and includable as earnings for the months and year in which the beneficiary rendered the services. Net earnings from self-employment, or net losses therefrom, are derived, or incurred, and are includable as earnings or losses, in the year for which such earnings or losses are reportable for Federal income tax purposes.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 45 FR 48116, July 18, 1980; 48 FR 4282, Jan. 31, 1983; 55 FR 37461, Sept. 12, 1990]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <PRTPAGE P="156"/>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.429</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Earnings; defined.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> When the term <E T="03">earnings</E> is used in this subpart other than as a part of the phrase <E T="03">net earnings from self-employment,</E> it means an individual's earnings for a taxable year after 1954. It includes the sum of his wages for services rendered in such year, and his net earnings from self-employment for the taxable year, minus any net loss from self-employment for the same taxable year.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Net earnings from self-employment; net loss from self-employment.</E> An individual's net earnings from self-employment and his net loss from self-employment are determined under the provisions in subpart K of this part except that:</P>

        <P>(1) For the purposes of this section, the provisions in subpart K of this part shall not apply that exclude from the definition of <E T="03">trade or business</E> the following occupations:</P>
        <P>(i) The performance of the functions of a public office;</P>
        <P>(ii) The performance of a service of a duly ordained, commissioned, or licensed minister of a church in the exercise of his ministry or by a member of a religious order in the exercise of duties required by the order;</P>
        <P>(iii) The performance of service by an individual in the exercise of his profession as a Christian Science practitioner;</P>
        <P>(iv) For taxable years ending before 1965, the performance by an individual in the exercise of his profession as a doctor of medicine;</P>
        <P>(v) For taxable years ending before 1956, the performance of service by an individual in the exercise of his profession as a lawyer, dentist, osteopath, veterinarian, chiropractor, naturopath, or optometrist.</P>
        <P>(2) For the sole purpose of the earnings test under this subpart—</P>
        <P>(i) An individual who has attained age 65 on or before the last day of his or her taxable year shall have excluded from his or her gross earnings from self-employment, royalties attributable to a copyright or patent obtained before the taxable year in which he or she attained age 65 if the copyright or patent is on property created by his or her own personal efforts; and</P>

        <P>(ii) An individual entitled to insurance benefits, under title II of the Act, other than disability insurance benefits or child's insurance benefits payable by reason of being under a disability, shall have excluded from gross earnings for any year after 1977 any self-employment income received in a year after his or her initial year of entitlement that is not attributable to services performed after the first month he or she became entitled to benefits. As used in this paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, <E T="03">services</E> means any significant work activity performed by the individual in the operation or management of a trade, profession, or business which can be related to the income received. Such services will be termed <E T="03">significant services.</E> Where a portion of the income received in a year is not related to any significant services performed after the month of initial entitlement, only that portion may be excluded from gross earnings for deduction purposes. The balance of the income counts for deduction purposes. Not counted as <E T="03">significant services</E> are—</P>
        <P>(A) Actions taken after the initial month of entitlement to sell a crop or product if the crop or product was completely produced or created in or before the month of entitlement. This rule does not apply to income received by an individual from a trade or business of buying and selling products produced or made by others; for example, a grain broker.</P>
        <P>(B) Those activities that are related solely to protecting an investment in a currently operating business or that are too irregular, occasional, or minor to be considered as having a bearing on the income received, such as—</P>
        <P>(<E T="03">1</E>) Hiring an agent, manager, or other employee to operate the business;</P>
        <P>(<E T="03">2</E>) Signing contracts where the owner's signature is required so long as the major contract negotiations were handled by the owner's agent, manager, or other employees in running the business for the owner;</P>
        <P>(<E T="03">3</E>) Looking over the company's financial records to assess the effectiveness of those agents, managers, or employees in running the business for the owner;<PRTPAGE P="157"/>
        </P>
        <P>(<E T="03">4</E>) Personally contacting an old and valued customer solely for the purpose of maintaining good will when such contact has a minimal effect on the ongoing operation of the trade or business; or</P>
        <P>(<E T="03">5</E>) Occasionally filling in for an agent, manager, or other employee or partner in an emergency.</P>
        <P>(iii) An individual is presumed to have royalties or other self-employment income countable for purposes of the earnings test until it is shown to the satisfaction of the Social Security Administration that such income may be excluded under § 404.429(b)(2) (i) or (ii).</P>
        <P>(3) In figuring an individual's net earnings or net loss from self-employment, all net income or net loss is includable even though (i) the individual did not perform personal services in carrying on the trade or business, (ii) the net profit was less than $400, (iii) the net profit was in excess of the maximum amount creditable to his earnings record, or (iv) the net profit was not reportable for social security tax purposes.</P>
        <P>(4) An individual's net earnings from self-employment is the excess of gross income over the allowable business deductions (allowed under the Internal Revenue Code). An individual's net loss from self-employment is the excess of business deductions (that are allowed under the Internal Revenue Code) over gross income. Expenses arising in connection with the production of income excluded from gross income under § 404.429(b)(2)(ii) cannot be deducted from wages or net earnings from self-employment that are not excluded under that section.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Wages defined.</E> Wages include the gross amount of an individual's wages rather than the net amount paid after deductions by the employer for items such as taxes and insurance. For purposes of this section, an individual's wages are determined under the provisions of subpart K of this part, except that, notwithstanding the provisions of subpart K, wages also includes:</P>
        <P>(1) Remuneration in excess of the amounts in the annual wage limitation table in § 404.1047;</P>
        <P>(2) Cash remuneration of less than $50 paid in a calendar quarter to an employee for (i) domestic service in the private home of the employer, or (ii) service not in the course of the employer's trade or business; and</P>
        <P>(3) Payments for agricultural labor excluded under § 404.1055.</P>
        <P>(4) Remuneration, cash and noncash, for service as a homeworker even though the cash remuneration paid the employee is less than $50 in a calendar quarter; and</P>
        <P>(5) For taxable years ending after 1955, services performed outside the United States in the military or naval service of the United States; and</P>
        <P>(6) Remuneration for services excepted from employment performed within the United States by an individual as an employee that are for that reason not considered wages under subpart K of this part, if the remuneration for such services is not includable in computing his net earnings from self-employment or net loss from self-employment, as defined in paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Presumptions concerning wages.</E> For purposes of this section, where reports received by the Administration show wages (as defined in paragraph (c) of this section) were paid to an individual during a taxable year, it is presumed that they were paid to him for services rendered in that year until such time as it is shown to the satisfaction of the Administration that the wages were paid for services rendered in another taxable year. If the reports of wages paid to an individual show his wages for a calendar year, the individual's taxable year is presumed to be a calendar year for purposes of this section until it is shown to the satisfaction of the Administration that his taxable year is not a calendar year.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 41 FR 13912, Apr. 1, 1976; 47 FR 46690, Oct. 20, 1982; 52 FR 8249, Mar. 17, 1987; 57 FR 59913, Dec. 17, 1992]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.430</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings defined for taxable years ending after December 1972; monthly exempt amount defined.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Method of determining excess earnings for years ending after December 1972.</E> For taxable years ending after 1972, an individual's excess earnings for a taxable year are 50 percent of his or her <PRTPAGE P="158"/>earnings (as described in § 404.429) for the year which are above the exempt amount. For an individual who has attained retirement age, as defined in section 216(l) of the Act, excess earnings for a taxable year beginning after December 31, 1989, are 33<FR>1/3</FR> percent of his or her earnings (as described in § 404.429) for the year which are above the exempt amount. For deaths after November 10, 1988, an individual who dies in the taxable year in which he or she would have attained retirement age shall have his or her excess earnings computed as if he or she had attained retirement age. The exempt amount is obtained by multiplying the number of months in the taxable year (except that the number of months in the taxable year in which the individual dies shall be 12, if death occurs after November 10, 1988) by the following applicable monthly exempt amount.</P>
        <P>(1) $175 for taxable years ending after December 1972 and before January 1974;</P>
        <P>(2) $200 for taxable years beginning after December 1973 and before January 1975; and</P>

        <P>(3) The exempt amount for taxable years ending after December 1974, as determined under paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. However, earnings in and after the month an individual attains age 72 will not be used to figure excess earnings for retirement test purposes. For the employed individual, wages for months prior to the month of attainment of age 72 are used to figure the excess earnings for retirement test purposes. For the self-employed individual, the pro rata share of the net earnings or net loss for the taxable year for the period prior to the month of attainment of age 72 is used to figure the excess earnings. If the beneficiary was not engaged in self-employment prior to the month of attainment of age 72, any subsequent earnings or losses from self-employment in the taxable year will not be used to figure the excess earnings. Where the excess amount figured under the provisions of this section is not a multiple of $1, it is reduced to the next lower dollar. (All references to age 72 will be age 70 for months after December 1982.)
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 1.</HD>
          <P>The self-employed beneficiary attained age 72 in July 1979. His net earnings for 1979, his taxable year, were $12,000. The pro rata share of the net earnings for the period prior to July is $6,000. His excess earnings for 1979 for retirement test purposes are $750. This is computed by subtracting $4,500 ($375×12), the exempt amount for 1979, from $6,000 and dividing the result by 2.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 2.</HD>
          <P>The beneficiary attained age 72 in July 1979. His taxable year was calendar year 1979. His wages for the period prior to July were $6,000. From August through December 1979, he worked in self-employment and had net earnings in the amount of $2,000. His net earnings from self-employment are not used to figure his excess earnings. Only his wages for the period prior to July 1979 ($6,000) are used to figure his excess earnings. As in example 1, his excess earnings are $750.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 3.</HD>
          <P>The facts are the same as in example 2, except that the beneficiary worked in self-employment throughout all of 1979 and had a net loss of $500 from the self-employment activity. The pro rata share of the net loss for the period prior to July is $250. His earnings for the taxable year to be used in figuring excess earnings are $5,750.</P>
          <P>This is computed by subtracting the $250 net loss from self-employment from the $6,000 in wages. The excess earnings are $625 (($5,750  −  $4,500)÷2).</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Monthly exempt amount defined.</E> The retirement test monthly exempt amount is the amount of wages which a social security beneficiary may earn in any month without part of his or her monthly benefit being deducted because of excess earnings. For benefits payable for months after 1977, the monthly exempt amount applies only in a beneficiary's grace year or years. (See § 404.435 (a) and (c)).</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Method of determining monthly exempt amount for taxable years ending after December 1974.</E> (1) Except as provided under paragraph (d) of this section, for purposes of paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the applicable monthly exempt amount effective for an individual's taxable year that ends in the calendar year after the calendar year in which an automatic cost-of-living increase in old-age, survivors, and disability insurance benefits is effective is the larger of—</P>
        <P>(i) The exempt amount in effect for months in the taxable year in which the exempt amount determination is being made; or</P>
        <P>(ii) The amount determined by:</P>

        <P>(A) Multiplying the monthly exempt amount effective during the taxable <PRTPAGE P="159"/>year in which the exempt amount determination is being made by the ratio of:</P>
        <P>(<E T="03">1</E>) The average amount, per employee, of the taxable wages of all employees as reported to the Commissioner for the first calendar quarter of the calendar year in which the exempt amount determination is made, to</P>
        <P>(<E T="03">2</E>) The average amount, per employee, of the taxable wages of all employees as reported to the Commissioner for the first calendar quarter of the most recent calendar year in which an increase in the exempt amount was enacted or a determination resulting in such an increase was made, and</P>
        <P>(B) Rounding the result of such multiplication:</P>
        <P>(<E T="03">1</E>) To the next higher multiple of $10 where such result is a multiple of $5 but not of $10, or</P>
        <P>(<E T="03">2</E>) to the nearest multiple of $10 in any other case.</P>
        <P>(2) For purposes of paragraph (c)(1) of this section, <E T="03">reported for the first calendar quarter</E> means reported for such first calendar quarter and posted to the earnings records by the Commissioner on or before the last day of the Social Security Administration's quarterly updating operations in September of the same year. Earnings items received or posted thereafter are not counted even though they pertain to the first quarter. </P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Method of determining monthly exempt amount for taxable years ending after December 1977 for beneficiaries, age 65 or over.</E> (1) For purposes of paragraph (a)(3) of this section, for all months of taxable years ending after 1977, the applicable monthly exempt amount for an individual who has attained (or, but for the individual's death occurring after November 10, 1988, would have attained) retirement age as defined in section 216(l) of the Act before the close of the taxable year involved is—</P>
        <P>(i) $333.33<FR>1/3</FR> for each month of any taxable year ending in 1978;</P>
        <P>(ii) $375 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1979;</P>
        <P>(iii) $416.66<FR>2/3</FR> for each month of any taxable year ending in 1980; and</P>
        <P>(iv) $458.33<FR>1/3</FR> for each month of any taxable year ending in 1981;</P>
        <P>(v) $500 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1982;</P>
        <P>(vi) $550 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1983;</P>
        <P>(vii) $580 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1984;</P>
        <P>(viii) $610 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1985;</P>
        <P>(ix) $650 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1986;</P>
        <P>(x) $680 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1987;</P>
        <P>(xi) $700 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1988;</P>
        <P>(xii) $740 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1989; and</P>
        <P>(xiii) $780 for each month of any taxable year ending in 1990.</P>
        <P>(2) Fractional amounts listed in paragraph (d)(1) of this section shall be rounded to the next higher whole dollar amount, unless the individual shows that doing so results in a different grace year (see § 404.435 (a) and (c)).</P>
        <CITA>[40 FR 42865, Sept. 17, 1975; 40 FR 45805, Oct. 3, 1975, as amended at 45 FR 48117, July 18, 1980; 45 FR 58107, Sept. 2, 1980; 48 FR 4282, Jan. 31, 1983; 55 FR 37461, Sept. 12, 1990; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.434</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings; method of charging.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Months charged.</E> For purposes of imposing deductions for taxable years after 1960, the excess earnings (as described in § 404.430) of an individual are charged to each month beginning with the first month the individual is entitled in the taxable year in question and continuing, if necessary, to each succeeding month in such taxable year until all of the individual's excess earnings have been charged. Excess earnings, however, are not charged to any month described in §§ 404.435 and 404.436.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Amount of excess earnings charged—</E>(1) <E T="03">Insured individual's excess earnings.</E> The insured individual's excess earnings are charged on the basis of $1 of excess earnings for each $1 of monthly benefits to which he and all other persons are entitled (or deemed entitled—see § 404.420) for such month on the insured individual's earnings record. (See § 404.439 where the excess earnings for a month are less than the total benefits payable for that month.)</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Excess earnings of beneficiary other than insured individual.</E> The excess <PRTPAGE P="160"/>earnings of a person other than the insured individual are charged on the basis of $1 of excess earnings for each $1 of monthly benefits to which he is entitled (see § 404.437) for such month. The excess earnings of such person, however, are charged only against his own benefits.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Insured individual and person entitled</E> (<E T="03">or deemed entitled</E>) <E T="03">on his earnings record both have excess earnings.</E> If both the insured individual and a person entitled (or deemed entitled) on his earnings record have excess earnings (as described in § 404.430), the insured individual's excess earnings are charged first against the total family benefits payable (or deemed payable) on his earnings record, as described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section. Next, the excess earnings of a person entitled on the insured individual's earnings record are charged (as described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section) against his own benefits, but only to the extent that his benefits have not already been charged with the excess earnings of the insured individual. See § 404.441 for an example of this process and the manner in which partial monthly benefits are apportioned.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 38 FR 17716, July 3, 1973; 43 FR 8133, Feb. 28, 1978]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.435</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings; months to which excess earnings cannot be charged.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Monthly benefits payable for months after 1977.</E> Beginning with monthly benefits payable for months after 1977, no matter how much a beneficiary earns in a given taxable year, no deduction on account of excess earnings will be made in the benefits payable for any month—</P>
        <P>(1) In which he or she was not entitled to a monthly benefit;</P>
        <P>(2) In which he or she was considered not entitled to benefits (due to noncovered work outside the United States, no child in care, or refusal of rehabilitation, as described in § 404.436);</P>
        <P>(3) In which he or she was age 72 or over (age 70 for months after December 1982);</P>
        <P>(4) In which he or she was entitled to payment of disability insurance benefit;</P>
        <P>(5) In which he or she was age 18 or over and entitled to a child's insurance benefit based on disability;</P>
        <P>(6) In which he or she was entitled to a widow's or widower's insurance benefit based on disability; or</P>
        <P>(7) Which was a <E T="03">nonservice</E> month (see paragraph (b) of this section) in the beneficiary's <E T="03">grace year</E> (see paragraph (c) of this section).</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Nonservice month defined.</E> A nonservice month is any month in which an individual, while entitled to retirement or survivors benefits—(1) does not work in self-employment (see paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section); (2) does not perform services for wages greater than the monthly exempt amount set for that month (see paragraph (f) of this section and § 404.430 (b), (c), and (d)); and (3) does not work in noncovered remunerative activity on 7 or more days in a month while outside the United States. A nonservice month occurs even if there are no excess earnings in the year.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Grace year defined.</E> (1) A beneficiary's initial grace year is the first taxable year after 1977 in which the beneficiary has a nonservice month (see paragraph (b) of this section) in or after the month in which he or she is entitled to a retirement, auxiliary, or survivor's benefit.</P>
        <P>(2) A beneficiary may have another grace year each time his or her entitlement to one type of benefit ends and, after a break in entitlement of at least one month, he or she becomes entitled to a different type of retirement or survivors benefit. The new grace year would then be the taxable year in which occurs the first nonservice month after the break in entitlement.</P>
        <P>(3) A month will not be counted as a nonservice month for purposes of determining whether a given year is a beneficiary's grace year if the nonservice month occurred while the beneficiary was entitled to disability benefits under section 223 of the Social Security Act or as a disabled widow, widower, or child under section 202.</P>

        <P>(4) A beneficiary entitled to child's benefits, to young wife's or young husband's benefits (entitled only by reason of having a child in his or her care), or to mother's or father's benefits, is entitled to a termination grace year in any <PRTPAGE P="161"/>year(s) the beneficiary's entitlement to these types of benefits terminates. This provision does not apply if the termination is because of death or if the beneficiary is entitled to a Social Security benefit for the month following the month in which the entitlement ended. The beneficiary is entitled to a termination grace year in addition to any other grace year(s) available to him or her.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 1:</HD>
          <P>Don, age 65, will retire from his regular job in April of next year. Although he will have earned $11,000 for January-April of that year and plans to work part time, he will not earn over the monthly exempt amount after April. Don's taxable year is the calendar year. Since next year will be the first year in which he has a nonservice month while entitled to benefits, it will be his grace year and he will be entitled to the monthly earnings test for that year only. He will receive benefits for all months in which he does not earn over the monthly exempt amount (May-December) even though his earnings have substantially exceeded the annual exempt amount. However, in the years that follow, only the annual earnings test will be applied if he has earnings that exceed the annual exempt amount, regardless of his monthly earnings.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 2:</HD>
          <P>Marion was entitled to mother's insurance benefits from 1978 because she had a child in her care under age 18. Because she had a nonservice month in 1978, 1978 was her initial grace year. Marion's child married in May 1980 and entitlement to mother's benefits terminated in April 1980. Since Marion's entitlement did not terminate by reason of her death and she was not entitled to another type of Social Security benefit in the month after her entitlement to mother's benefit ended, she is entitled to a termination grace year for 1980, the year in which her entitlement to mother's insurance benefits terminated.</P>
          <P>She applied for and became entitled to widow's insurance benefits effective February 1981. Because there was a break in entitlement to benefits of at least one month before entitlement to another type of benefit, 1981 will be a subsequent grace year if Marion has a nonservice month in 1981.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(d) <E T="03">When an individual works in self-employment.</E> An individual works in self-employment in any month in which he or she performs substantial services (see § 404.446) in the operation of a trade or business (or in a combination of trades and businesses if there are more than one) as an owner or partner even though there may be no earnings or net earnings caused by the individual's services during the month.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Presumption regarding work in self-employment.</E> An individual is presumed to have worked in self-employment in each month of the individual's taxable year until it is shown to the satisfaction of the Social Security Administration that in a particular month the individual did not perform substantial services (see § 404.446(c)) in any trade or business (or in a combination of trades and businesses if there are more than one) from which the net income or loss is included in computing the individual's annual earnings (see § 404.429).</P>
        <P>(f) <E T="03">Presumption regarding services for wages.</E> An individual is presumed to have performed services in any month for wages (as defined in § 404.429) of more than the applicable monthly exempt amount set for that month until it is shown to the satisfaction of the Social Security Administration that the individual did not perform services in that month for wages of more than the monthly exempt amount.</P>
        <CITA>[45 FR 48117, July 18, 1980, as amended at 47 FR 46691, Oct. 20, 1982; 48 FR 4282, Jan. 31, 1983]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.436</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings; months to which excess earnings cannot be charged because individual is deemed not entitled to benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Under the annual earnings test, excess earnings (as described in § 404.430) are not charged to any month in which an individual is deemed not entitled to a benefit. A beneficiary (i.e., the insured individual or any person entitled or deemed entitled on the individual's earnings record) is deemed not entitled to a benefit for a month if he is subject to a deduction for that month because of:</P>
        <P>(a) Engaging in noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States (as described in §§ 404.417 and 404.418); or</P>

        <P>(b) Failure to have a child in her care (in the case of a wife under age 65 or a widow or surviving divorced mother under age 62, as described in § 404.421); or<PRTPAGE P="162"/>
        </P>
        <P>(c) Refusal by a person entitled to a child's insurance benefit based on disability to accept rehabilitation services (as described in § 404.422). (An insured individual's excess earnings are not charged against the benefit of a child entitled (or deemed entitled) on the insured individual's earnings record for any month in which the child is subject to a deduction for refusing rehabilitation services); or</P>
        <P>(d) Refusal by an individual entitled to a disability insurance benefit to accept rehabilitation services as described in § 404.422 (e.g., a wife's excess earnings may not be charged against her benefits for months in which the disability insurance beneficiary on whose account she is entitled to wife's benefits incurs a deduction because he refuses rehabilitation services; also, a woman's earnings may not be charged against the mother's insurance benefit or child's insurance benefit she is receiving (on the earnings record of another individual) for months in which her husband refuses rehabilitation services while he is entitled to a disability insurance benefit).</P>
        <P>(e) Refusal by a person entitled before age 60 to a widow's/or to a widower's insurance benefit based on disability (before age 62 in the case of a widower's insurance benefit for months before 1973) to accept rehabilitation services (as described in § 404.422).</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 38 FR 9429, Apr. 16, 1973; 38 FR 17716, July 3, 1973; 43 FR 8133, Feb. 28, 1978]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.437</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Excess earnings; benefit rate subject to deductions because of excess earnings.</SUBJECT>
        <P>For purposes of deductions because of excess earnings (as described in § 404.430), the benefit rate against which excess earnings are charged is the amount of the benefit (other than a disability insurance benefit) to which the person is entitled for the month:</P>
        <P>(a) After reduction for the <E T="03">maximum</E> (see §§ 404.403 and 404.404). The rate as reduced for the maximum as referred to in this paragraph is the one applicable to remaining entitled beneficiaries after exclusion of beneficiaries deemed not entitled under § 404.436 (due to a deduction for engaging in noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States, failure to have a child in her care, or refusal to accept rehabilitation services);</P>
        <P>(b) After any reduction under section 202(q) of the Act because of entitlement to benefits for months before age 65 (this applies only to old-age, wife's, widow's, or husband's benefits);</P>
        <P>(c) After any reduction in benefits payable to a person entitled (or deemed entitled; see § 404.420) on the earnings record of the insured individual because of entitlement on his own earnings record to other benefits (see § 404.407); and</P>
        <P>(d) After any reduction of benefits payable to a person entitled or deemed entitled on the earnings record of an individual entitled to a disability insurance benefit because of such individual's entitlement to workmen's compensation for months after 1965 (see § 404.408).</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 38 FR 17716, July 3, 1973; 43 FR 8133, Feb. 28, 1978]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.439</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Partial monthly benefits; excess earnings of the individual charged against his benefits and the benefits of persons entitled (or deemed entitled) to benefits on his earnings record.</SUBJECT>

        <P>Deductions are made against the total family benefits where the excess earnings (as described in § 404.430) of an individual entitled to old-age insurance benefits are charged to a month and require deductions in an amount less than the total family benefits payable on his earnings record for that month (including the amount of a mother's or child's insurance benefit payable to a spouse who is deemed entitled on the individual's earnings record—see § 404.420). The difference between the total benefits payable and the deductions made under the annual earnings test for such month is paid (if otherwise payable under title II of the Act) to each person in the proportion that the benefit to which each is entitled (before the application of the reductions described in § 404.403 for the family maximum, § 404.407 for entitlement to more than one type of benefit, and section 202(q) of the Act for entitlement to benefits before retirement age) and before the application of § 404.304(f) <PRTPAGE P="163"/>to round to the next lower dollar bears to the total of the benefits to which all of them are entitled, except that the total amount payable to any such person may not exceed the benefits which would have been payable to that person if none of the insured individual's excess earnings had been charged to that month.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
          <P>A is entitled to an old-age insurance benefit of $165 and his wife is entitled to $82.50 before rounding, making a total of $247.50. After A's excess earnings have been charged to the appropriate months, there remains a partial benefit of $200 payable for October, which is apportioned as follows:</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s10,10.2,8,8" COLS="4" OPTS="L2">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1"/>
              <CHED H="1">Original benefit</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Fraction of original</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Benefit<SU>1</SU>
              </CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">A</ENT>
              <ENT>$165</ENT>
              <ENT>2/3</ENT>
              <ENT>$133</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW RUL="n,s">
              <ENT I="01">Wife</ENT>
              <ENT>82.50</ENT>
              <ENT>1/3</ENT>
              <ENT>66</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="02">Total</ENT>
              <ENT>247.50</ENT>
              <ENT/>
              <ENT>199</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <TNOTE>
              <SU>1</SU> After deductions for excess earnings and after rounding per § 404.304(f).</TNOTE>
          </GPOTABLE>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <CITA>[38 FR 9429, Apr. 16, 1973, as amended at 38 FR 17717, July 3, 1973; 43 FR 8133, Feb. 28, 1978; 48 FR 46149, Oct. 11, 1983]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.440</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Partial monthly benefits; pro-rated share of partial payment exceeds the benefit before deduction for excess earnings.</SUBJECT>

        <P>Where, under the apportionment described in § 404.439, a person's prorated share of the partial benefit exceeds the benefit rate to which he was entitled before excess earnings of the insured individual were charged, such person's share of the partial benefit is reduced to the amount he would have been paid had there been no deduction for excess earnings (see example). The remainder of the partial benefit is then paid to other persons eligible to receive benefits in the proportion that the benefit of each such other person bears to the total of the benefits to which all such other persons are entitled (before reduction for the family maximum). Thus, if only two beneficiaries are involved, payment is made to one as if no deduction had been imposed; and the balance of the partial benefit is paid to the other. If three or more beneficiaries are involved, however, reapportionment of the excess of the beneficiary's share of the partial benefit over the amount he would have been paid without the deduction is made in proportion to his original entitlement rate (before reduction for the family maximum). If the excess amount involved at any point totals less than $1, it is not reapportioned; instead, each beneficiary is paid on the basis of the last calculation.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
          <P>Family maximum is $150. Insured individual's excess earnings charged to the month are $25. The remaining $125 is prorated as partial payment.</P>
          <GPOTABLE CDEF="s50,8,15,15,20,15" COLS="6" OPTS="L2">
            <BOXHD>
              <CHED H="1"/>
              <CHED H="1">Original benefit</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Fraction of original total benefit</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Benefit after deductions for excess earnings but before reduction for family maximum</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Benefit reduced for maximum but without deductions for excess earnings</CHED>
              <CHED H="1">Benefit payable after both deductions and reductions (and rounded)</CHED>
            </BOXHD>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Insured Individual</ENT>
              <ENT>$100</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>2/5</FR>
              </ENT>
              <ENT>50</ENT>
              <ENT>100.00</ENT>
              <ENT>75</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Wife</ENT>
              <ENT>50</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>1/5</FR>
              </ENT>
              <ENT>25</ENT>
              <ENT>16.60</ENT>
              <ENT>16</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Child</ENT>
              <ENT>50</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>1/5</FR>
              </ENT>
              <ENT>25</ENT>
              <ENT>16.60</ENT>
              <ENT>16</ENT>
            </ROW>
            <ROW>
              <ENT I="01">Child</ENT>
              <ENT>50</ENT>
              <ENT>
                <FR>1/5</FR>
              </ENT>
              <ENT>25</ENT>
              <ENT>16.60</ENT>
              <ENT>16</ENT>
            </ROW>
          </GPOTABLE>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <CITA TYPE="W">[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 48 FR 46149, Oct. 11, 1983]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.441</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Partial monthly benefits; insured individual and another person entitled (or deemed entitled) on the same earnings record both have excess earnings.</SUBJECT>

        <P>Where both the insured individual and another person entitled (or deemed entitled) on the same earnings record have excess earnings (as described in § 404.430), their excess earnings are charged, and their partial monthly benefit is apportioned, as follows:
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>

          <P>M and his wife are initially entitled to combined total benefits of $264 per month based on M's old-age insurance benefit of $176. For the taxable year in question, M's excess earnings were $1,599 and his wife's excess earnings were $265. Both were under age 65. M had wages of more than $340 in all months of the year except February, while his wife had wages of more than $340 in all <PRTPAGE P="164"/>months of the year. After M's excess earnings have been charged to the appropriate months (all months through July except February), there remains a partial benefit payment for August of $249, which is allocated to M and his wife in the ratio that the original benefit of each bears to the sum of their original benefits: $166 and $83. His wife's excess earnings are charged against her full benefit for February ($88), her partial benefit for August ($83), her full benefit for September, and from $6 of her October benefit, leaving an $82 benefit payable to her for that month.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <CITA>[48 FR 46149, Oct. 11, 1983]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.446</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Definition of “substantial services” and “services.”</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> In general, the substantial services test will be applicable only in a grace year (including a termination grace year) as defined in § 404.435(c)(1). It is a test of whether, in view of all the services rendered by the individual and the surrounding circumstances, the individual reasonably can be considered retired in the month in question. In determining whether an individual has or has not performed substantial services in any month, the following factors are considered:</P>
        <P>(1) The amount of time the individual devoted to all trades and businesses;</P>
        <P>(2) The nature of the services rendered by the individual;</P>
        <P>(3) The extent and nature of the activity performed by the individual before he allegedly retired as compared with that performed thereafter;</P>
        <P>(4) The presence or absence of an adequately qualified paid manager, partner, or family member who manages the business;</P>
        <P>(5) The type of business establishment involved;</P>
        <P>(6) The amount of capital invested in the trade or business; and</P>
        <P>(7) The seasonal nature of the trade or business.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Individual engaged in more than one trade or business.</E> When an individual, in any month, performs services in more than one trade or business, his services in all trades or businesses are considered together in determining whether he performed substantial services in self-employment in such month.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Evidentiary requirements.</E> An individual who alleges that he did not render substantial services in any month, or months, shall submit detailed information about the operation of the trades or businesses, including the individual's activities in connection therewith. When requested to do so by the Administration, the individual shall also submit such additional statements, information, and other evidence as the Administration may consider necessary for a proper determination of whether the individual rendered substantial services in self-employment. Failure of the individual to submit the requested statements, information, and other evidence is a sufficient basis for a determination that the individual rendered substantial services in self-employment during the period in question.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 47 FR 46691, Oct. 20, 1982]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.447</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Evaluation of factors involved in substantial services test.</SUBJECT>
        <P>In determining whether an individual's services are substantial, consideration is given to the following factors:</P>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Amount of time devoted to trades or businesses.</E> Consideration is first given to the amount of time the self-employed individual devotes to all trades or businesses, the net income or loss of which is includable in computing his earnings as defined in § 404.429. For the purposes of this paragraph, the time devoted to a trade or business includes all the time spent by the individual in any activity, whether physical or mental, at the place of business or elsewhere in furtherance of such trade or business. This includes the time spent in advising and planning the operation of the business, making business contacts, attending meetings, and preparing and maintaining the facilities and records of the business. All time spent at the place of business which cannot reasonably be considered unrelated to business activities is considered time devoted to the trade or business. In considering the weight to be given to the time devoted to trades or businesses the following rules are applied:</P>
        <P>(1) <E T="03">Forty-five hours or less in a month devoted to trade or business.</E> Where the individual establishes that the time devoted to his trades and businesses during a calendar month was not more than 45 hours, the individual's services <PRTPAGE P="165"/>in that month are not considered substantial unless other factors (see paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section) make such a finding unreasonable. For example, an individual who worked only 15 hours in a month might nevertheless be found to have rendered substantial services if he was managing a sizable business or engaging in a highly skilled occupation. However, the services of less than 15 hours rendered in all trades and businesses during a calendar month are not substantial.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">More than 45 hours in a month devoted to trades and businesses.</E> Where an individual devotes more than 45 hours to all trades and businesses during a calendar month, it will be found that the individual's services are substantial unless it is established that the individual could reasonably be considered retired in the month and, therefore, that such services were not, in fact, substantial.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Nature of services rendered.</E> Consideration is also given to the nature of the services rendered by the individual in any case where a finding that the individual was retired would be unreasonable if based on time alone (see paragraph (a) of this section). The more highly skilled and valuable his services in self-employment are, the more likely the individual rendering such services could not reasonably be considered retired. The performance of services regularly also tends to show that the individual has not retired. Services are considered in relation to the technical and management needs of the business in which they are rendered. Thus, skilled services of a managerial or technical nature may be so important to the conduct of a sizable business that such services would be substantial even though the time required to render the services is considerably less than 45 hours.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Comparison of services rendered before and after retirement.</E> Where consideration of the amount of time devoted to a trade or business (see paragraph (a) of this section) and the nature of services rendered (see paragraph (b) of this section) is not sufficient to establish whether an individual's services were substantial, consideration is given to the extent and nature of the services rendered by the individual before his <E T="03">retirement,</E> as compared with the services performed during the period in question. A significant reduction in the amount or importance of services rendered in the business tends to show that the individual is retired; absence of such reduction tends to show that the individual is not retired.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Setting in which services performed.</E> Where consideration of the factors described in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section is not sufficient to establish that an individual's services in self-employment were or were not substantial, all other factors are considered. The presence or absence of a capable manager, the kind and size of the business, the amount of capital invested and whether the business is seasonal, as well as any other pertinent factors, are considered in determining whether the individual's services are such that he can reasonably be considered retired.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.450</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Required reports of work outside the United States or failure to have care of a child.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Beneficiary engaged in noncovered remunerative activity; report by beneficiary.</E> Any individual entitled to a benefit which is subject to a deduction in that month because of noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States (see § 404.417) shall report the occurrence of such an event to the Social Security Administration before the receipt and acceptance of a benefit for the second month following the month in which such event occurred.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Beneficiary receiving wife's, husband's, mother's or father's insurance benefits does not have care of a child; report by beneficiary.</E> Any person receiving wife's, husband's, mother's, or father's insurance benefits which are subject to a deduction (as described in § 404.421) because he or she did not have a child in his or her care shall report the occurrence of such an event to the Social Security Administration before the receipt and acceptance of a benefit for the second month following the month in which the deduction event occurred.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Report required by person receiving benefits on behalf of another.</E> Where a person is receiving benefits on behalf of a beneficiary (see subpart U of this <PRTPAGE P="166"/>part) it is his duty to make the report to the Administration required by paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, on behalf of the beneficiary.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Report; content and form.</E> A report required under the provisions of this section shall be filed with the Social Security Administration. (See § 404.608 for procedures concerning place of filing and date of receipt of such a report.) The report should be made on a form prescribed by the Administration and in accordance with instructions, printed thereon or attached thereto, as prescribed by the Administration. Prescribed forms may be obtained at any office of the Administration. If the prescribed form is not used, the report should be properly identified (e.g., show the name and social security claim number of the beneficiary about whom the report is made), describe the events being reported, tell when the events occurred, furnish any other pertinent data (e.g., who has care of the children), and be properly authenticated (e.g., bear the signature and address of the beneficiary making the report or the person reporting on his behalf). The report should contain all the information needed for a proper determination of whether a deduction applies and, if it does, the period for which such deductions should be made.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 49 FR 24117, June 12, 1984; 51 FR 10616, Mar. 28, 1986]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.451</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Penalty deductions for failure to report within prescribed time limit noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States or not having care of a child.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Penalty for failure to report.</E> If an individual (or the person receiving benefits on his behalf) fails to comply with the reporting obligations of § 404.450 within the time specified in § 404.450 and it is found that good cause for such failure does not exist (see § 404.454), a penalty deduction is made from the individual's benefits in addition to the deduction described in § 404.417 (relating to noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States) or § 404.421 (relating to failure to have care of a child).</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Determining amount of penalty deduction.</E> The amount of the penalty deduction for failure to report noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States or not having care of a child within the prescribed time is determined as follows:</P>
        <P>(1) <E T="03">First failure to make timely report.</E> The penalty deduction for the first failure to make a timely report is an amount equal to the individual's benefit or benefits for the first month for which the deduction event was not reported timely.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Second failure to make timely report.</E> The penalty deduction for the second failure to make a timely report is an amount equal to twice the amount of the individual's benefit or benefits for the first month for which the deduction event in the second failure period was not reported timely.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Subsequent failures to make timely reports.</E> The penalty deduction for the third or subsequent failure to file a timely report is an amount equal to three times the amount of the individual's benefit or benefits for the first month for which the deduction event in the third failure period was not reported timely.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Determining whether a failure to file a timely report is first, second, third, or subsequent failure—</E>(1) <E T="03">Failure period.</E> A failure period runs from the date of one delinquent report (but initially starting with the date of entitlement to monthly benefits) to the date of the next succeeding delinquent report, excluding the date of the earlier report and including the date of the later report. The failure period includes each month for which succeeding delinquent report, excluding a report becomes overdue during a failure period, but it does not include any month for which a report is not yet overdue on the ending date of such period. If <E T="03">good cause</E> (see § 404.454) is found for the entire period, the period is not regarded as a failure period.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">First failure.</E> When no penalty deduction under paragraph (b) of this section has previously been imposed against the beneficiary for failure to report noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States or for failure to report not having care of a child, the earliest month in the first failure period for which a report is delinquent and for which <E T="03">good cause</E> (see <PRTPAGE P="167"/>§ 404.454) for failure to make the required report is not found is considered to be the first failure.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Second failure.</E> After one penalty deduction under paragraph (b) of this section has been imposed against the beneficiary, the first month for which a report is delinquent in the second failure period is considered to be the second failure.</P>
        <P>(4) <E T="03">Third and subsequent failures.</E> After a second penalty deduction under paragraph (b) of this section has been imposed against the beneficiary, the first month for which a report is delinquent in the third failure period is considered to be the third failure. Subsequent failures will be determined in the same manner.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>

          <P>M became entitled in January 1966 to mother's benefits; these benefits are not payable for any month in which the mother does not have a child in her care. M accepted benefits for each month from January 1966 through June 1967. In July 1967 she reported that she had not had a child in her care in January 1967. As she was not eligible for a benefit for any month in which she did not have a child in her care, M's July 1967 benefit was withheld to recover the overpayment she had received for January 1967, and the next payment she received was for August 1967. No penalty was imposed for her failure to make a timely report of the deduction event that occurred in January 1967 because it was determined that <E T="03">good cause</E> existed.</P>

          <P>In March 1968 M reported that she had not had a child in her care in September or October 1967; however, she had accepted benefit payments for each month from August 1967 through February 1968. Her benefits for March and April 1968 were withheld to recover the overpayment for September and October 1967. Also, it was determined that <E T="03">good cause</E> was not present for M's failure to make a timely report of the deduction event that had occurred in September 1967. A penalty equal to her benefit for September 1967 was deducted from M's May 1968 payment since this was her <E T="03">first failure</E> to report not having a child in her care. Payments to her then were continued.</P>

          <P>On November 4, 1968, it was learned that M had not had a child in her care in November 1967 or in June, July, or August 1968 although she had accepted benefits for June through October 1968. Consequently, M's benefits for November 1968 through February 1969 were withheld to recover the 4 months' overpayment she received for months in which she did not have a child in her care. In addition, it was determined that <E T="03">good cause</E> was not present for M's failure to report the deduction events, and a penalty was imposed equal to twice the amount of M's benefit for the month of June 1968. This was M's <E T="03">second failure</E> to report not having a child in her care. No further penalty applied for November 1967 because that month was included in M's <E T="03">first-failure</E> period.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(5) <E T="03">Penalty deductions imposed under § 404.453 not considered.</E> A failure to make a timely report of earnings as required by § 404.452 for which a penalty deduction is imposed under § 404.453 is not counted as a failure to report in determining the first or subsequent failure to report noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States or not having care of a child.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Limitation on amount of penalty deduction.</E> Notwithstanding the provisions described in paragraph (b) of this section, the amount of the penalty deduction imposed for failure to make a timely report of noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States or for failure to report not having care of a child may not exceed the number of months in that failure period for which the individual received and accepted a benefit and for which a deduction is imposed by reason of his noncovered remunerative activity outside the United States or failure to have care of a child. (See § 404.458 for other limitations on the amount of the penalty deduction.)</P>
        <CITA>[38 FR 3596, Feb. 8, 1973, as amended at 38 FR 9430, Apr. 16, 1973]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.452</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Reports to Social Security Administration of earnings; wages; net earnings from self-employment.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Conditions under which a report of earnings, wages, and net earnings from self-employment is required.</E> An individual who, during a taxable year, is entitled to a monthly benefit (except if in each month of his taxable year he was entitled only to a disability insurance benefit) is required to report to the Social Security Administration the total amount of his earnings (as defined in § 404.429) for each such taxable year. A report is required when the individual's total earnings or wages (as defined in § 404.429) for any taxable year ending after 1972 exceed the product of $175 multiplied by the number of months in his taxable year, except that the report is not required for a taxable year if:<PRTPAGE P="168"/>
        </P>
        <P>(1) The individual attained the age of 70 in or before the first month of entitlement to benefits in the taxable year, or</P>
        <P>(2) The individual's benefit payments were suspended under the provisions described in § 404.456 for all months in a taxable year in which the individual was entitled to benefits and was under age 70.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Time within which report must be filed.</E> The report for any taxable year beginning after 1954 shall be filed with the Social Security Administration on or before the 15th day of the fourth month following the close of the taxable year; for example, April 15 when the beneficiary's taxable year is a calendar year. (See § 404.3(c) where the last day for filing the report falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, or any other day all or part of which is declared to be a nonwork day for Federal employees by statute or Executive order.) The filing of an income tax return or a form W-2 with the Internal Revenue Service may serve as the report required to be filed under the provisions of this section where the income tax return or form W-2 shows the same wages and net earnings from self-employment that must be reported to the Administration under this section.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Report required by person receiving benefits on behalf of another.</E> Where a person is receiving benefits on behalf of a beneficiary (see subpart U of this part), it is his duty to make the report to the Administration required by this section.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Information to be provided to us.</E> The report should show the name and social security claim number of the beneficiary about whom the report is made; identify the taxable year for which the report is made; show the total amount of wages for which the beneficiary rendered services during the taxable year (if applicable), the amount of net earnings from self-employment for such year (if applicable); and show the name and address of the individual making the report. To overcome the presumption that the beneficiary rendered services for wages exceeding the allowable amount and rendered substantial services in self-employment in each month (see § 404.435), we must also be told the specific months in which the beneficiary did not render services in employment for wages of more than the allowable amount (as described in § 404.435) and did not render substantial services in self-employment (as described in §§ 404.446 and 404.447).</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Requirement to furnish requested information.</E> A beneficiary, or the person reporting on his behalf, is required to furnish any other information about the beneficiary's earnings and services that the Administration requests for the purpose of determining the correct amount of benefits payable for a taxable year (see § 404.455).</P>
        <P>(f) <E T="03">Extension of time for filing report—</E>(1) <E T="03">General.</E> Notwithstanding the provision described in paragraph (b) of this section, the Administration may grant a reasonable extension of time for making the report of earnings required under this section if it finds that there is valid reason for a delay, but in no case may the period be extended more than 4 months for any taxable year.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Requirements applicable to requests for extensions.</E> Before his annual report of earnings is due, a beneficiary may request an extension of time for filing his report. The request must meet all of these requirements:</P>
        <P>(i) Be in writing, and</P>
        <P>(ii) Be made by the beneficiary, his representative payee, or his authorized agent,</P>
        <P>(iii) Be made before the required report is overdue (If an extension of time already has been granted, a request for further extension must be made before the due date as extended previously),</P>
        <P>(iv) Be made to an office of the Administration,</P>
        <P>(v) Name the beneficiary for whom the annual report must be made and furnish his claim number,</P>
        <P>(vi) Identify the year for which an annual report is due and for which an extension of time is requested,</P>
        <P>(vii) Explain in the requester's own words the reasons why an extension of time is needed, and how much extended time is needed,</P>
        <P>(viii) Show the date the request is made, and</P>
        <P>(ix) Be signed by the requester.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Valid reason defined.</E> A valid reason is a bona fide need, problem, or situation which makes it impossible or <PRTPAGE P="169"/>difficult for a beneficiary (or his representative payee) to meet the annual report due date prescribed by law. This may be illness or disability of the one required to make the report, absence or travel so far from home that he does not have and cannot readily obtain the records needed for making his report, inability to obtain evidence required from another source when such evidence is necessary in making the report, inability of his accountant to compile the data needed for the annual report, or any similar situation which has a direct bearing on the individual's ability to comply with his reporting obligation within the specified time limit.</P>
        <P>(4) <E T="03">Evidence that extension of time has been granted.</E> In the absence of written evidence of a properly approved extension of time for making an annual report of earnings, it will be presumed that no extension of filing time was granted. In such case it will be necessary for the beneficiary to establish whether he otherwise had good cause (§ 404.454) for filing his annual report after the normal due date.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 38 FR 9430, Apr. 16, 1973; 43 FR 8133, Feb. 28, 1978; 51 FR 10616, Mar. 28, 1986; 60 FR 56513, Nov. 9, 1995; 62 FR 15610, Apr. 2, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.453</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Penalty deductions for failure to report earnings timely.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Penalty for failure to report earnings; general.</E> Penalty deductions are imposed against an individual's benefits, in addition to the deductions required because of his excess earnings (see § 404.415), if:</P>
        <P>(1) He fails to make a timely report of his earnings as specified in § 404.452 for a taxable year beginning after 1954;</P>
        <P>(2) It is found that good cause for failure to report earnings timely (see § 404.454) does not exist;</P>
        <P>(3) A deduction is imposed because of his earnings (see § 404.415) for that year; and</P>
        <P>(4) He received and accepted any payment of benefits for that year.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Determining amount of penalty deduction.</E> The amount of the penalty deduction for failure to report earnings for a taxable year within the prescribed time is determined as follows:</P>
        <P>(1) <E T="03">First failure to file timely report.</E> The penalty deduction for the first failure to file a timely report is an amount equal to the individual's benefit or benefits for the last month for which he was entitled to such benefit or benefits during the taxable year, except that with respect to any deductions imposed on or after January 2, 1968, if the amount of the deduction imposed for the taxable year is less than the benefit or benefits for the last month of the taxable year for which he was entitled to a benefit under section 202 of the Act, the penalty deduction is an amount equal to the amount of the deduction imposed but not less than $10.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Second failure to file timely report.</E> The penalty deduction for the second failure to file a timely report is an amount equal to twice the amount of the individual's benefit or benefits for the last month for which he was entitled to such benefit or benefits during such taxable year.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Subsequent failures to file timely reports.</E> The penalty deduction for the third or subsequent failure to file a timely report is an amount equal to three times the amount of the individual's benefit or benefits for the last month for which he was entitled to such benefit or benefits during such taxable year.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Determining whether a failure to file a timely report is first, second, or subsequent failure—</E>(1) <E T="03">No prior failure.</E> Where no penalty deduction under this section has previously been imposed against the beneficiary for failure to make a timely report of his earnings, all taxable years (and this may include 2 or more years) for which a report of earnings is overdue as of the date the first delinquent report is made are included in the first failure. The latest of such years for which <E T="03">good cause</E> for failure to make the required report (see § 404.454) is not found is considered the first failure to file a timely report.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>

          <P>X became entitled to benefits in 1964 and had reportable earnings for 1964, 1965, and 1966. He did not make his annual reports for those years until July 1967. At that time it was found that 1966 was the only year for which he has good cause for not making a timely report of his earnings. Since all taxable years for which a report is overdue as of the date of the first delinquent report are included in the first failure period, it was <PRTPAGE P="170"/>found that his first failure to make a timely report was for 1965. The penalty is equal to his December 1965 benefit rate. If good cause had also been found for both 1965 and 1964, then X would have <E T="03">no prior failure</E> within the meaning of this subsection.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Second and subsequent failures.</E> After one penalty deduction under paragraph (b) of this section has been imposed against an individual, each taxable year for which a timely report of earnings is not made (and the count commences with reports of earnings which become delinquent after the date the first delinquent report described in paragraph (c)(1) of this section was made), and for which <E T="03">good cause</E> for failure to make the required report is not found, is considered separately in determining whether the failure is the second or subsequent failure to report timely.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
          <P>Y incurred a penalty deduction for not making his 1963 annual report until July 1964. In August 1966 it was found that he had not made a timely report of either his 1964 or 1965 earnings, and good cause was not present with respect to either year. The penalty for 1964 is equal to twice his benefit rate for December 1964. The penalty for 1965 is equal to three times his benefit rate for December 1965.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(3) <E T="03">Penalty deduction imposed under § 404.451 not considered.</E> A failure to make a report as required by § 404.450, for which a penalty deduction is imposed under § 404.451, is not counted as a failure to report in determining, under this section, whether a failure to report earnings or wages is the first or subsequent failure to report.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Limitation on amount of penalty deduction.</E> Notwithstanding the provisions described in paragraph (b) of this section, the amount of the penalty deduction imposed for failure to file a timely report of earnings for a taxable year may not exceed the number of months in that year for which the individual received and accepted a benefit and for which deductions are imposed by reason of his earnings for such year. (See § 404.458 for other limitations on the amount of the penalty deduction.)</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 38 FR 3597, Feb. 8, 1973; 38 FR 9431, Apr. 16, 1973]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.454</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Good cause for failure to make required reports.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> The failure of an individual to make a timely report under the provisions described in §§ 404.450 and 404.452 will not result in a penalty deduction if the individual establishes to the satisfaction of the Administration that his failure to file a timely report was due to good cause. Before making any penalty determination as described in §§ 404.451 and 404.453, the individual shall be advised of the penalty and good cause provisions and afforded an opportunity to establish good cause for failure to report timely. The failure of the individual to submit evidence to establish good cause within a specified time may be considered a sufficient basis for a finding that good cause does not exist (see § 404.705). In determining whether good cause for failure to report timely has been established by the individual, consideration is given to whether the failure to report within the proper time limit was the result of untoward circumstances, misleading action of the Social Security Administration, confusion as to the requirements of the Act resulting from amendments to the Act or other legislation, or any physical, mental, educational, or linguistic limitations (including any lack of facility with the English language) the individual may have. For example, <E T="03">good cause</E> may be found where failure to file a timely report was caused by:</P>
        <P>(1) Serious illness of the individual, or death or serious illness in his immediate family;</P>
        <P>(2) Inability of the individual to obtain, within the time required to file the report, earnings information from his employer because of death or serious illness of the employer or one in the employer's immediate family; or unavoidable absence of his employer; or destruction by fire or other damage of the employer's business records;</P>
        <P>(3) Destruction by fire, or other damage, of the individual's business records;</P>

        <P>(4) Transmittal of the required report within the time required to file the report, in good faith to another Government agency even though the report does not reach the Administration <PRTPAGE P="171"/>until after the period for reporting has expired;</P>
        <P>(5) Unawareness of the statutory provision that an annual report of earnings is required for the taxable year in which the individual attained age 72 provided his earnings for such year exceeded the applicable amount, e.g., $1,680 for a 12-month taxable year ending after December 1967;</P>
        <P>(6) Failure on the part of the Administration to furnish forms in sufficient time for an individual to complete and file the report on or before the date it was due, provided the individual made a timely request to the Administration for the forms;</P>
        <P>(7) Belief that an extension of time for filing income tax returns granted by the Internal Revenue Service was also applicable to the annual report to be made to the Social Security Administration;</P>
        <P>(8) Reliance upon a written report to the Social Security Administration made by, or on behalf of, the beneficiary before the close of the taxable year, if such report contained sufficient information about the beneficiary's earnings or work, to require suspension of his benefits (see § 404.456) and the report was not subsequently refuted or rescinded; or</P>
        <P>(9) Failure of the individual to understand reporting responsibilities due to his or her physical, mental, educational, or linguistic limitation(s).</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Notice of determination.</E> In every case in which it is determined that a penalty deduction should be imposed, the individual shall be advised of the penalty determination and of his reconsideration rights. If it is found that good cause for failure to file a timely report does not exist, the notice will include an explanation of the basis for this finding; the notice will also explain the right to partial adjustment of the overpayment, in accordance with the provisions of § 404.502(c).</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Good cause for subsequent failure.</E> Where circumstances are similar and an individual fails on more than one occasion to make a timely report, good cause normally will not be found for the second or subsequent violation.</P>
        <CITA>[38 FR 3597, Feb. 8, 1973, as amended at 43 FR 8133, Feb. 28, 1978; 59 FR 1634, Jan. 12, 1994]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.455</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Request by Social Security Administration for reports of earnings and estimated earnings; effect of failure to comply with request.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Request by Social Security Administration for report during taxable year; effect of failure to comply.</E> The Social Security Administration may, during the course of a taxable year, request a beneficiary to estimate his or her earnings (as defined in § 404.429) for the current taxable year and for the next taxable year, and to furnish any other information about his or her earnings that the Social Security Administration may specify. If a beneficiary fails to comply with a request for an estimate of earnings for a taxable year, the beneficiary's failure, in itself, constitutes justification under section 203(h) of the Act for a determination that it may reasonably be expected that the beneficiary will have deductions imposed under the provisions described in § 404.415, due to his or her earnings for that taxable year. Furthermore, the failure of the beneficiary to comply with a request for an estimate of earnings for a taxable year will, in itself, constitute justification for the Social Security Administration to use the preceding taxable year's estimate of earnings (or, if available, reported earnings) to suspend payment of benefits for the current or next taxable year.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Request by Social Security Administration for report after close of taxable year; failure to comply.</E> After the close of his or her taxable year, the Social Security Administration may request a beneficiary to furnish a report of his or her earnings for the closed taxable year and to furnish any other information about his or her earnings for that year that the Social Security Administration may specify. If he or she fails to comply with this request, this failure shall, in itself, constitute justification under section 203(h) of the Act for a determination that the beneficiary's benefits are subject to deductions as described in § 404.415 for each month in the taxable year (or only for the months thereof specified by the Social Security Administration).</P>
        <CITA>[56 FR 11373, Mar. 18, 1991]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <PRTPAGE P="172"/>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.456</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Current suspension of benefits because an individual works or engages in self-employment.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Circumstances under which benefit payments may be suspended.</E> If, on the basis of information obtained by or submitted to the Administration, it is determined that an individual entitled to monthly benefits for any taxable year may reasonably be expected to have deductions imposed against his benefits (as described in § 404.415) by reason of his earnings for such year, the Administration may, before the close of the taxable year, suspend all or part, as the Administration may specify, of the benefits payable to the individual and to all other persons entitled (or deemed entitled—see § 404.420) to benefits on the basis of the individual's earnings record.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Duration of suspension.</E> The suspension described in paragraph (a) of this section shall remain in effect with respect to the benefits for each month until the Administration has determined whether or not any deduction under § 404.415 applies for such month.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">When suspension of benefits becomes final.</E> For taxable years beginning after August 1958, if benefit payments were suspended (as described in paragraph (a) of this section) for all months of entitlement in an individual's taxable year, no benefit payment for any month in that year may be made after the expiration of the period of 3 years, 3 months, and 15 days following the close of the individual's taxable year unless, within that period, the individual, or any person entitled to benefits based on his earnings record, files with the Administration information showing that a benefit for a month is payable to the individual. Subject to the limitations of this paragraph, a determination about deductions may be reopened under the circumstances described in § 404.957.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.457</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Deductions where taxes neither deducted from wages of certain maritime employees nor paid.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">When deduction is required.</E> A deduction is required where:</P>
        <P>(1) An individual performed services after September 1941 and before the termination of Title I of the First War Powers Act, 1941, on or in connection with any vessel as an officer or crew member; and</P>
        <P>(2) The services were performed in the employ of the United States and employment was through the War Shipping Administration or, for services performed before February 11, 1942, through the United States Maritime Commission; and</P>
        <P>(3) The services, under the provisions described in § 403.803(d) of this chapter (Regulations No. 3 of the Social Security Administration), constituted employment for purposes of title II of the Social Security Act; and</P>
        <P>(4) The taxes imposed (by section 1400 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, as amended) with respect to such services were neither deducted from the individual's wages nor paid by the employer.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Amount of deduction.</E> The deduction required by paragraph (a) of this section is an amount equal to 1 percent of the wages with respect to which the taxes described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section were neither deducted nor paid by the employer.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">How deduction is made.</E> The deduction required by paragraph (a) of this section is made by withholding an amount as determined under paragraph (b) of this section from any monthly benefit or lump-sum death payment based on the earnings record of the individual who performed the services described in paragraph (a) of this section.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.458</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Limiting deductions where total family benefits payable would not be affected or would be only partly affected.</SUBJECT>

        <P>Notwithstanding the provisions described in §§ 404.415, 404.417, 404.421, 404.422, 404.451, and 404.453 about the amount of the deduction to be imposed for a month, no such deduction is imposed for a month when the benefits payable for that month to all persons entitled to benefits on the same earnings record and living in the same household remain equal to the maximum benefits payable to them on that earnings record. Where making such deductions and increasing the benefits to others in the household (for the month in which the deduction event occurred) would give members of the household less than the <E T="03">maximum</E> (as <PRTPAGE P="173"/>determined under § 404.404) payable to them, the amount of deduction imposed is reduced to the difference between the maximum amount of benefits payable to them and the total amount which would have been paid if the benefits of members of the household not subject to deductions were increased for that month. The individual subject to the deduction for such month may be paid the difference between the deduction so reduced and his benefit as adjusted under § 404.403 (without application of § 404.402(a)). All other persons in the household are paid, for such month, their benefits as adjusted under § 404.403 without application of § 404.402(a).</P>
        <CITA>[47 FR 43673, Oct. 4, 1982]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.460</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of monthly benefits of aliens outside the United States.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Nonpayment of monthly benefits to aliens outside the United States more than 6 months.</E> Except as described in paragraph (b) and subject to the limitations in paragraph (c) of this section after December 1956 no monthly benefit may be paid to any individual who is not a citizen or national of the United States, for any month after the sixth consecutive calendar month during all of which he is outside the United States, and before the first calendar month for all of which he is in the United States after such absence. (See § 404.380 regarding special payments at age 72.)</P>

        <P>(1) For nonpayment of benefits under this section, it is necessary that the beneficiary be an alien and while an alien be outside the United States for more than six full consecutive calendar months. In determining whether at the time of a beneficiary's initial entitlement to benefits he has been outside the United States for a period exceeding six full consecutive calendar months, not more than the six calendar months immediately preceding the month of initial entitlement may be considered. For the purposes of this section, <E T="03">outside the United States</E> means outside the territorial boundaries of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands of the United States, Guam, and American Samoa.</P>
        <P>(2) Effective with 6-month periods beginning after January 2, 1968, after an alien has been outside the United States for any period of 30 consecutive days, he is deemed to be outside the United States continuously until he has returned to the United States and remained in the United States for a period of 30 consecutive days.</P>
        <P>(3) Payments which have been discontinued pursuant to the provisions of this section will not be resumed until the alien beneficiary has been in the United States for a full calendar month. A full calendar month includes 24 hours of each day of the calendar month.</P>

        <P>(4) Nonpayment of benefits to an individual under this section does not cause nonpayment of benefits to other persons receiving benefits based on the individual's earnings record.
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example</HD>
          <P>R, an alien, leaves the United States on August 15, 1967, and returns on February 1, 1968. He leaves again on February 15, 1968, and does not return until May 15, 1968, when he spends 1 day in the United States. He has been receiving monthly benefits since July 1967.</P>
          <P>R's first 6-month period of absence begins September 1, 1967. Since this period begins before January 2, 1968, his visit (Feb. 1, 1968, to Feb. 15, 1968) to the United States for less than 30 consecutive days is sufficient to break this 6-month period.</P>
          <P>R's second 6-month period of absence begins March 1, 1968. Since this period begins after January 2, 1968, and he was outside the United States for 30 consecutive days, he must return and spend 30 consecutive days in the United States prior to September 1, 1968, to prevent nonpayment of benefits beginning September 1968. If R fails to return to the United States for 30 consecutive days prior to September 1, 1968, payments will be discontinued and will not be resumed until R spends at least 1 full calendar month in the United States.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        
        <P>(b) <E T="03">When nonpayment provisions do not apply.</E> The provisions described in paragraph (a) of this section do not apply, subject to the limitations in paragraph (c) of this section, to a benefit for any month if:</P>
        <P>(1) The individual was, or upon application would have been, entitled to a monthly benefit for December 1956, based upon the same earnings record; or</P>

        <P>(2)(i) The individual upon whose earnings the benefit is based, before that <PRTPAGE P="174"/>month, has resided in the United States for a period or periods aggregating 10 years or more or has earned not less than 40 quarters of coverage;</P>

        <P>(ii) Except that, effective with the month of July 1968, the provisions of paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section do not apply if (<E T="03">a</E>) the beneficiary is a citizen of a country having a social insurance or pension system which meets the conditions described in paragraphs (b)(7) (i), (ii), and (iii) of this section but does not meet the condition described in paragraph (b)(7)(iv) of this section, or (<E T="03">b</E>) the beneficiary is a citizen of a country that has no social insurance or pension system of general application if at any time within 5 years prior to January 1968 (or the first month after December 1967 in which his benefits are subject to suspension pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section) payments to individuals residing in such country were withheld by the Treasury Department under the first section of the Act of October 9, 1940 (31 U.S.C. 123) (see paragraph (c) of this section);</P>
        <P>(iii) For purposes of this subparagraph a period of residence begins with the day the insured individual arrives in the United States with the intention of establishing at least a temporary home here; it continues so long as he maintains an attachment to an abode in the United States, accompanied by actual physical presence in the United States for a significant part of the period; and ends with the day of departure from the United States with the intention to reside elsewhere; or</P>
        <P>(3) The individual is outside the United States while in the active military or naval service of the United States; or</P>
        <P>(4) The individual on whose earnings the benefit is based died before that month and:</P>
        <P>(i) Death occurred while the individual was on active duty or inactive duty training as a member of a uniformed service, or</P>
        <P>(ii) Death occurred after the individual was discharged or released from a period of active duty or inactive duty training as a member of a uniformed service, and the Administrator of Veterans' Affairs determines, and certifies to the Commissioner, that the discharge or release was under conditions other than dishonorable and that death was as a result of a disease or injury incurred or aggravated in line of duty while on active duty or inactive duty training; or</P>
        <P>(5) The individual on whose earnings record the benefit is based worked in service covered by the Railroad Retirement Act, and such work is treated as employment covered by the Social Security Act under the provisions described in subpart O of this part; or</P>
        <P>(6) The nonpayment of monthly benefits under the provisions described in paragraph (a) of this section would be contrary to a treaty obligation of the United States in effect on August 1, 1956 (see § 404.463(b)); or</P>
        <P>(7) The individual is a citizen of a foreign country that the Commissioner determines has in effect a social insurance or pension system (see § 404.463) which meets all of the following conditions:</P>
        <P>(i) Such system pays periodic benefits or the actuarial equivalent thereof; and</P>
        <P>(ii) The system is of general application; and</P>
        <P>(iii) Benefits are paid in this system on account of old age, retirement, or death; and</P>
        <P>(iv) Individuals who are citizens of the United States but not citizens of the foreign country and who qualify for such benefits are permitted to receive benefits without restriction or qualification, at their full rate, or the actuarial equivalent thereof, while outside of the foreign country and without regard to the duration of their absence therefrom.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Nonpayment of monthly benefits to aliens residing in certain countries—</E>(1) <E T="03">Benefits for months after June 1968.</E> Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, no monthly benefit may be paid for any month after June 1968 to any individual who is not a citizen or national of the United States for any month such individual resides in a country to which payments to individuals in such country are being withheld by the Treasury Department pursuant to the first section of the Act of October 9, 1940 (31 U.S.C. 123).<PRTPAGE P="175"/>
        </P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Benefits for months before July 1968.</E> If any benefits which an individual who is not a citizen or national of the United States was entitled to receive under title II of the Social Security Act are, on June 30, 1968, being withheld by the Treasury Department pursuant to the first section of the Act of October 9, 1940 (31 U.S.C. 123), upon removal of the restriction such benefits, payable to such individual for months after the month in which the determination by the Treasury Department that the benefits should be so withheld was made, shall not be paid—</P>
        <P>(i) To any person other than such individual, or, if such individual dies before such benefits can be paid, to any person other than an individual who was entitled for the month in which the deceased individual died (with the application of section 202(j)(1) of the Social Security Act) to a monthly benefit under title II of such Act on the basis of the same wages and self-employment income as such deceased individual; or</P>
        <P>(ii) In excess of an amount equal to the amount of the last 12 months' benefits that would have been payable to such individual.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">List of countries under Treasury Department alien payment restriction.</E> Pursuant to the provisions of the first section of the Act of October 9, 1940 (31 U.S.C. 123) the Treasury Department is currently withholding payments to individuals residing in the following countries. Further additions to or deletions from the list of countries will be published in the <E T="04">Federal Register.</E>
          
        </P>
        <EXTRACT>
          <FP>Cuba</FP>
          <FP>Democratic Kampuchea (formerly Cambodia)</FP>
          <FP>North Korea</FP>
          <FP>Vietnam</FP>
        </EXTRACT>
        
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Nonpayment of monthly benefits to certain aliens entitled to benefits on a worker's earnings record.</E> An individual who after December 31, 1984 becomes eligible for benefits on the earnings record of a worker for the first time, is an alien, has been outside the United States for more than 6 consecutive months, and is qualified to receive a monthly benefit by reason of the provisions of paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3), (b)(5), or (b)(7) of this section, must also meet a U.S. residence requirement described in this section to receive benefits:</P>
        <P>(1) An alien entitled to benefits as a child of a living or deceased worker—</P>
        <P>(i) Must have resided in the U.S. for 5 or more years as the child of the parent on whose earnings record entitlement is based; or</P>
        <P>(ii) The parent on whose earnings record the child is entitled and the other parent, if any, must each have either resided in the United States for 5 or more years or died while residing in the U.S.</P>
        <P>(2) An alien who meets the requirements for child's benefits based on paragraph (d)(1) of this section above, whose status as a child is based on an adoptive relationship with the living or deceased worker, must also—</P>
        <P>(i) Have been adopted within the United States by the worker on whose earnings record the child's entitlement is based; and</P>
        <P>(ii) Have lived in the United States with, and received one-half support from, the worker for a period, beginning prior to the child's attainment of age 18, of</P>
        <P>(A) At least one year immediately before the month in which the worker became eligible for old-age benefits or disability benefits or died (whichever occurred first), or</P>
        <P>(B) If the worker had a period of disability which continued until the worker's entitlement to old-age or disability benefits or death, at least one year immediately before the month in which that period of disability began.</P>
        <P>(3) An alien entitled to benefits as a spouse, surviving spouse, divorced spouse, surviving divorced spouse, or surviving divorced mother or father must have resided in the United States for 5 or more years while in a spousal relationship with the person on whose earnings record the entitlement is based. The spousal relationship over the required period can be that of wife, husband, widow, widower, divorced wife, divorced husband, surviving divorced wife, surviving divorced husband, surviving divorced mother, surviving divorced father, or a combination of two or more of these categories.</P>

        <P>(4) An alien who is entitled to parent's benefits must have resided in the United States for 5 or more years as a parent of the person on whose earnings record the entitlement is based.<PRTPAGE P="176"/>
        </P>
        <P>(5) Individuals eligible for benefits before January 1, 1985 (including those eligible for one category of benefits on a particular worker's earnings record after December 31, 1984, but also eligible for a different category of benefits on the same worker's earnings record before January 1, 1985), will not have to meet the residency requirement.</P>
        <P>(6) Definitions applicable to paragraph (d) of this section are as follows:</P>
        <P>
          <E T="03">Eligible for benefits</E> means that an individual satisfies the criteria described in subpart D of this part for benefits at a particular time except that the person need not have applied for those benefits at that time.</P>
        <P>
          <E T="03">Other parent</E> for purposes of paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section means any other living parent who is of the opposite sex of the worker and who is the adoptive parent by whom the child was adopted before the child attained age 16 and who is or was the spouse of the person on whose earnings record the child is entitled; or the natural mother or natural father of the child; or the step-parent of the child by a marriage, contracted before the child attained age 16, to the natural or adopting parent on whose earnings record the child is entitled. (Note: Based on this definition, a child may have more than one living <E T="03">other parent.</E> However, the child's benefit will be payable for a month if in that month he or she has one <E T="03">other parent</E> who had resided in the U.S. for at least 5 years.)</P>
        <P>
          <E T="03">Resided in the United States</E> for satisfying the residency requirement means presence in the United States with the intention of establishing at least a temporary home. A period of residence begins upon arrival in the United States with that intention and continues so long as an attachment to an abode in the United States is maintained, accompanied by actual physical presence in the United States for a significant part of the period, and ending the day of departure from the United States with the intention to reside elsewhere. The period need not have been continuous and the requirement is satisfied if the periods of U.S. residence added together give a total of 5 full years.</P>
        <P>(7) The provisions described in paragraph (d) of this section shall not apply if the beneficiary is a citizen or resident of a country with which the United States has a totalization agreement in force, except to the extent provided by that agreement.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 34 FR 13366, Aug. 19, 1969; 52 FR 8249, Mar. 17, 1987; 52 FR 26145, July 13, 1987; 60 FR 17445, Apr. 6, 1995; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.461</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of lump sum after death of alien outside United States for more than 6 months.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Where an individual dies outside the United States after January 1957 and no monthly benefit was or could have been paid to him for the month preceding the month in which he died because of the provisions described in § 404.460, no lump-sum death payment may be made upon the basis of the individual's earnings record.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.462</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of hospital and medical insurance benefits of alien outside United States for more than 6 months.</SUBJECT>
        <P>No payments may be made under part A (hospital insurance benefits) of title XVIII for items or services furnished to an individual in any month for which the prohibition described in § 404.460 against payment of benefits to an individual outside the United States for more than six full consecutive calendar months is applicable (or would be if he were entitled to any such benefits). Also, no payments may be made under part B (supplementary medical insurance benefits) of title XVIII for expenses incurred by an individual during any month the individual is not paid a monthly benefit by reason of the provisions described in § 404.460 or for which no monthly benefit would be paid if he were otherwise entitled thereto.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.463</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits of aliens outside the United States; “foreign social insurance system,” and “treaty obligation” exceptions defined.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Foreign social insurance system exception.</E> The following criteria are used to evaluate the social insurance or pension system of a foreign country to determine whether the exception described in § 404.460(b) to the alien nonpayment provisions applies:<PRTPAGE P="177"/>
        </P>
        <P>(1) <E T="03">Social insurance or pension system.</E> A <E T="03">social insurance system</E> means a governmental plan which pays benefits as an earned right, on the basis either of contributions or work in employment covered under the plan, without regard to the financial need of the beneficiary. However, a plan of this type may still be regarded as a <E T="03">social insurance system</E> though it may provide, in a subordinate fashion, for a supplemental payment based on need. A <E T="03">pension system</E> means a governmental plan which pays benefits based on residence or age, or a private employer's plan for which the government has set up uniform standards for coverage, contributions, eligibility, and benefit amounts provided that, in both of these types of plans, the financial need of the beneficiary is not a consideration.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">In effect.</E> The social insurance or pension system of the foreign country must be <E T="03">in effect.</E> This means that the foreign social insurance or pension system is in full operation with regard to taxes (or contributions) and benefits, or is in operation with regard to taxes (or contributions), and provision is made for payments to begin immediately upon the expiration of the period provided in the law for acquiring earliest eligibility. It is not <E T="03">in effect</E> if the law leaves the beginning of operation to executive or other administrative action; nor is it in effect if the law has been temporarily suspended.</P>
        <P>(3) <E T="03">General application.</E> The term <E T="03">of general application</E> means that the social insurance or pension system (or combination of systems) covers a substantial portion of the paid labor force in industry and commerce, taking into consideration the industrial classification and size of the paid labor force and the population of the country, as well as occupational, size of employer, and geographical limitations on coverage.</P>
        <P>(4) <E T="03">Periodic benefit or actuarial equivalent.</E> The term <E T="03">periodic benefit</E> means a benefit payable at stated regular intervals of time such as weekly, biweekly, or monthly. <E T="03">Actuarial equivalent</E> of a periodic benefit means the commutation of the value of the periodic benefit into a lump-sum payment, taking life expectancy and interest into account.</P>
        <P>(5) <E T="03">Benefits payable on account of old age, retirement, or death.</E> The requirement that benefits be payable <E T="03">on account of old age, retirement, or death,</E> is satisfied if the foreign social insurance plan or system includes provision for payment of benefits to aged or retired persons and to dependents and survivors of covered workers. The requirement is also met where the system pays benefits based only on old age or retirement. The requirement is not met where the only benefits payable are workmen's compensation payments, cash sickness payments, unemployment compensation payments, or maternity insurance benefits.</P>
        <P>(6) <E T="03">System under which U.S. citizens who qualify may receive payment while outside the foreign country.</E> The foreign social insurance or pension system must permit payments to qualified U.S. citizens while outside such foreign country, regardless of the duration of their absence therefrom and must make the payments without restriction or qualification to these U.S. citizens at full rate, or at the full actuarial value. The foreign system is considered to pay benefits at the full rate if the U.S. citizen receives the full benefit rate in effect for qualified beneficiaries at the time of his award, whether he is then inside or outside the paying country; and he continues to receive the same benefit amount so long as he remains outside that country, even though he may not receive any increases going into effect after his award provided that in those other countries in which such increases are denied to beneficiaries, they are denied to all beneficiaries including nationals of the paying country.</P>
        <P>(7) <E T="03">List of countries which meet the social insurance or pension system exception in section 202(t)(2) of the act.</E> The following countries have been found to have in effect a social insurance or pension system which meets the requirements of section 202(t)(2) of the Act. Unless otherwise specified, each country meets such requirements effective January 1957. The effect of these findings is that beneficiaries who are citizens of such countries and not citizens of the United States may be paid benefits regardless of the duration of their absence from the United States unless for months beginning after June 1968 they <PRTPAGE P="178"/>are residing in a country to which payments to individuals are being withheld by the Treasury Department pursuant to the first section of the Act of October 9, 1940 (31 U.S.C. 123). Further additions to or deletions from the list of countries will be published in the <E T="04">Federal Register.</E>
          
        </P>
        <EXTRACT>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Antigua and Barbuda (effective November 1981)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Argentina (effective July 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Austria (except from January 1958 through June 1961)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Bahamas, Commonwealth of the (effective October 1974)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Barbados (effective July 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Belgium (effective July 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Belize (effective September 1981)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Bolivia</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Brazil</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Burkina Faso, Republic of (formerly Upper Volta)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Canada (effective January 1966)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Chile</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Colombia (effective January 1967)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Costa Rica (effective May 1962)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Cyprus (effective October 1964)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Czechoslovakia (effective July 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Denmark (effective April 1964)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Dominica (effective November 1978)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Dominican Republic (effective November 1984)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Ecuador</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">El Salvador (effective January 1969)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Finland (effective May 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">France (effective June 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Gabon (effective June 1964)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Grenada (effective April 1983)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Guatemala (effective October 1978)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Guyana (effective September 1969)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Iceland (effective December 1980)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Ivory Coast</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Jamaica (effective July 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Liechtenstein (effective July 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Luxembourg</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Malta (effective September 1964)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Mexico (effective March 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Monaco</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Netherlands (effective July 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Nicaragua (effective May 1986)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Norway (effective June 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Panama</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Peru (effective February 1969)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Philippines (effective June 1960)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Poland (effective March 1957)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Portugal (effective May 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">San Marino (effective January 1965)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Spain (effective May 1966)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">St. Christopher and Nevis (effective September 1983)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">St. Lucia (effective August 1984)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Sweden (effective July 1966)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Switzerland (effective July 1968)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Trinidad and Tobago (effective July 1975)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (Micronesia) (effective July 1976)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Turkey</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">United Kingdom</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Western Samoa (effective August 1972)</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Yugoslavia</FP>
          <FP SOURCE="FP-1">Zaire (effective July 1961) (formerly Congo (Kinshasa))</FP>
        </EXTRACT>
        
        <P>(b) <E T="03">The “treaty obligation” exception.</E> It is determined that the Treaties of Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation now in force between the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany, Greece, the Republic of Ireland, Israel, Italy, and Japan, respectively, create treaty obligations precluding the application of § 404.460(a) to citizens of such countries; and that the Treaty of Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation now in force between the United States and the Kingdom of the Netherlands creates treaty obligations precluding the application of § 404.460(a) to citizens of that country with respect to monthly survivors benefits only. There is no treaty obligation that would preclude the application of § 404.460(a) to citizens of any country other than those listed above.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 43 FR 2628, Jan. 18, 1978; 52 FR 8249, Mar. 17, 1987]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.464</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits where individual is deported; prohibition against payment of lump sum based on deported individual's earnings records.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Old-age or disability insurance benefits.</E> When an individual is deported under the provisions of section 241(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (other than under paragraph (1)(C) or (1)(E) thereof), no old-age or disability insurance benefit is payable to the individual for any month occurring after the month in which the Commissioner is notified by the Attorney General of the United States that the individual has been deported and before the month in which the individual is thereafter lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence. An individual is considered lawfully admitted for permanent residence as of the month he enters the United States with permission to reside here permanently.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Other monthly benefits.</E> If, under the provisions described in paragraph (a) of this section, no old-age or disability insurance benefit is payable to <PRTPAGE P="179"/>an individual for a month, no monthly insurance benefit is payable for that month, based upon the individual's earnings record, to any other person who is not a citizen of the United States and who is outside the United States for any part of that month.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Lump sum death payment.</E> No lump-sum death payment is payable on the basis of the earnings of an individual deported under section 241(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (other than paragraph (1)(C) or (1)(E) thereof) if the individual dies in or after the month in which the Commissioner receives notice that he has been deported and before the month in which the individual is thereafter lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 19159, Dec. 20, 1967, as amended at 58 FR 64889, Dec. 10, 1993; 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.465</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Conviction for subversive activities; effect on monthly benefits and entitlement to hospital insurance benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Effect of conviction.</E> Where an individual is convicted of any offense (committed after August 1, 1956) under chapter 37 (relating to espionage and censorship), chapter 105 (relating to sabotage), or chapter 115 (relating to treason, sedition, and subversive activities) of title 18 U.S.C., or under section 4, 112, or 113 of the Internal Security Act of 1950, as amended, the court, in addition to all other penalties provided by law, may order that, in determining whether any monthly benefit is payable to the individual for the month in which he is convicted or for any month thereafter, and in determining whether the individual is entitled to hospital insurance benefits under part A of title XVIII for any such month, and in determining the amount of the benefit for that month, the following are not to be taken into account:</P>
        <P>(1) Any wages paid to such individual, or to any other individual, in the calendar quarter in which such conviction occurred or in any prior calendar quarter, and</P>
        <P>(2) Any net earnings from self-employment derived by the individual, or any other individual, during the taxable year in which the conviction occurred or during any prior taxable year.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Recalculation of benefit.</E> When notified by the Attorney General that the additional penalty as described in paragraph (a) of this section has been imposed against any individual entitled to benefits under section 202 or section 223 of the Act (see subpart D), the Administration, for the purposes of determining the individual's entitlement to such benefits as of the month in which convicted and the amount of the benefit, will exclude the applicable wages and net earnings in accordance with the order of the court.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Effect of pardon.</E> In the event that an individual, with respect to whom the additional penalty as described in paragraph (a) of this section has been imposed, is granted a pardon of the offense by the President of the United States, such penalty is not applied in determining such individual's entitlement to benefits, and the amount of such benefit, for any month beginning after the date on which the pardon is granted.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.466</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Conviction for subversive activities; effect on enrollment for supplementary medical insurance benefits.</SUBJECT>
        <P>An individual may not enroll under part B (supplementary medical insurance benefits) of title XVIII if he has been convicted of any offense described in § 404.465.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.467</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits; individual entitled to disability insurance benefits or childhood disability benefits based on statutory blindness is engaging in substantial gainful activity.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Disability insurance benefits.</E> An individual who has attained age 55 and who meets the definition of disability for disability insurance benefits purposes based on <E T="03">statutory blindness,</E> as defined in § 404.1581, may be entitled to disability insurance benefits for months in which he is engaged in certain types of substantial gainful activity. No payment, however, may be made to the individual or to beneficiaries entitled to benefits on his earnings record for any month in which such individual engages in any type of substantial gainful activity.<PRTPAGE P="180"/>
        </P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Childhood disability benefits.</E> An individual who has attained age 55 and who meets the definition of disability prescribed in § 404.1583 for childhood disability benefits on the basis of statutory blindness may be entitled to childhood disability benefits for months in which he engages in certain types of substantial gainful activity. However, no payment may be made to such individual for any month after December 1972 in which such individual engages in substantial gainful activity.</P>
        <CITA>[39 FR 43715, Dec. 18, 1974, as amended at 51 FR 10616, Mar. 28, 1986]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.468</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits to prisoners.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> No monthly benefits will be paid to any individual for any month any part of which the individual is confined in a jail, prison, or other penal institution or correctional facility for conviction of a felony. This rule applies to disability benefits (§ 404.315) and child's benefits based on disability (§ 404.350) effective with benefits payable for months beginning on or after October 1, 1980. For all other monthly benefits, this rule is effective with benefits payable for months beginning on or after May 1, 1983. However, it applies only to the prisoner; benefit payments to any other person who is entitled on the basis of the prisoner's wages and self-employment income are payable as though the prisoner were receiving benefits.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Felonious offenses.</E> An offense will be considered a felony if—</P>
        <P>(1) It is a felony under applicable law: or</P>
        <P>(2) In a jurisdiction which does not classify any crime as a felony, it is an offense punishable by death or imprisonment for a term exceeding one year.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Confinement.</E> In general, a jail, prison, or other penal institution or correctional facility is a facility which is under the control and jurisdiction of the agency in charge of the penal system or in which convicted criminals can be incarcerated. Confinement in such a facility continues as long as the individual is under a sentence of confinement and has not been released due to parole or pardon. An individual is considered confined even though he or she is temporarily or intermittently outside of that facility (e.g., on work release, attending school, or hospitalized).</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Vocational rehabilitation exception.</E> The nonpayment provision of paragraph (a) of this section does not apply if a prisoner who is entitled to benefits on the basis of disability is actively and satisfactorily participating in a rehabilitation program which has been specifically approved for the individual by court of law. In addition, the Commissioner must determine that the program is expected to result in the individual being able to do substantial gainful activity upon release and within a reasonable time. No benefits will be paid to the prisoner for any month prior to the approval of the program.</P>
        <CITA>[49 FR 48182, Dec. 11, 1984, as amended at 62 FR 38450, July 18, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.469</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of benefits where individual has not furnished or applied for a Social Security number.</SUBJECT>
        <P>No monthly benefits will be paid to an entitled individual unless he or she either furnishes to the Social Security Administration (SSA) satisfactory proof of his or her Social Security number, or, if the individual has not been assigned a number, he or she makes a proper application for a number (see § 422.103). An individual submits satisfactory proof of his or her Social Security number by furnishing to SSA the number and sufficient additional information that can be used to determine whether that Social Security number or another number has been assigned to the individual. Sufficient additional information may include the entitled individual's date and place of birth, mother's maiden name, and father's name. If the individual does not know his or her Social Security number, SSA will use this additional information to determine the Social Security number, if any, that it assigned to the individual. This rule applies to individuals who become entitled to benefits beginning on or after June 1, 1989.</P>
        <CITA>[56 FR 41789, Aug. 23, 1991]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <PRTPAGE P="181"/>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.470</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Nonpayment of disability benefits due to noncompliance with rules regarding treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Suspension of monthly benefits.</E> (1) For an individual entitled to benefits based on a disability (§ 404.1505) and for whom drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability (as described in § 404.1535), monthly benefits will be suspended beginning with the first month after we notify the individual in writing that he or she has been determined not to be in compliance with the treatment requirements for such individuals (§ 404.1536).</P>
        <P>(2) This rule applies to all individuals entitled to disability benefits (§ 404.315), widow(er)'s benefits (§ 404.335), and child's benefits based on a disability (§ 404.350) effective with benefits paid in months beginning on or after March 1, 1995.</P>
        <P>(3) Benefit payments to any other person who is entitled on the basis of a disabled wage earner's entitlement to disability benefits are payable as though the disabled wage earner were receiving benefits.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Resumption of monthly benefits.</E> The payment of benefits may be resumed only after an individual demonstrates and maintains compliance with appropriate treatment requirements for:</P>
        <P>(1) 2 consecutive months for the first determination of noncompliance;</P>
        <P>(2) 3 consecutive months for the second determination of noncompliance; and</P>
        <P>(3) 6 consecutive months for the third and all subsequent determinations of noncompliance.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Termination of benefits.</E> (1) A suspension of benefit payments due to noncompliance with the treatment requirements for 12 consecutive months will result in termination of benefits effective with the first month following the 12th month of suspension of benefits.</P>
        <P>(2) Benefit payments to any other person who is entitled on the basis of a disabled wage earner's entitlement to disability benefits are payable as though the disabled wage earner were receiving benefits.</P>
        <CITA>[60 FR 8146, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.480</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Paying benefits in installments: Drug addiction or alcoholism.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> For disabled beneficiaries who receive benefit payments through a representative payee because drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability (as described in § 404.1535), certain amounts due the beneficiary for a past period will be paid in installments. The amounts subject to payment in installments include:</P>
        <P>(1) Benefits due but unpaid which accrued prior to the month payment was effectuated; </P>
        <P>(2) Benefits due but unpaid which accrued during a period of suspension for which the beneficiary was subsequently determined to have been eligible; and</P>
        <P>(3) Any adjustment to benefits which results in an accrual of unpaid benefits.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Installment formula.</E> Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, the amount of the installment payment in any month is limited so that the sum of (1) the amount due for a past period (and payable under paragraph (a) of this section) paid in such month and (2) the amount of any benefit due for the preceding month under such entitlement which is payable in such month, does not exceed two times the amount of the beneficiary's benefit payment for the preceding month. In counting the amount of the beneficiary's benefit payment for the previous month, no reductions or deductions under this title are taken into account.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Exception to installment limitation.</E> An exception to the installment payment limitation in paragraph (b) of this section can be granted for the first month in which a beneficiary accrues benefit amounts subject to payment in installments if the beneficiary has unpaid housing expenses which result in a high risk of homelessness for the beneficiary. In that case, the benefit payment may be increased by the amount of the unpaid housing expenses so long as that increase does not exceed the amount of benefits which accrued during the most recent period of nonpayment. We consider a person to be at risk of homelessness if continued nonpayment of the outstanding housing <PRTPAGE P="182"/>expenses is likely to result in the person losing his or her place to live or if past nonpayment of housing expenses has resulted in the person having no appropriate personal place to live. In determining whether this exception applies, we will ask for evidence of outstanding housing expenses that shows that the person is likely to lose or has already lost his or her place to live. For purposes of this section, homelessness is the state of not being under the control of any public institution and having no appropriate personal place to live. Housing expenses include charges for all items required to maintain shelter (for example, mortgage payments, rent, heating fuel, and electricity).</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Payment through a representative payee.</E> If the beneficiary does not have a representative payee, payment of amounts subject to installments cannot be made until a representative payee is selected.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Underpaid beneficiary no longer entitled.</E> In the case of a beneficiary who is no longer currently entitled to monthly payments, but to whom amounts defined in paragraph (a) of this section are still owing, we will treat such beneficiary's monthly benefit for the last month of entitlement as the beneficiary's benefit for the preceding month and continue to make installment payments of such benefits through a representative payee.</P>
        <P>(f) <E T="03">Beneficiary currently not receiving Social Security benefits because of suspension for noncompliance with treatment.</E> If a beneficiary is currently not receiving benefits because his or her benefits have been suspended for noncompliance with treatment (as defined in § 404.1536), the payment of amounts under paragraph (a) of this section will stop until the beneficiary has demonstrated compliance with treatment as described in § 404.470 and will again commence with the first month the beneficiary begins to receive benefit payments.</P>
        <P>(g) <E T="03">Underpaid beneficiary deceased.</E> Upon the death of a beneficiary, any remaining unpaid amounts as defined in paragraph (a) of this section will be treated as underpayments in accordance with § 404.503(b).</P>
        <CITA>[60 FR 8146, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart F—Overpayments, Underpayments, Waiver of Adjustment or Recovery of Overpayments, and Liability of a Certifying Officer</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 204, 205(a), and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 404, 405(a), and 902(a)); 31 U.S.C. 3720A.</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.501</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>General applicability of section 204 of the Act.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">In general.</E> Section 204 of the Act provides for adjustment as set forth in §§ 404.502 and 404.503, in cases where an individual has received more or less than the correct payment due under title II of the Act. As used in this subpart, the term <E T="03">overpayment</E> includes a payment in excess of the amount due under title II of the Act, a payment resulting from the failure to impose deductions or to suspend or reduce benefits under sections 203, 222(b), 224, and 228(c), and (d), and (e) of the Act (see subpart E of this part), a payment pursuant to section 205(n) of the Act in an amount in excess of the amount to which the individual is entitled under section 202 or 223 of the Act, a payment resulting from the failure to terminate benefits, and a payment where no amount is payable under title II of the Act. The term <E T="03">underpayment</E> as used in this subpart refers only to monthly insurance benefits and includes nonpayment where some amount of such benefits was payable. An underpayment may be in the form of an accrued unpaid benefit amount for which no check has been drawn or in the form of an unnegotiated check payable to a deceased individual. The provisions for adjustment also apply in cases where through error:</P>
        <P>(1) A reduction required under section 202(j)(1), 202(k)(3), 203(a), or 205(n) of the Act is not made, or</P>
        <P>(2) An increase or decrease required under section 202(d)(2), or 215 (f) or (g) of the Act is not made, or</P>

        <P>(3) A deduction required under section 203(b) (as may be modified by the provisions of section 203(h)), 203(c), 203(d), 203(i), 222(b), or 223(a)(1)(D) of the Act or section 907 of the Social Security Amendments of 1939 is not made, or<PRTPAGE P="183"/>
        </P>
        <P>(4) A suspension required under section 202(n) or 202(t) of the Act is not made, or</P>
        <P>(5) A reduction under section 202(q) of the Act is not made, or</P>
        <P>(6) A reduction, increase, deduction, or suspension is made which is either more or less than required, or</P>
        <P>(7) A payment in excess of the amount due under title XVIII of the Act was made to or on behalf of an individual (see 42 CFR 405.350 through 405.351) entitled to benefits under title II of the Act, or</P>
        <P>(8) A payment of past due benefits is made to an individual and such payment had not been reduced by the amount of attorney's fees payable directly to an attorney under section 206 of the Act (see § 404.977).</P>
        <P>(9) A reduction under § 404.408b is made which is either more or less than required.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Payments made on the basis of an erroneous report of death.</E> Any monthly benefit or lump sum paid under title II of the Act on the basis of an erroneous report by the Department of Defense of the death of an individual in the line of duty while such individual was a member of the uniformed services (as defined in section 210(m) of the Act) on active duty (as defined in section 210(l) of the Act) is deemed a correct payment for any month prior to the month such Department notifies the Administration that such individual is alive.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Payments made by direct deposit to a financial institution.</E> When a payment in excess of the amount due under title II of the Act is made by direct deposit to a financial institution to or on behalf of an individual who has died, and the financial institution credits the payment to a joint account of the deceased individual and another person who was entitled to a monthly benefit on the basis of the same earnings record as the deceased individual for the month before the month in which the deceased individual died, the amount of the payment in excess of the correct amount will be an overpayment to the other person.</P>
        <CITA>[34 FR 14887, Sept. 27, 1969, as amended at 44 FR 34942, June 18, 1979; 47 FR 4988, Feb. 3, 1982; 48 FR 46149, Oct. 11, 1983; 55 FR 7313, Mar. 1, 1990]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.502</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Overpayments.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Upon determination that an overpayment has been made, adjustments will be made against monthly benefits and lump sums as follows:</P>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Individual overpaid is living.</E> (1) If the individual to whom an overpayment was made is at the time of a determination of such overpayment entitled to a monthly benefit or a lump sum under title II of the Act, or at any time thereafter becomes so entitled, no benefit for any month and no lump sum is payable to such individual, except as provided in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section, until an amount equal to the amount of the overpayment has been withheld or refunded. Such adjustments will be made against any monthly benefit or lump sum under title II of the Act to which such individual is entitled whether payable on the basis of such individual's earnings or the earnings of another individual.</P>
        <P>(2) If any other individual is entitled to benefits for any month on the basis of the same earnings as the overpaid individual, except as adjustment is to be effected pursuant to paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section by withholding a part of the monthly benefit of either the overpaid individual or any other individual entitled to benefits on the basis of the same earnings, no benefit for any month will be paid on such earnings to such other individual until an amount equal to the amount of the overpayment has been withheld or refunded.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Individual overpaid dies before adjustment.</E> If an overpaid individual dies before adjustment is completed under the provisions of paragraph (a) of this section, no lump sum and no subsequent monthly benefit will be paid on the basis of earnings which were the basis of the overpayment to such deceased individual until full recovery of the overpayment has been effected, except as provided in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section or under § 404.515. Such recovery may be effected through:</P>
        <P>(1) Payment by the estate of the deceased overpaid individual,</P>

        <P>(2) Withholding of amounts due the estate of such individual under title II of the Act,<PRTPAGE P="184"/>
        </P>
        <P>(3) Withholding a lump sum or monthly benefits due any other individual on the basis of the same earnings which were the basis of the overpayment to the deceased overpaid individual, or</P>
        <P>(4) Any combination of the amount above.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Adjustment by withholding part of a monthly benefit.</E> (1) Where it is determined that withholding the full amount each month would <E T="03">defeat the purpose of title II,</E> i.e., deprive the person of income required for ordinary and necessary living expenses (see § 404.508), adjustment under paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section may be effected by withholding an amount of not less than $10 of the monthly benefit payable to an individual.</P>
        <P>(2) Adjustment as provided by this paragraph will not be available if the overpayment was caused by the individual's intentional false statement or representation, or willful concealment of, or deliberate failure to furnish, material information. In such cases, recovery of the overpayment will be accomplished as provided in paragraph (a) of this section.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Individual overpaid enrolled under supplementary insurance plan.</E> Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section, if the individual liable for the overpayment is an enrollee under part B of title XVIII of the Act and the overpayment was not caused by such individual's intentional false statement or representation, or willful concealment of, or deliberate failure to furnish, material information, an amount of such individual's monthly benefit which is equal to his obligation for supplementary medical insurance premiums will be applied toward payment of such premiums, and the balance of the monthly benefit will be applied toward recovery of the overpayment. Further adjustment with respect to such balance may be made if the enrollee so requests and meets the conditions of paragraph (c) of this section.</P>
        <CITA>[35 FR 5943, Apr. 10, 1970, as amended at 44 FR 20653, Apr. 6, 1979]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.502a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Notice of right to waiver consideration.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Whenever an initial determination is made that more than the correct amount of payment has been made, and we seek adjustment or recovery of the overpayment, the individual from whom we are seeking adjustment or recovery is immediately notified. The notice includes:</P>
        <P>(a) The overpayment amount and how and when it occurred;</P>
        <P>(b) A request for full, immediate refund, unless the overpayment can be withheld from the next month's benefit;</P>
        <P>(c) The proposed adjustment of benefits if refund is not received within 30 days after the date of the notice and adjustment of benefits is available;</P>
        <P>(d) An explanation of the availability of a different rate of withholding when full withholding is proposed, installment payments when refund is requested and adjustment is not currently available, and/or cross-program recovery when refund is requested and the individual is receiving another type of payment from SSA (language about cross-program recovery is not included in notices sent to individuals in jurisdictions where this recovery option is not available);</P>
        <P>(e) An explanation of the right to request waiver of adjustment or recovery and the automatic scheduling of a file review and pre-recoupment hearing (commonly referred to as a personal conference) if a request for waiver cannot be approved after initial paper review;</P>
        <P>(f) An explanation of the right to request reconsideration of the fact and/or amount of the overpayment determination;</P>
        <P>(g) Instructions about the availability of forms for requesting reconsideration and waiver;</P>
        <P>(h) An explanation that if the individual does not request waiver or reconsideration within 30 days of the date of the overpayment notice, adjustment or recovery of the overpayment will begin;</P>

        <P>(i) A statement that an SSA office will help the individual complete and submit forms for appeal or waiver requests; and<PRTPAGE P="185"/>
        </P>
        <P>(j) A statement that the individual receiving the notice should notify SSA promptly if reconsideration, waiver, a lesser rate of withholding, repayment by installments or cross-program adjustment is wanted.</P>
        <CITA>[61 FR 56131, Oct. 31, 1996]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.503</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Underpayments.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Underpayments will be adjusted as follows:</P>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Individual underpaid is living.</E> If an individual to whom an underpayment is due is living, the amount of such underpayment will be paid to such individual either in a single payment (if he is not entitled to a monthly benefit or a lump-sum death payment) or by increasing one or more monthly benefits or a lump-sum death payment to which such individual is or becomes entitled.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Individual dies before adjustment of underpayment.</E> If an individual to whom an underpayment is due dies before receiving payment or negotiating a check or checks representing such payment, such underpayment will be distributed to the living person (or persons) in the highest order of priority as follows:</P>
        <P>(1) The deceased individual's surviving spouse as defined in section 216(c), (g), or (h) of the Act who was either:</P>
        <P>(i) Living in the same household (as defined in § 404.347) with the deceased individual at the time of such individual's death, or</P>
        <P>(ii) Entitled to a monthly benefit on the basis of the same earnings record as was the deceased individual for the month in which such individual died.</P>
        <P>(2) The child or children of the deceased individual (as defined in section 216 (e) or (h) of the Act) entitled to a monthly benefit on the basis of the same earnings record as was the deceased individual for the month in which such individual died (if more than one such child, in equal shares to each such child).</P>
        <P>(3) The parent or parents of the deceased individual, entitled to a monthly benefit on the basis of the same earnings record as was the deceased individual for the month in which such individual died (if more than one such parent, in equal shares to each such parent). For this purpose, the definition of “parent” in § 404.374 includes the parent(s) of any deceased individual who was entitled to benefits under title II of the Act.</P>
        <P>(4) The surviving spouse of the deceased individual (as defined in section 216(c), (g), or (h) of the Act) who does not qualify under paragraph (b)(1) of this section.</P>
        <P>(5) The child or children of the deceased individual (as defined in section 216 (e) or (h) of the Act) who do not qualify under paragraph (b)(2) of this section (if more than one such child, in equal shares to each such child).</P>
        <P>(6) The parent or parents of the deceased individual, who do not qualify under paragraph (b)(3) of this section (if more than one such parent, in equal shares to each such parent). For this purpose, the definition of “parent” in § 404.374 includes the parent(s) of any deceased individual who was entitled to benefits under title II of the Act.</P>
        <P>(7) The legal representative of the estate of the deceased individual as defined in paragraph (d) of this section.</P>
        <P>(c) In the event that a person who is otherwise qualified to receive an underpayment under the provisions of paragraph (b) of this section, dies before receiving payment or before negotiating the check or checks representing such payment, his share of the underpayment will be divided among the remaining living person(s) in the same order of priority. In the event that there is (are) no other such person(s), the underpayment will be paid to the living person(s) in the next lower order of priority under paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Definition of legal representative.</E> The term <E T="03">legal representative,</E> for the purpose of qualifying to receive an underpayment, generally means the administrator or executor of the estate of the deceased individual. However, it may also include an individual, institution or organization acting on behalf of an unadministered estate, provided that such person can give the Administration good acquittance (as defined in paragraph (e) of this section). The following persons may qualify as legal representative for the purposes of this subpart, provided they can give the Administration good acquittance:</P>
        <P>(1) A person who qualifies under a State's <E T="03">small estate</E> statute,<PRTPAGE P="186"/>
        </P>
        <P>(2) A person resident in a foreign country who, under the laws and customs of that country, has the right to receive assets of the estate,</P>
        <P>(3) A public administrator, or</P>
        <P>(4) A person who has the authority, under applicable law, to collect the assets of the estate of the deceased individual.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Definition of “good acquittance.”</E> A person is considered to give the Administration <E T="03">good acquittance</E> when payment to that person will release the Administration from further liability for such payment.</P>
        <CITA>[34 FR 14487, Sept. 27, 1969, as amended at 35 FR 14129, Sept. 5, 1970; 55 FR 7313, Mar. 1, 1990; 60 FR 17445, Apr. 6, 1995]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.504</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Relation to provisions for reductions and increases.</SUBJECT>
        <P>The amount of an overpayment or underpayment is the difference between the amount paid to the beneficiary and the amount of the payment to which the beneficiary was actually entitled. Such payment, for example, would be equal to the difference between the amount of a benefit in fact paid to the beneficiary and the amount of such benefit as reduced under section 202(j)(1), 202(k)(3), 203(a), or 224(a), or as increased under section 202(d)(2), 202(m), or 215 (f) and (g). In effecting an adjustment with respect to an overpayment, no amount can be considered as having been withheld from a particular benefit which is in excess of the amount of such benefit as so decreased.</P>
        <CITA>[34 FR 14888, Sept. 27, 1969]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.505</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Relationship to provisions requiring deductions.</SUBJECT>
        <P>Adjustments required by any of the provisions in this subpart F are made in addition to, but after, any deductions required by section 202(t), 203(b), 203(c), 203(d), and 222(b) of the Act, or section 907 of the Social Security Act Amendments of 1939, and before any deductions required by section 203(g) or 203(h)(2) of the Act.</P>
        <CITA>[34 FR 14888, Sept. 27, 1969]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.506</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When waiver may be applied and how to process the request.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) Section 204(b) of the Act provides that there shall be no adjustment or recovery in any case where an overpayment under title II has been made to an individual who is without fault if adjustment or recovery would either defeat the purpose of title II of the Act, or be against equity and good conscience.</P>
        <P>(b) If an individual requests waiver of adjustment or recovery of a title II overpayment within 30 days after receiving a notice of overpayment that contains the information in § 404.502a, no adjustment or recovery action will be taken until after the initial waiver determination is made. If the individual requests waiver more than 30 days after receiving the notice of overpayment, SSA will stop any adjustment or recovery actions until after the initial waiver determination is made.</P>
        <P>(c) When waiver is requested, the individual gives SSA information to support his/her contention that he/she is without fault in causing the overpayment (see § 404.507) and that adjustment or recovery would either defeat the purpose of title II of the Act (see § 404.508) or be against equity and good conscience (see § 404.509). That information, along with supporting documentation, is reviewed to determine if waiver can be approved. If waiver cannot be approved after this review, the individual is notified in writing and given the dates, times and place of the file review and personal conference; the procedure for reviewing the claims file prior to the personal conference; the procedure for seeking a change in the scheduled dates, times, and/or place; and all other information necessary to fully inform the individual about the personal conference. The file review is always scheduled at least 5 days before the personal conference.</P>

        <P>(d) At the file review, the individual and the individual's representative have the right to review the claims file and applicable law and regulations with the decisionmaker or another SSA representative who is prepared to answer questions. We will provide copies of material related to the overpayment and/or waiver from the claims file or pertinent sections of the law or regulations that are requested by the individual or the individual's representative.<PRTPAGE P="187"/>
        </P>
        <P>(e) At the personal conference, the individual is given the opportunity to:</P>
        <P>(1) Appear personally, testify, cross-examine any witnesses, and make arguments;</P>
        <P>(2) Be represented by an attorney or other representative (see § 404.1700), although the individual must be present at the conference; and</P>
        <P>(3) Submit documents for consideration by the decisionmaker.</P>
        <P>(f) At the personal conference, the decisionmaker:</P>
        <P>(1) Tells the individual that the decisionmaker was not previously involved in the issue under review, that the waiver decision is solely the decisionmaker's, and that the waiver decision is based only on the evidence or information presented or reviewed at the conference;</P>
        <P>(2) Ascertains the role and identity of everyone present;</P>
        <P>(3) Indicates whether or not the individual reviewed the claims file;</P>
        <P>(4) Explains the provisions of law and regulations applicable to the issue;</P>
        <P>(5) Briefly summarizes the evidence already in file which will be considered;</P>
        <P>(6) Ascertains from the individual whether the information presented is correct and whether he/she fully understands it;</P>
        <P>(7) Allows the individual and the individual's representative, if any, to present the individual's case;</P>
        <P>(8) Secures updated financial information and verification, if necessary;</P>
        <P>(9) Allows each witness to present information and allows the individual and the individual's representative to question each witness;</P>
        <P>(10) Ascertains whether there is any further evidence to be presented;</P>
        <P>(11) Reminds the individual of any evidence promised by the individual which has not been presented;</P>
        <P>(12) Lets the individual and the individual's representative, if any, present any proposed summary or closing statement;</P>
        <P>(13) Explains that a decision will be made and the individual will be notified in writing; and</P>
        <P>(14) Explains repayment options and further appeal rights in the event the decision is adverse to the individual.</P>
        <P>(g) SSA issues a written decision to the individual (and his/her representative, if any) specifying the findings of fact and conclusions in support of the decision to approve or deny waiver and advising of the individual's right to appeal the decision. If waiver is denied, adjustment or recovery of the overpayment begins even if the individual appeals.</P>
        <P>(h) If it appears that the waiver cannot be approved, and the individual declines a personal conference or fails to appear for a second scheduled personal conference, a decision regarding the waiver will be made based on the written evidence of record. Reconsideration is then the next step in the appeals process (but see § 404.930(a)(7)).</P>
        <CITA>[61 FR 56131, Oct. 31, 1996]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.507</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Fault.</SUBJECT>
        <P>
          <E T="03">Fault</E> as used in <E T="03">without fault</E> (see § 404.506 and 42 CFR 405.355) applies only to the individual. Although the Administration may have been at fault in making the overpayment, that fact does not relieve the overpaid individual or any other individual from whom the Administration seeks to recover the overpayment from liability for repayment if such individual is not without fault. In determining whether an individual is at fault, the Social Security Administration will consider all pertinent circumstances, including the individual's age and intelligence, and any physical, mental, educational, or linguistic limitations (including any lack of facility with the English language) the individual has. What constitutes fault (except for <E T="03">deduction overpayments</E>—see § 404.510) on the part of the overpaid individual or on the part of any other individual from whom the Administration seeks to recover the overpayment depends upon whether the facts show that the incorrect payment to the individual or to a provider of services or other person, or an incorrect payment made under section 1814(e) of the Act, resulted from:</P>
        <P>(a) An incorrect statement made by the individual which he knew or should have known to be incorrect; or</P>

        <P>(b) Failure to furnish information which he knew or should have known to be material; or<PRTPAGE P="188"/>
        </P>
        <P>(c) With respect to the overpaid individual only, acceptance of a payment which he either knew or could have been expected to know was incorrect.</P>
        <CITA>[34 FR 14888, Sept. 27, 1969; 34 FR 15646, Oct. 9, 1969, as amended at 44 FR 34942, June 18, 1979; 59 FR 1634, Jan. 12, 1994]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.508</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Defeat the purpose of Title II.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General. Defeat the purpose of title II,</E> for purposes of this subpart, means defeat the purpose of benefits under this title, i.e., to deprive a person of income required for ordinary and necessary living expenses. This depends upon whether the person has an income or financial resources sufficient for more than ordinary and necessary needs, or is dependent upon all of his current benefits for such needs. An individual's ordinary and necessary expenses include:</P>
        <P>(1) Fixed living expenses, such as food and clothing, rent, mortgage payments, utilities, maintenance, insurance (e.g., life, accident, and health insurance including premiums for supplementary medical insurance benefits under title XVIII), taxes, installment payments, etc.;</P>
        <P>(2) Medical, hospitalization, and other similar expenses;</P>
        <P>(3) Expenses for the support of others for whom the individual is legally responsible; and</P>
        <P>(4) Other miscellaneous expenses which may reasonably be considered as part of the individual's standard of living.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">When adjustment or recovery will defeat the purpose of title II.</E> Adjustment or recovery will defeat the purposes of title II in (but is not limited to) situations where the person from whom recovery is sought needs substantially all of his current income (including social security monthly benefits) to meet current ordinary and necessary living expenses.</P>
        <CITA>[32 FR 18026, Dec. 16, 1967, as amended at 34 FR 14888, Sept. 27, 1969]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.509</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Against equity and good conscience; defined.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) Recovery of an overpayment is <E T="03">against equity and good conscience</E> (under title II and title XVIII) if an individual—</P>
        <P>(1) Changed his or her position for the worse (Example 1) or relinquished a valuable right (Example 2) because of reliance upon a notice that a payment would be made or because of the overpayment itself; or</P>
        <P>(2) Was living in a separate household from the overpaid person at the time of the overpayment and did not receive the overpayment (Examples 3 and 4).</P>

        <P>(b) The individual's financial circumstances are not material to a finding of <E T="03">against equity and good conscience.</E>
          
        </P>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 1.</HD>

          <P>A widow, having been awarded benefits for herself and daughter, entered her daughter in private school because the monthly benefits made this possible. After the widow and her daughter received payments for almost a year, the deceased worker was found to be not insured and all payments to the widow and child were incorrect. The widow has no other funds with which to pay the daughter's private school expenses. Having entered the daughter in private school and thus incurred a financial obligation toward which the benefits had been applied, she was in a worse position financially than if she and her daughter had never been entitled to benefits. In this situation, the recovery of the payments would be <E T="03">against equity and good conscience.</E>
          </P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 2.</HD>

          <P>After being awarded old-age insurance benefits, an individual resigned from employment on the assumption he would receive regular monthly benefit payments. It was discovered 3 years later that (due to a Social Security Administration error) his award was erroneous because he did not have the required insured status. Due to his age, the individual was unable to get his job back and could not get any other employment. In this situation, recovery of the overpayments would be <E T="03">against equity and good conscience</E> because the individual gave up a valuable right.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 3.</HD>

          <P>M divorced K and married L. M died a few years later. When K files for benefits as a surviving divorced wife, she learns that L had been overpaid $3,200 on M's earnings record. Because K and L are both entitled to benefits on M's record of earnings and we could not recover the overpayment from L, we sought recovery from K. K was living in a separate household from L at the time of the overpayment and did not receive the overpayment. K requests waiver of recovery of the $3,200 overpayment from benefits due her as a surviving divorced wife of M. In this situation, it would be <E T="03">against equity and good conscience</E> to recover the overpayment from K.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <EXAMPLE>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 4.</HD>

          <P>G filed for and was awarded benefits. His daughter, T, also filed for student <PRTPAGE P="189"/>benefits on G's earnings record. Since T was an independent, full-time student living in another State, she filed for benefits on her own behalf. Later, after T received 12 monthly benefits, the school reported that T had been a full-time student only 2 months and had withdrawn from school. Since T was overpaid 10 monthly benefits, she was requested to return the overpayment to SSA. T did not return the overpayment and further attempts to collect the overpayment were unsuccessful. G was asked to repay the overpayment because he was receiving benefits on the same earnings record. G requested waiver. To support his waiver request G established that he was not at fault in causing the overpayment because he did not know that T was receiving benefits. Since G is without fault and, in addition, meets the requirements of not living in the same household at the time of the overpayment and did not receive the overpayment, it would be <E T="03">against equity and good conscience</E> to recover the overpayment from G.</P>
        </EXAMPLE>
        <CITA>[53 FR 25483, July 7, 1988]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.510</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When an individual is “without fault” in a deduction overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <P>In determining whether an individual is “without fault” with respect to a deduction overpayment, the Social Security Administration will consider all pertinent circumstances, including the individual's age and intelligence, and any physical, mental, educational, or linguistic limitations (including any lack of facility with the English language) the individual has. Except as provided in § 404.511 or elsewhere in this subpart F, situations in which an individual will be considered to be “without fault” with respect to a deduction overpayment include, but are not limited to, those that are described in this section. An individual will be considered “without fault” in accepting a payment which is incorrect because he/she failed to report an event specified in sections 203 (b) and (c) of the Act, or an event specified in section 203(d) of the Act as in effect for monthly benefits for months after December 1960, or because a deduction is required under section 203 (b), (c), (d), or section 222(b) of the Act, or payments were not withheld as required by section 202(t) or section 228 of the Act, if it is shown that such failure to report or acceptance of the overpayment was due to one of the following circumstances:</P>
        <P>(a) Reasonable belief that only his net cash earnings (<E T="03">take-home</E> pay) are included in determining the annual earnings limitation or the monthly earnings limitation under section 203(f) of the Act.</P>
        <P>(b) Reliance upon erroneous information from an official source within the Social Security Administration (or other governmental agency which the individual had reasonable cause to believe was connected with the administration of benefits under title II of the Act) with respect to the interpretation of a pertinent provision of the Social Security Act or regulations pertaining thereto. For example, this circumstance could occur where the individual is misinformed by such source as to the interpretation of a provision in the Act or regulations relating to deductions, or relating to the effect of residence of an alien outside the United States for more than 6 months.</P>
        <P>(c) The beneficiary's death caused the earnings limit applicable to his earnings for purposes of deduction and the charging of excess earnings to be reduced below $1,680 for a taxable year ending after 1967.</P>
        <P>(d) [Reserved]</P>
        <P>(e) Reasonable belief that in determining, for deduction purposes, his earnings from employment and/or net earnings from self-employment in the taxable year in which he became entitled to benefits, earnings in such year prior to such entitlement would be excluded. However, this provision does not apply if his earnings in the taxable year, beginning with the first month of entitlement, exceeded the earnings limitation amount for such year.</P>
        <P>(f) Unawareness that his earnings were in excess of the earnings limitation applicable to the imposition of deductions and the charging of excess earnings or that he should have reported such excess where these earnings were greater than anticipated because of:</P>
        <P>(1) Retroactive increases in pay, including back-pay awards;</P>
        <P>(2) Work at a higher pay rate than realized;</P>

        <P>(3) Failure of the employer of an individual unable to keep accurate records to restrict the amount of earnings or <PRTPAGE P="190"/>the number of hours worked in accordance with a previous agreement with such individual;</P>
        <P>(4) The occurrence of five Saturdays (or other work days, e.g., five Mondays) in a month and the earnings for the services on the fifth Saturday or other work day caused the deductions.</P>
        <P>(g) The continued issuance of benefit checks to him after he sent notice to the Administration of the event which caused or should have caused the deductions provided that such continued issuance of checks led him to believe in good faith that he was entitled to checks subsequently received.</P>
        <P>(h) Lack of knowledge that bonuses, vacation pay, or similar payments, constitute earnings for purposes of the annual earnings limitation.</P>
        <P>(i) [Reserved]</P>
        <P>(j) Reasonable belief that earnings in excess of the earnings limitation amount for the taxable year would subject him to deductions only for months beginning with the first month in which his earnings exceeded the earnings limitation amount. However, this provision is applicable only if he reported timely to the Administration during the taxable year when his earnings reached the applicable limitation amount for such year.</P>
        <P>(k) Lack of knowledge by a wife, husband, or child entitled to wife's, husband's, or child's insurance benefits, as the case may be, that the individual entitled to old-age insurance benefits on the same earnings record has incurred or would incur deductions because of a violation of the annual earnings or 7-day foreign work test, whichever is applicable, provided the wife, husband, or child is not living with such old-age insurance beneficiary and did not know and had no reason to know that such beneficiary's earnings activity or the income derived therefrom has caused or would cause such deductions.</P>
        <P>(l) Reasonable belief, with respect to earnings activity for months after December 1982, that net earnings from self-employment after attainment of age 70 (age 72 for months after December 1972 and before January 1983) in the taxable year in which such age was attained would not cause deductions (see § 404.430(a)) with respect to benefits payable for months in that taxable year prior to the attainment of such age.</P>
        <P>(m) Reasonable belief by an individual entitled to child's, wife's, husband's, widow's, widower's, mother's, or parent's insurance benefits that earnings from employment and/or net earnings from self-employment after the termination of entitlement (other than termination by reason of entitlement to an old-age insurance benefit) in the taxable year in which the termination event occurred would not cause deductions with respect to benefits payable for months in that taxable year prior to the month in which the termination event occurred.</P>
        <P>(n) Failure to understand the deduction provisions of the Act or the occurrence of unusual or unavoidable circumstances the nature of which clearly shows that the individual was unaware of a violation of such deduction provisions.</P>
        <CITA>[27 FR 1162, Feb. 8, 1962, as amended at 28 FR 14492, Dec. 31, 1963; 34 FR 14888, Sept. 27, 1969; 36 FR 23361, Dec. 9, 1971; 43 FR 31318, July 21, 1978; 44 FR 20653, Apr. 6, 1979; 59 FR 1634, Jan. 12, 1994; 60 FR 17445, Apr. 6, 1995]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.510a</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When an individual is “without fault” in an entitlement overpayment.</SUBJECT>

        <P>A benefit payment under title II or title XVIII of the Act to or on behalf of an individual who fails to meet one or more requirements for entitlement to such payment or a benefit payment exceeding the amount to which he is entitled, constitutes an entitlement overpayment. Where an individual or other person on behalf of an individual accepts such overpayment because of reliance on erroneous information from an official source within the Social Security Administration (or other governmental agency which the individual had reasonable cause to believe was connected with the administration of benefits under title II or title XVIII of the Act) with respect to the interpretation of a pertinent provision of the Social Security Act or regulations pertaining thereto, or where an individual or other person on behalf of an individual is overpaid as a result of the adjustment upward (under the family maximum provision in section 203 of <PRTPAGE P="191"/>the Act) of the benefits of such individual at the time of the proper termination of one or more beneficiaries on the same social security record and the subsequent reduction of the benefits of such individual caused by the reentitlement of the terminated beneficiary(ies) pursuant to a change in a provision of the law, such individual, in accepting such overpayment, will be deemed to be <E T="03">without fault.</E> For purposes of this section <E T="03">governmental agency</E> includes intermediaries and carriers under contract pursuant to sections 1816 and 1842 of the Act.</P>
        <CITA>[39 FR 43716, Dec. 18, 1974]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.511</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When an individual is at “fault” in a deduction overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Degree of care.</E> An individual will not be <E T="03">without fault</E> if the Administration has evidence in its possession which shows either a lack of good faith or failure to exercise a high degree of care in determining whether circumstances which may cause deductions from his benefits should be brought to the attention of the Administration by an immediate report or by return of a benefit check. The high degree of care expected of an individual may vary with the complexity of the circumstances giving rise to the overpayment and the capacity of the particular payee to realize that he is being overpaid. Accordingly, variances in the personal circumstances and situations of individual payees are to be considered in determining whether the necessary degree of care has been exercised by an individual to warrant a finding that he was without fault in accepting a <E T="03">deduction overpayment.</E>
        </P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Subsequent deduction overpayments.</E> The Social Security Administration generally will not find an individual to be without fault where, after having been exonerated for a “deduction overpayment” and after having been advised of the correct interpretation of the deduction provision, the individual incurs another “deduction overpayment” under the same circumstances as the first overpayment. However, in determining whether the individual is without fault, the Social Security Administration will consider all of the pertinent circumstances surrounding the prior and subsequent “deduction overpayments,” including any physical, mental, educational, or linguistic limitations (including any lack of facility with the English language) which the individual may have.</P>
        <CITA>[16 FR 13054, Dec. 28, 1951, as amended at 59 FR 1634, Jan. 12, 1994]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.512</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>When adjustment or recovery of an overpayment will be waived.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Adjustment or recovery deemed “against equity and good conscience.”</E> In the situations described in §§ 404.510(a), (b), and (c), and 404.510a, adjustment or recovery will be waived since it will be deemed such adjustment or recovery is <E T="03">against equity and good conscience.</E> Adjustment or recovery will also be deemed <E T="03">against equity and good conscience</E> in the situation described in § 404.510(e), but only as to a month in which the individual's earnings from wages do not exceed the total monthly benefits affected for that month.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Adjustment or recovery considered to defeat the purpose of title II</E> or be <E T="03">against equity and good conscience</E> under certain circumstances. In the situation described in § 404.510(e) (except in the case of an individual whose monthly earnings from wages in employment do not exceed the total monthly benefits affected for a particular month), and in the situations described in § 404.510 (f) through (n), adjustment or recovery shall be waived only where the evidence establishes that adjustment or recovery would work a financial hardship (see § 404.508) or would otherwise be inequitable (see § 404.509).</P>
        <CITA>[27 FR 1163, Feb. 8, 1962, as amended at 35 FR 6321, Apr. 18, 1970; 36 FR 23361, Dec. 9, 1971]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.513</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Liability of a certifying officer.</SUBJECT>
        <P>No certifying or disbursing officer shall be held liable for any amount certified or paid by him to any individual.</P>
        <P>(a) Where adjustment or recovery of such amount is waived under section 204(b) of the Act; or</P>
        <P>(b) Where adjustment under section 204(a) of the Act is not completed prior to the death of all individuals against whose benefits or lump sums deductions are authorized; or</P>

        <P>(c) Where a claim for recovery of an overpayment is compromised or collection or adjustment action is suspended <PRTPAGE P="192"/>or terminated pursuant to the Federal Claims Collection Act of 1966 (31 U.S.C. 951-953) (see § 404.515).</P>
        <CITA>[34 FR 14889, Sept. 27, 1969]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.515</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Collection and compromise of claims for overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General effect of the Federal Claims Collection Act of 1966.</E> Claims by the Administration against an individual for recovery of overpayments under title II or title XVIII (not including title XVIII overpayments for which refund is requested from providers, physicians, or other suppliers of services) of the Act, not exceeding the sum of $20,000, exclusive of interest, may be compromised, or collection suspended or terminated where such individual or his estate does not have the present or prospective ability to pay the full amount of the claim within a reasonable time (see paragraph (c) of this section) or the cost of collection is likely to exceed the amount of recovery (see paragraph (d) of this section) except as provided under paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">When there will be no compromise, suspension or termination of collection of a claim for overpayment—</E>(1) <E T="03">Overpaid individual alive.</E> In any case where the overpaid individual is alive, a claim for overpayment will not be compromised, nor will there be suspension or termination of collection of the claim by the Administration if there is an indication of fraud, the filing of a false claim, or misrepresentation on the part of such individual or on the part of any other party having an interest in the claim.</P>
        <P>(2) <E T="03">Overpaid individual deceased.</E> In any case where the overpaid individual is deceased (i) a claim for overpayment in excess of $5,000 will not be compromised, nor will there be suspension or termination of collection of the claim by the Administration if there is an indication of fraud; the filing of a false claim, or misrepresentation on the part of such deceased individual, and (ii) a claim for overpayment regardless of the amount will not be compromised, nor will there be suspension or termination of collection of the claim by the Administration if there is an indication that any person other than the deceased overpaid individual had a part in the fraudulent action which resulted in the overpayment.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Inability to pay claim for recovery of overpayment.</E> In determining whether the overpaid individual is unable to pay a claim for recovery of an overpayment under title II or title XVIII of the Act, the Administration will consider such individual's age, health, present and potential income (including inheritance prospects), assets (e.g., real property, savings account), possible concealment or improper transfer of assets, and assets or income of such individual which may be available in enforced collection proceedings. The Administration will also consider exemptions available to such individual under the pertinent State or Federal law in such proceedings. In the event the overpaid individual is deceased, the Administration will consider the available assets of the estate, taking into account any liens or superior claims against the estate.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Cost of collection or litigative probabilities.</E> Where the probable costs of recovering an overpayment under title II or title XVIII of the Act would not justify enforced collection proceedings for the full amount of the claim or there is doubt concerning the Administration's ability to establish its claim as well as the time which it will take to effect such collection, a compromise or settlement for less than the full amount will be considered.</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Amount of compromise.</E> The amount to be accepted in compromise of a claim for overpayment under title II or title XVIII of the Act shall bear a reasonable relationship to the amount which can be recovered by enforced collection proceedings giving due consideration to the exemptions available to the overpaid individual under State or Federal law and the time which such collection will take.</P>
        <P>(f) <E T="03">Payment.</E> Payment of the amount which the Administration has agreed to accept as a compromise in full settlement of a claim for recovery of an overpayment under title II or title XVIII of the Act must be made within the time and in the manner set by the Administration. A claim for such recovery of the overpayment shall not be considered compromised or settled <PRTPAGE P="193"/>until the full payment of the compromised amount has been made within the time and manner set by the Administration. Failure of the overpaid individual or his estate to make such payment as provided shall result in reinstatement of the full amount of the overpayment less any amounts paid prior to such default.</P>
        <CITA>[34 FR 14889, Sept. 27, 1969; 34 FR 15413, Oct. 3, 1969]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.520</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Referral of overpayments to the Department of the Treasury for tax refund offset—General.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) The standards we will apply and the procedures we will follow before requesting the Department of the Treasury to offset income tax refunds due taxpayers who have an outstanding overpayment are set forth in §§ 404.520 through 404.526. These standards and procedures are authorized by 31 U.S.C. 3720A and are implemented through Department of the Treasury regulations at 31 CFR 285.2.</P>
        <P>(b) We will use the Department of the Treasury tax refund offset procedure to collect overpayments that are certain in amount, past due and legally enforceable, and eligible for tax refund offset under regulations issued by the Department of the Treasury. We will use these procedures to collect overpayments only from individuals who are not currently entitled to monthly Social Security benefits under title II of the Act. We will refer an overpayment to the Department of the Treasury for offset against tax refunds no later than 10 years after our right to collect the overpayment first accrued.</P>
        <CITA>[62 FR 64277, Dec. 5, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.521</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Notice to overpaid individual.</SUBJECT>
        <P>A request for reduction of a Federal income tax refund will be made only after we determine that an amount is owed and past due and send the overpaid individual written notice. Our notice of intent to collect an overpayment through tax refund offset will state:</P>
        <P>(a) The amount of the overpayment;</P>
        <P>(b) That unless, within 60 calendar days from the date of our notice, the overpaid individual repays the overpayment, sends evidence to us at the address given in our notice that the overpayment is not past due or not legally enforceable, or asks us to waive collection of the overpayment under section 204(b) of the Act, we intend to seek collection of the overpayment by requesting that the Department of the Treasury reduce any amounts payable to the overpaid individual as refunds of Federal income taxes by an amount equal to the amount of the overpayment;</P>
        <P>(c) The conditions under which we will waive recovery of an overpayment under section 204(b) of the Act;</P>
        <P>(d) That we will review any evidence presented that the overpayment is not past due or not legally enforceable;</P>
        <P>(e) That the overpaid individual has the right to inspect and copy our records related to the overpayment as determined by us and will be informed as to where and when the inspection and copying can be done after we receive notice from the overpaid individual that inspection and copying are requested.</P>
        <CITA>[56 FR 52468, Oct. 21, 1991, as amended at 62 FR 64278, Dec. 5, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.522</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Review within SSA that an overpayment is past due and legally enforceable.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Notification by overpaid individual.</E> An overpaid individual who receives a notice as described in § 404.521 has the right to present evidence that all or part of the overpayment is not past due or not legally enforceable. To exercise this right, the individual must notify us and present evidence regarding the overpayment within 60 calendar days from the date of our notice.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Submission of evidence.</E> The overpaid individual may submit evidence showing that all or part of the debt is not past due or not legally enforceable as provided in paragraph (a) of this section. Failure to submit the notification and evidence within 60 calendar days will result in referral of the overpayment to the Department of the Treasury, unless the overpaid individual, within this 60-day time period, has asked us to waive collection of the overpayment under section 204(b) of the Act and we have not yet determined whether we can grant the waiver request. If the overpaid individual asks <PRTPAGE P="194"/>us to waive collection of the overpayment, we may ask that evidence to support the request be submitted to us.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Review of the evidence.</E> After a timely submission of evidence by the overpaid individual, we will consider all available evidence related to the overpayment. If the overpaid individual has not requested a waiver we will make findings based on a review of the written record, unless we determine that the question of indebtedness cannot be resolved by a review of the documentary evidence. If the overpaid individual has asked us to make a waiver determination and our records do not show that after an oral hearing we had previously determined that he was at “fault” in accepting the overpayment, we will not deny the waiver request without first scheduling an oral hearing.</P>
        <CITA>[56 FR 52469, Oct. 21, 1991, as amended at 62 FR 64278, Dec. 5, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.523</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Findings by SSA.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) Following the hearing or a review of the record, we will issue written findings which include supporting rationale for the findings. Issuance of these findings concerning whether the overpayment or part of the overpayment is past due and legally enforceable is the final Agency action with respect to the past-due status and enforceability of the overpayment. If we make a determination that a waiver request cannot be granted, we will issue a written notice of this determination in accordance with the regulations in subpart J of this part. Our referral of the overpayment to the Department of the Treasury will not be suspended under § 404.525 pending any further administrative review of the waiver request that the individual may seek.</P>
        <P>(b) Copies of the findings described in paragraph (a) of this section will be distributed to the overpaid individual and the overpaid individual's attorney or other representative, if any.</P>
        <P>(c) If the findings referred to in paragraph (a) of this section affirm that all or part of the overpayment is past due and legally enforceable and, if waiver is requested, we determine that the request cannot be granted, we will refer the overpayment to the Department of the Treasury. No referral will be made to the Department of the Treasury if, based on our review of the overpayment, we reverse our prior finding that the overpayment is past due and legally enforceable or, upon consideration of a waiver request, we determine that waiver of our collection of the overpayment is appropriate.</P>
        <CITA>[56 FR 52469, Oct. 21, 1991, as amended at 62 FR 64278, Dec. 5, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.524</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Review of our records related to the overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Notification by the overpaid individual.</E> An overpaid individual who intends to inspect or copy our records related to the overpayment as determined by us must notify us stating his or her intention to inspect or copy.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Our response.</E> In response to a notification by the overpaid individual as described in paragraph (a) of this section, we will notify the overpaid individual of the location and time when the overpaid individual may inspect or copy our records related to the overpayment. We may also, at our discretion, mail copies of the overpayment-related records to the overpaid individual.</P>
        <CITA>[56 FR 52469, Oct. 21, 1991]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.525</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Suspension of offset.</SUBJECT>
        <P>If, within 60 days of the date of the notice described in § 404.521, the overpaid individual notifies us that he or she is exercising a right described in § 404.522(a) and submits evidence pursuant to § 404.522(b) or requests a waiver under § 404.506, we will suspend any notice to the Department of the Treasury until we have issued written findings that affirm that an overpayment is past due and legally enforceable and, if applicable, make a determination that a waiver request cannot be granted.</P>
        <CITA>[56 FR 52469, Oct. 21, 1991, as amended at 62 FR 64278, Dec. 5, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.526</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Tax refund insufficient to cover amount of overpayment.</SUBJECT>
        <P>If a tax refund for a given taxable year is insufficient to recover an overpayment completely, the case will remain with the Department of the Treasury for offset, assuming that all criteria for offset continue to be met.</P>
        <CITA>[62 FR 64278, Dec. 5, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <PRTPAGE P="195"/>
        <SECTNO>§ 404.527</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Additional methods for recovery of title II benefit overpayments.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> In addition to the methods specified in §§ 404.502 and 404.520, an overpayment under title II of the Act is also subject to recovery under the rules in subpart D of part 422, provided:</P>
        <P>(1) The overpayment occurred after the individual has attained age 18;</P>
        <P>(2) The overpaid individual is no longer entitled to benefits under title II of the Act; and</P>
        <P>(3) Pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section, we have determined that the overpayment is otherwise unrecoverable under section 204 of the Act.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">When an overpayment is considered to be otherwise unrecoverable.</E> An overpayment under title II of the Act is considered to be otherwise unrecoverable under section 204 of the Act if all of the following conditions are met:</P>
        <P>(1) Our billing system sequence has been completed (i.e., we have sent the individual an initial notice of the overpayment, a reminder notice, and a past-due notice) or collection activity has been suspended or terminated in accordance with the Federal Claims Collection Standards in 4 CFR 104.2 or 104.3.</P>
        <P>(2) We have not entered into an installment payment arrangement with the overpaid individual or, if we have entered into such an arrangement, the overpaid individual has failed to make any payment for two consecutive months.</P>
        <P>(3) The overpaid individual has not requested waiver pursuant to § 404.506 or § 404.522 or, after a review conducted pursuant to those sections, we have determined that we will not waive collection of the overpayment.</P>
        <P>(4) The overpaid individual has not requested reconsideration of the initial overpayment determination pursuant to §§ 404.907 and 404.909 or, after a review conducted pursuant to § 404.913, we have affirmed, in whole or in part, the initial overpayment determination.</P>
        <P>(5) The overpayment cannot be recovered pursuant to § 404.502 by adjustment of benefits payable to any individual other than the overpaid individual. For purposes of this paragraph, an overpayment will be deemed to be unrecoverable from any individual who was living in a separate household from the overpaid person at the time of the overpayment and did not receive the overpayment.</P>
        <CITA>[62 FR 64278, Dec. 5, 1997]</CITA>
      </SECTION>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart G—Filing of Applications and Other Forms</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 202 (i), (j), (o), (p), and (r), 205(a), 216(i)(2), 223(b), 228(a), and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 402 (i), (j), (o), (p), and (r), 405(a), 416(i)(2), 423(b), 428(a), and 902(a)(5)).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">General Provisions</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.601</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <P>This subpart contains the Social Security Administration's rules for filing a claim for old-age, disability, dependents', and survivors' insurance benefits as described in subpart D of part 404. It tells what an application is, who may sign it, where and when it must be signed and filed, the period of time it is in effect and how it may be withdrawn. This subpart also explains when a written statement, request, or notice will be considered filed. Since the application form and procedures for filing a claim under this subpart are the same as those used to establish entitlement to Medicare benefits under 42 CFR part 405, persons who wish to become entitled to Medicare benefits should refer to the provisions of this subpart. Requirements concerning applications for the black lung benefits program are contained in part 410. Requirements concerning applications for the supplemental security income program are contained in part 416. Part 422 contains the requirements for applying for a social security number.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.602</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>For the purpose of this subpart—</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Applicant</E> means the person who files an application for benefits for himself or herself or for someone else. A person who files for himself or herself is both the <E T="03">applicant</E> and the <E T="03">claimant.</E>
          </P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Application</E> refers only to an application on a form described in § 404.611.<PRTPAGE P="196"/>
          </P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Benefits</E> means any old-age, disability, dependents', and survivors' insurance benefits described in subpart D, including a period of disability.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Claimant</E> means the person who files an application for benefits for himself or herself or the person for whom an application is filed.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">We, us,</E> or <E T="03">our</E> means the Social Security Administration (SSA).</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">You</E> or <E T="03">your</E> means, as appropriate, the person who applies for benefits, the person for whom an application is filed, or the person who may consider applying for benefits.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.603</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>You must file an application to receive benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In addition to meeting other requirements, you must file an application to become entitled to benefits. If you believe you may be entitled to benefits, you should file an application. Filing an application will—</P>
          <P>(a) Permit a formal decision to be made on your entitlement to benefits;</P>
          <P>(b) Protect your entitlement to any benefits that may be payable for as many as 6 months or 12 months (depending on the type of benefit, as explained in § 404.621) before the application was filed; and</P>
          <P>(c) Give you the right to appeal if you are dissatisfied with the decision.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 46 FR 47444, Sept. 28, 1981]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Applications</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.610</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>What makes an application a claim for benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>To be considered a claim for benefits, an application must generally meet all of the following conditions:</P>
          <P>(a) It must be on an application form as described in § 404.611.</P>
          <P>(b) It must be completed and filed with SSA as described in § 404.611.</P>
          <P>(c) It must be signed by the claimant or someone described in § 404.612. who may sign an application for the claimant.</P>
          <P>(d) The claimant, with the limited exceptions in § 404.615, must be alive at the time it is filed.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.611</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing of application with Social Security Administration.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General rule.</E> You must apply for benefits on an applications we prescribe. See § 404.614 for places where an application for benefits may be filed.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Effect of claims filed with the Railroad Retirement Board.</E> Pursuant to section 5(b) of the Railroad Retirement Act of 1974, as amended, 45 U.S.C. 231d(b), if you file an application with the Railroad Retirement Board on one of its forms for an annuity under section 2 of the Railroad Retirement Act of 1974, as amended, 45 U.S.C. 231a, unless you specify otherwise, this application also will be an application for any benefit to which you may be entitled under title II of the Social Security Act.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Effect of claims filed with the Veterans Administration.</E> An application filed with the Veterans Administration on one of its forms for survivors' dependency and indemnity compensation (see section 3005 of title 38 U.S.C.) is also considered an application for social security dependents' and survivors' benefits except the lump-sum death payment.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 51 FR 41951, Nov. 20, 1986; 58 FR 60381, Nov. 16, 1993]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.612</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Who may sign an application.</SUBJECT>
          <P>We will determine who may sign an application according to the following rules:</P>
          <P>(a) A claimant who is 18 years old or over, mentally competent, and physically able to do so, must sign his or her own application. If the claim is for child's benefits for a person who is not yet 22 years old, the application may be signed by a parent or a person standing in place of the parent.</P>
          <P>(b) A claimant who is between 16 and 18 years old may sign his or her own application if he or she is mentally competent, has no court appointed representative, and is not in the care of any person.</P>

          <P>(c) If the claimant is under age 18, or mentally incompetent, or physically unable to sign, the application may be signed by a court appointed representative or a person who is responsible for the care of the claimant, including a relative. If the claimant is in the care <PRTPAGE P="197"/>of an institution, the manager or principal officer of the institution may sign the application.</P>
          <P>(d) If a person who could receive disability benefits or who could have a period of disability established dies before filing, an application for disability benefits or for a period of disability may be signed by a person who would be qualified to receive any benefits due the deceased.</P>
          <P>(e) If a written statement showing an intent to claim benefits is filed with us, but the person for whom the benefits are claimed dies before an application is filed, an application may be filed as explained in § 404.630(d).</P>
          <P>(f) If a person who could receive benefits on the basis of a “deemed” filing date of an application under § 404.633 (b)(1)(i) or (b)(2)(i) dies before an application for the benefits is filed, the application may be signed by a person who would be qualified to receive any benefits due the deceased person as explained in § 404.633 (b)(1)(ii) and (b)(2)(ii).</P>

          <P>(g) If it is necessary to protect a claimant from losing benefits and there is good cause for the claimant not signing the application, we may accept an application signed by some one other than a person described in this section.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
            <P>Mr. Smith comes to a social security office a few days before the end of a month to file an application for old-age benefits for his neighbor, Mr. Jones. Mr. Jones, a 63 year old widower, just suffered a heart attack and is in the hospital. He asked Mr. Smith to file the application for him. We will accept an application signed by Mr. Smith since it would not be possible to have Mr. Jones sign and file the application until the next calendar month and a loss of one month's benefits would result.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 59 FR 44923, Aug. 31, 1994; 61 FR 41330, Aug. 8, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.613</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of authority to sign an application for another.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A person who signs an application for someone else will be required to provide evidence of his or her authority to sign the application for the person claiming benefits under the following rules:</P>
          <P>(1) If the person who signs is a court appointed representative, he or she must submit a certificate issued by the court showing authority to act for the claimant.</P>
          <P>(2) If the person who signs is not a court appointed representative, he or she must submit a statement describing his or her relationship to the claimant. The statement must also describe the extent to which the person is responsible for the care of the claimant. This latter information will not be requested if the application is signed by a parent for a child with whom he or she is living.</P>
          <P>(3) If the person who signs is the manager or principal officer of an institution which is responsible for the care of the claimant, he or she must submit a statement indicating the person's position of responsibility at the institution.</P>
          <P>(b) We may, at any time, require additional evidence to establish the authority of a person to sign an application for someone else.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.614</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When an application or other form is considered filed.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General rule.</E> Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b) of this section and in §§ 404.630 through 404.633 which relate to the filing date of an application, an application for benefits, or a written statement, request, or notice is filed on the day it is received by an SSA employee at one of our offices or by an SSA employee who is authorized to receive it at a place other than one of our offices.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Other places and dates of filing.</E> We will also accept as the date of filing—</P>
          <P>(1) The date an application for benefits, or a written statement, request or notice is received by any office of the U.S. Foreign Service or by the Veterans Administration Regional Office in the Philippines;</P>

          <P>(2) The date an application for benefits or a written statement, request or notice is mailed to us by the U.S. mail, if using the date we receive it would result in the loss or lessening of rights. The date shown by a U.S. postmark will be used as the date of mailing. If the postmark is unreadable, or there is no postmark, we will consider other evidence of when you mailed it to us; or<PRTPAGE P="198"/>
          </P>
          <P>(3) The date an application for benefits is filed with the Railroad Retirement Board or the Veterans Administration. See § 404.611 (b) and (c) for an explanation of when an application for benefits filed with the Railroad Retirement Board or the Veterans Administration is considered an application for social security benefits.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 59 FR 44923, Aug. 31, 1994]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.615</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Claimant must be alive when an application is filed.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A claimant must be alive at the time an application is filed. There are the following exceptions to this general rule:</P>
          <P>(a) If a disabled person dies before filing an application for disability benefits or a period of disability, a person who would be qualified to receive any benefits due the deceased may file an application. The application must be filed within 3 months after the month in which the disabled person died.</P>
          <P>(b) If a written statement showing an intent to claim benefits is filed with us, but the person for whom the benefits are claimed dies before an application is filed, an application may be filed as explained in § 404.630(d).</P>
          <P>(c) If a person who could receive benefits on the basis of a “deemed” filing date of an application under § 404.633 (b)(1)(i) or (b)(2)(i) dies before an application for the benefits is filed, the application may be signed by a person who would be qualified to receive any benefits due the deceased person as explained in § 404.633 (b)(1)(ii) and (b)(2)(ii).</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 59 FR 44923, Aug. 31, 1994; 61 FR 41330, Aug. 8, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Effective Filing Period of Application</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.620</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing before the first month you meet the requirements for benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General rule.</E> If you file an application for benefits (except special age 72 payments) before the first month you meet all the other requirements for entitlement, the application will remain in effect until we make a final determination on your application unless there is an administrative law judge hearing decision on your application. If there is an administrative law judge hearing decision, your application will remain in effect until the administrative law judge hearing decision is issued.</P>
          <P>(1) If you meet all the requirements for entitlement while your application is in effect, we may pay you benefits from the first month that you meet all the requirements.</P>
          <P>(2) If you first meet all the requirements for entitlement after the period for which your application was in effect, you must file a new application for benefits. In this case, we may pay you benefits only from the first month that you meet all the requirements based on the new application.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Filing for special age 72 payments.</E> The requirements for entitlement to special age 72 payments must be met no later than 3 months after the month an application is filed.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 52 FR 4003, Feb. 9, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.621</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing after the first month you meet the requirements for benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Filing for disability benefits and for old-age, survivors', or dependents' benefits.</E> (1)(i) If you file an application for disability benefits, widow's or widower's benefits based on disability, or wife's, husband's, or child's benefits based on the earnings record of a person entitled to disability benefits, after the first month you could have been entitled to them, you may receive benefits for up to 12 months immediately before the month in which your application is filed. Your benefits may begin with the first month in this 12-month period in which you meet all the requirements for entitlement. However, entitlement to wife's or husband's benefits under this rule is limited by paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section.</P>

          <P>(ii) If you file an application for old-age benefits, widow's or widower's benefits not based on disability, wife's, husband's, or child's benefits based on the earnings record of a person not entitled to disability benefits, or mother's, father's, or parent's benefits, after the first month you could have been <PRTPAGE P="199"/>entitled to them, you may receive benefits for up to 6 months immediately before the month in which your application is filed. Your benefits may begin with the first month in this 6-month period in which you meet all the requirements for entitlement. However, entitlement to old-age, wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's benefits under this rule is limited by paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section.</P>

          <P>(iii) If the effect of the payment of benefits for a month before the month you file would be to reduce your benefits because of your age, you cannot be entitled to old-age, wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's benefits for any month before the month in which your application is filed, unless you meet one of the conditions in paragraph (a)(2) of this section. (An explanation of the reduction that occurs because of age if you are entitled to these benefits for a month before you reach the retirement age of 65, is in § 404.410.) An example follows that assumes you do not meet any of the conditions in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example:</HD>
            <P>You become 65 years old in April 1981. If you apply for old-age benefits in April, you cannot be entitled to benefits for months in the 6-month period before April because the payment of benefits for any of these months would result in your benefits being reduced for age. If you do not file your application until July 1981, you may be entitled to benefits for the months of April, May, and June 1981 because the payment of benefits for these months would not result in your benefits being reduced for age. You will not, however, receive benefits for the 3 months before April.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          
          <P>(2) The limitation in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section on your entitlement to old-age, wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's benefits for months before you file an application does not apply if—</P>
          <P>(i) You are a widow, widower, surviving divorced wife, or surviving divorced husband who is disabled and could be entitled to retroactive benefits for any month before age 60. If you could not be entitled before age 60, the limitation will prevent payment of benefits to you for past months, but it will not affect the month you become entitled to hospital insurance benefits.</P>
          <P>(ii) You are a widow, widower, or surviving divorced spouse of the insured person who died in the month before you applied and you were at least age 60 in the month of death of the insured person on whose earnings record you are claiming benefits. In this case, you can be entitled beginning with the month the insured person died if you choose and if you file your application on or after July 1, 1983.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Filing for lump-sum death payment.</E> An application for a lump-sum death payment must be filed within 2 years after the death of the person on whose earnings record the claim is filed. There are two exceptions to the 2-year filing requirement:</P>
          <P>(1) If there is a good cause for failure to file within the 2-year period, we will consider your application as though it were filed within the 2-year period. Good cause does not exist if you were informed of the need to file an application within the 2-year period and you neglected to do so or did not desire to make a claim. Good cause will be found to exist if you did not file within the time limit due to—</P>
          <P>(i) Circumstances beyond your control, such as extended illness, mental or physical incapacity, or a language barrier;</P>
          <P>(ii) Incorrect or incomplete information we furnished you;</P>
          <P>(iii) Your efforts to get evidence to support your claim without realizing that you could submit the evidence after filing an application; or</P>
          <P>(iv) Unusual or unavoidable circumstances which show that you could not reasonably be expected to know of the time limit.</P>
          <P>(2) The Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940 provides for extending the filing time.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Filing for special age 72 payments.</E> An application for special age 72 payments is not effective as a claim for benefits for any month before you actually file.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Filing for a period of disability.</E> You must file an application for a period of disability while you are disabled or no later than 12 months after the month in which your period of disability ended. If you were unable to apply within the 12-month time period because of a physical or mental condition, you may apply not more than 36 months after your disability ended. <PRTPAGE P="200"/>The general rule we use to decide whether your failure to file was due to a physical or mental condition is stated in subpart D.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Filing after death of person eligible for disability benefits or period of disability.</E> If you file for disability benefits or a period of disability for another person who died before filing an application and you would qualify under § 404.503(b) to receive any benefits due the deceased, you must file an application no later than the end of the third month following the month in which the disabled person died.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 46 FR 47444, Sept. 28, 1981; 51 FR 4482, Feb. 5, 1986; 56 FR 58846, Nov. 22, 1991]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.622</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limiting an application.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Your application may entitle you to benefits for up to 6 months or 12 months (depending on the type of benefit, as explained in § 404.621) before the month in which it is filed. You may limit the number of months of your entitlement in the 6-month or 12-month period. You may state this choice any time before a decision is made on your claim by indicating, in writing, the month you want your benefits to begin. You may change the first month of entitlement in this 6-month or 12-month period after a decision has been made on your claim under the following conditions:</P>
          <P>(a) You file the request in writing.</P>
          <P>(b) If you are filing for the claimant, he or she is alive when the request is filed.</P>
          <P>(c) If any other person who is entitled to benefits would lose some or all of those benefits because of the change, that person, or the person who filed for him or her, consents in writing.</P>
          <P>(d) Any benefit payments that would become improper as a result of the change in entitlement month are repaid, or we are satisfied that they will be repaid.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 46 FR 47445, Sept. 28, 1981]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.623</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing by person eligible for old-age and husband's or wife's benefits.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Presumed filing for husband's or wife's benefits.</E> If you file an application for old-age benefits, you are presumed to have filed an application for husband's or wife's benefits in the first month of your entitlement to old-age benefits, if—</P>
          <P>(1) Your old-age benefits are reduced for age because you choose to receive them before you become 65 years old; and</P>
          <P>(2) You are eligible for either a husband's or a wife's benefit for the first month of your entitlement to old-age benefits.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Presumed filing for old-age benefits.</E> (1) If you file an application for a husband's or a wife's benefits, you are presumed to have filed an application for old-age benefits in the first month of your entitlement to husband's or wife's benefits if—</P>
          <P>(i) Your husband's or wife's benefits are reduced for age because you choose to receive them before you become 65 years old; and</P>
          <P>(ii) You are eligible for old-age benefits for the first month of your entitlement to husband's or wife's benefits.</P>
          <P>(2) The rule in paragraph (b)(1) of this section is not used if you are also entitled to disability benefits in the first month of your entitlement to husband's or wife's benefits. In this event, you are presumed to have filed for old-age benefits only if your disability benefits end before you become 65 years old.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Filing Date Based on Written Statement</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.630</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Use of date of written statement as filing date.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If a written statement, such as a letter, indicating your intent to claim benefits either for yourself or for another person is filed with us under the rules stated in § 404.614, we will use the filing date of the written statement as the filing date of the application, if all of the following requirements are met:</P>
          <P>(a) The statement indicates an intent to claim benefits.</P>

          <P>(b) The statement is signed by the claimant, the claimant's spouse, or a person described in § 404.612. If you telephone us and advise us that you intend to file a claim but cannot file an application before the end of the month, we <PRTPAGE P="201"/>will prepare and sign a written statement if it is necessary to prevent the loss of benefits.</P>
          <P>(c) The claimant files an application with us on an application form as described in § 404.611, or one is filed for the claimant by a person described in § 404.612, within 6 months after the date of a notice we will send advising of the need to file an application. We will send the notice to the claimant. However, if it is clear from the information we receive that the claimant is a minor or is mentally incompetent, we will send the notice to the person who submitted the written statement.</P>
          <P>(d) The claimant is alive when the application is filed; or if the claimant has died after the written statement was filed, an application is filed—</P>
          <P>(1) By or for a person who would be eligible to receive benefits on the deceased's earnings record;</P>
          <P>(2) By a person acting for the deceased's estate; or</P>
          <P>(3) If the statement was filed with a hospital under § 404.632, by the hospital if—</P>
          <P>(i) No person described in paragraph (d) (1) or (2) of this section can be located; or</P>
          <P>(ii) A person described in paragraphs (d) (1) or (2) of this section is located but refuses or fails to file the application unless the refusal or failure to file is because it would be harmful to the deceased person or the deceased's estate.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.631</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Statements filed with the Railroad Retirement Board.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A written statement filed with the Railroad Retirement Board will be considered a written statement filed with us under the rules in § 404.630 if—</P>
          <P>(a) The statement indicates an intent to claim any payments under the Railroad Retirement Act;</P>
          <P>(b) It bears the signature of the person filing the statement;</P>
          <P>(c) No application is filed with the Railroad Retirement Board on one of its forms. If an application has been filed, we will use the date of filing of that application as determined by the Railroad Retirement Board (see § 404.614(b)(3)); and</P>
          <P>(d) The statement is sent to us by the Railroad Retirement Board.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.632</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Statements filed with a hospital.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A statement (generally a hospital admission form) filed with a hospital may serve as a written statement under § 404.630 if the requirements of this section are met. The statement will be considered filed with us as of the date it was filed with the hospital and will serve to protect entitlement to benefits. A statement filed with a hospital by you or some other person for you requesting or indicating an intent to claim benefits will be considered a written statement filed with us and § 404.630 will apply to it if—</P>
          <P>(a) You are a patient in the hospital;</P>
          <P>(b) The hospital provides services covered by hospital insurance under the Medicare program;</P>
          <P>(c) An application has not already been filed; and </P>
          <P>(d) The statement is sent to us.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Deemed Filing Date Based on Misinformation</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.633</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Deemed filing date in a case of misinformation.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> You may have considered applying for monthly benefits for yourself or for another person, and you may have contacted us in writing, by telephone or in person to inquire about filing an application for these benefits. It is possible that in responding to your inquiry, we may have given you misinformation about your eligibility for such benefits, or the eligibility of the person on whose behalf you were considering applying for benefits, which caused you not to file an application at that time. If this happened, and later an application for such benefits is filed with us, we may establish an earlier filing date under this section.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 1:</HD>

            <P>Mrs. Smith, a widow of an insured individual, contacts a Social Security office when she reaches age 60 to inquire about applying for widow's insurance benefits. She is told by an SSA employee that she must be age 62 to be eligible for these benefits. This information, which was incorrect, causes Mrs. Smith not to file an application for benefits. When Mrs. Smith reaches age 62, she again contacts a Social Security office to ask about filing for widow's insurance <PRTPAGE P="202"/>benefits and learns that she could have received the benefits at age 60. She files an application for these benefits, provides the information required under paragraph (f) of this section to show that an SSA employee provided misinformation, and requests a deemed filing date based on the misinformation which she received from an SSA employee when she was age 60.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 2:</HD>
            <P> Ms. Hill, a 22-year-old, is forced to stop work because of illness. When she contacts a Social Security office to inquire about applying for disability insurance benefits, she is told by an SSA employee that she must have 20 quarters of coverage out of the last 40 calendar quarters to be insured for disability insurance benefits. The employee fails to consider the special rules for insured status for persons who become disabled before age 31 and, consequently, tells Ms. Hill that she is not insured because she only has 16 quarters of coverage. The misinformation causes Ms. Hill not to file an application for disability insurance benefits. Because of her illness, she is unable to return to work. A year later, Ms. Hill reads an article that indicates that there are special rules for insured status for young workers who become disabled. She again contacts a Social Security office to inquire about benefits based on disability and learns that she was misinformed earlier about her insured status. She files an application for disability insurance benefits, provides the information required under paragraph (f) of this section to show that an SSA employee provided misinformation, and requests a deemed filing date based on the misinformation provided to her earlier.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Deemed filing date of an application based on misinformation.</E> Subject to the requirements and conditions in paragraphs (c) through (g) of this section, we may establish a deemed filing date of an application for monthly benefits under the following provisions.</P>
          <P>(1)(i) If we determine that you failed to apply for monthly benefits for yourself because we gave you misinformation about your eligibility for such benefits, we will deem an application for such benefits to have been filed with us on the later of—</P>
          <P>(A) The date on which the misinformation was provided to you; or</P>
          <P>(B) The date on which you met all of the requirements for entitlement to such benefits, other than the requirement of filing an application.</P>
          <P>(ii) Before we may establish a deemed filing date of an application for benefits for you under paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section, you or a person described in § 404.612 must file an application for such benefits. If you die before an application for the benefits is filed with us, we will consider establishing a deemed filing date of an application for such benefits only if an application for the benefits is filed with us by a person who would be qualified to receive any benefits due you.</P>
          <P>(2)(i) If you had authority under § 404.612 to sign an application for benefits for another person, and we determine that you failed to apply for monthly benefits for that person because we gave you misinformation about that person's eligibility for such benefits, we will deem an application for such benefits to have been filed with us on the later of—</P>
          <P>(A) The date on which the misinformation was provided to you; or</P>
          <P>(B) The date on which the person met all of the requirements for entitlement to such benefits, other than the requirement of filing an application.</P>
          <P>(ii) Before we may establish a deemed filing date of an application for benefits for the person under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, you, such person, or another person described in § 404.612 must file an application for such benefits. If the person referred to in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section dies before an application for the benefits is filed with us, we will consider establishing a deemed filing date of an application for such benefits only if an application for the benefits is filed with us by a person who would be qualified to receive any benefits due the deceased person.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Requirements concerning the misinformation.</E> We apply the following requirements for purposes of paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
          <P>(1) The misinformation must have been provided to you by one of our employees while he or she was acting in his or her official capacity as our employee. For purposes of this section, an employee includes an officer of SSA.</P>

          <P>(2) Misinformation is information which we consider to be incorrect, misleading, or incomplete in view of the facts which you gave to the employee, or of which the employee was aware or should have been aware, regarding your <PRTPAGE P="203"/>particular circumstances, or the particular circumstances of the person referred to in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section. In addition, for us to find that the information you received was incomplete, the employee must have failed to provide you with the appropriate, additional information which he or she would be required to provide in carrying out his or her official duties.</P>
          <P>(3) The misinformation may have been provided to you orally or in writing.</P>
          <P>(4) The misinformation must have been provided to you in response to a specific request by you to us for information about your eligibility for benefits or the eligibility for benefits of the person referred to in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section for which you were considering filing an application.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Evidence that misinformation was provided.</E> We will consider the following evidence in making a determination under paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">Preferred evidence.</E> Preferred evidence is written evidence which relates directly to your inquiry about your eligibility for benefits or the eligibility of another person and which shows that we gave you misinformation which caused you not to file an application. Preferred evidence includes, but is not limited to, the following—</P>
          <P>(i) A notice, letter or other document which was issued by us and addressed to you; or</P>
          <P>(ii) Our record of your telephone call, letter or in-person contact.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Other evidence.</E> In the absence of preferred evidence, we will consider other evidence, including your statements about the alleged misinformation, to determine whether we gave you misinformation which caused you not to file an application. We will not find that we gave you misinformation, however, based solely on your statements. Other evidence which you provide or which we obtain must support your statements. Evidence which we will consider includes, but is not limited to, the following—</P>
          <P>(i) Your statements about the alleged misinformation, including statements about—</P>
          <P>(A) The date and time of the alleged contact(s);</P>
          <P>(B) How the contact was made, e.g., by telephone or in person;</P>
          <P>(C) The reason(s) the contact was made;</P>
          <P>(D) Who gave the misinformation; and</P>
          <P>(E) The questions you asked and the facts you gave us, and the questions we asked and the information we gave you, at the time of the contact;</P>
          <P>(ii) Statements from others who were present when you were given the alleged misinformation, e.g., a neighbor who accompanied you to our office;</P>
          <P>(iii) If you can identify the employee or the employee can recall your inquiry about benefits—</P>
          <P>(A) Statements from the employee concerning the alleged contact, including statements about the questions you asked, the facts you gave, the questions the employee asked, and the information provided to you at the time of the alleged contact; and</P>
          <P>(B) Our assessment of the likelihood that the employee provided the alleged misinformation;</P>
          <P>(iv) An evaluation of the credibility and the validity of your allegations in conjunction with other relevant information; and</P>
          <P>(v) Any other information regarding your alleged contact.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Information which does not constitute satisfactory proof that misinformation was given.</E> Certain kinds of information will not be considered satisfactory proof that we gave you misinformation which caused you not to file an application. Examples of such information include—</P>
          <P>(1) General informational pamphlets that we issue to provide basic program information;</P>
          <P>(2) The Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statement that is based on an individual's reported and projected earnings and is an estimate which can be requested at any time;</P>
          <P>(3) General information which we review or prepare but which is disseminated by the media, e.g., radio, television, magazines, and newspapers; and</P>

          <P>(4) Information provided by other governmental agencies, e.g., the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Defense, State unemployment agencies, and State and local governments.<PRTPAGE P="204"/>
          </P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Claim for benefits based on misinformation.</E> You may make a claim for benefits based on misinformation at any time. Your claim must contain information that will enable us to determine if we did provide misinformation to you about your eligibility for benefits, or the eligibility of a person on whose behalf you were considering applying for benefits, which caused you not to file an application for the benefits. Specifically, your claim must be in writing and it must explain what information was provided; how, when and where it was provided and by whom; and why the information caused you not to file an application. If you give us this information, we will make a determination on such a claim for benefits if all of the following conditions are also met.</P>
          <P>(1) An application for the benefits described in paragraph (b)(1)(i) or (b)(2)(i) of this section is filed with us by someone described in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) or (b)(2)(ii) of this section, as appropriate. The application must be filed after the alleged misinformation was provided. This application may be—</P>
          <P>(i) An application on which we have made a previous final determination or decision awarding the benefits, but only if the claimant continues to be entitled to benefits based on that application;</P>
          <P>(ii) An application on which we have made a previous final determination or decision denying the benefits, but only if such determination or decision is reopened under § 404.988; or</P>
          <P>(iii) A new application on which we have not made a final determination or decision.</P>
          <P>(2) The establishment of a deemed filing date of an application for benefits based on misinformation could result in the claimant becoming entitled to benefits or to additional benefits.</P>
          <P>(3) We have not made a previous final determination or decision to which you were a party on a claim for benefits based on alleged misinformation involving the same facts and issues. This provision does not apply, however, if the final determination or decision may be reopened under § 404.988.</P>
          <P>(g) <E T="03">Effective date.</E> This section applies only to misinformation which we provided after December 1982. In addition, this section is effective only for benefits payable for months after December 1982.</P>
          <CITA>[59 FR 44924, Aug. 31, 1994]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Withdrawal of Application</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.640</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Withdrawal of an application.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Request for withdrawal filed before a determination is made.</E> An application may be withdrawn before we make a determination on it if—</P>
          <P>(1) A written request for withdrawal is filed at a place described in § 404.614 by the claimant or a person who may sign an application for the claimant under § 404.612; and</P>
          <P>(2) The claimant is alive at the time the request is filed.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Request for withdrawal filed after a determination is made.</E> An application may be withdrawn after we make a determination on it if—</P>
          <P>(1) The conditions in paragraph (a) of this section are met;</P>
          <P>(2) Any other person whose entitlement would be rendered erroneous because of the withdrawal consents in writing to it. Written consent for the person may be given by someone who could sign an application for him or her under § 404.612; and</P>
          <P>(3) All benefits already paid based on the application being withdrawn are repaid or we are satisfied that they will be repaid.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Request for withdrawal filed after the claimant's death.</E> An application may be withdrawn after the claimant's death, regardless of whether we have made a determination on it, if—</P>
          <P>(1) The claimant's application was for old-age benefits that would be reduced because of his or her age;</P>
          <P>(2) The claimant died before we certified his or her benefit entitlement to the Treasury Department for payment;</P>
          <P>(3) A written request for withdrawal is filed at a place described in § 404.614 by or for the person eligible for widow's or widower's benefits based on the claimant's earnings; and</P>
          <P>(4) The conditions in paragraphs (b) (2) and (3) of this section are met.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Effect of withdrawal.</E> If we approve a request to withdraw an application, the application will be considered as though it was never filed. If we disapprove a request for withdrawal, the <PRTPAGE P="205"/>application is treated as though the request was never filed.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 37209, June 26, 1979, as amended at 48 FR 21931, May 16, 1983; 51 FR 37720, Oct. 24, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.641</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Cancellation of a request to withdraw.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A request to withdraw an application may be cancelled and the application reinstated if—</P>
          <P>(a) A written request for cancellation is filed at a place described in § 404.614 by the claimant or someone who may sign an application for the claimant under § 404.612;</P>
          <P>(b) The claimant is alive at the time the request for cancellation is filed; and</P>
          <P>(c) For a cancellation request received after we have approved the withdrawal, the request is filed no later than 60 days after the date of the notice of approval.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart H—Evidence</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 205(a) and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 405(a) and 902(a)(5)).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>43 FR 24795, June 7, 1978, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">General</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.701</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <P>This subpart contains the Social Security Administration's basic rules about what evidence is needed when a person claims old-age, disability, dependents' and survivors' insurance benefits as described in subpart D. In addition, there are special evidence requirements for disability benefits. These are contained in subpart P. Evidence of a person's earnings under social security is described in subpart I. Evidence needed to obtain a social security number card is described in part 422. Evidence requirements for the supplemental security income program are contained in part 416.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.702</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>As used in this subpart:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Apply</E> means to sign a form or statement that the Social Security Administration accepts as an application for benefits under the rules set out in subpart G.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Benefits</E> means any old-age, disability, dependents' and survivors' insurance benefits described in subpart D, including a period of disability.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Convincing evidence</E> means one or more pieces of evidence that prove you meet a requirement for eligibility. See § 404.708 for the guides we use in deciding whether evidence is convincing.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Eligible</E> means that a person would meet all the requirements for entitlement to benefits for a period of time but has not yet applied.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Entitled</E> means that a person has applied and has proven his or her right to benefits for a period of time.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Evidence</E> means any record, document, or signed statement that helps to show whether you are eligible for benefits or whether you are still entitled to benefits.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Insured person</E> means someone who has enough earnings under social security to permit the payment of benefits on his or her earnings record. He or she is <E T="03">fully insured, transitionally insured, currently insured,</E> or <E T="03">insured for disability</E> as defined in subpart B.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">We</E> or <E T="03">Us</E> refers to the Social Security Administration.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">You</E> refers to the person who has applied for benefits, or the person for whom someone else has applied.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.703</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When evidence is needed.</SUBJECT>
          <P>When you apply for benefits, we will ask for evidence that you are eligible for them. After you become entitled to benefits, we may ask for evidence showing whether you continue to be entitled to benefits; or evidence showing whether your benefit payments should be reduced or stopped. See § 404.401 for a list showing when benefit payments must be reduced or stopped.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.704</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Your responsibility for giving evidence.</SUBJECT>

          <P>When evidence is needed to prove your eligibility or your right to continue to receive benefit payments, you will be responsible for obtaining and giving the evidence to us. We will be glad to advise you what is needed and how to get it and we will consider any evidence you give us. If your evidence <PRTPAGE P="206"/>is a foreign-language record or document, we can have it translated for you. Evidence given to us will be kept confidential and not disclosed to anyone but you except under the rules set out in part 401. You should also be aware that Section 208 of the Social Security Act provides criminal penalties for misrepresenting the facts or for making false statements to obtain social security benefits for yourself or someone else.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.705</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Failure to give requested evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Generally, you will be asked to give us by a certain date specific kinds of evidence or information to prove you are eligible for benefits. If we do not receive the evidence or information by that date, we may decide you are not eligible for benefits. If you are already receiving benefits, you may be asked to give us by a certain date information needed to decide whether you continue to be entitled to benefits or whether your benefits should be stopped or reduced. If you do not give us the requested information by the date given, we may decide that you are no longer entitled to benefits or that your benefits should be stopped or reduced. You should let us know if you are unable to give us the requested evidence within the specified time and explain why there will be a delay. If this delay is due to illness, failure to receive timely evidence you have asked for from another source, or a similar circumstance, you will be given additional time to give us the evidence.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.706</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Where to give evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Evidence should be given to the people at a Social Security Administration office. In the Philippines evidence should be given to the people at the Veterans Administration Regional Office. Elsewhere outside the United States, evidence should be given to the people at a United States Foreign Service Office.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.707</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Original records or copies as evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> To prove your eligibility or continuing entitlement to benefits, you may be asked to show us an original document or record. These original records or documents will be returned to you after we have photocopied them. We will also accept copies of original records that are properly certified and some uncertified birth notifications. These types of records are described below in this section.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Certified copies of original records.</E> You may give us copies of original records or extracts from records if they are certified as true and exact copies by—</P>
          <P>(1) The official custodian of the record;</P>
          <P>(2) A Social Security Administration employee authorized to certify copies;</P>
          <P>(3) A Veterans Administration employee if the evidence was given to that agency to obtain veteran's benefits;</P>
          <P>(4) A U.S. Consular Officer or employee of the Department of State authorized to certify evidence received outside the United States; or</P>
          <P>(5) An employee of a State Agency or State Welfare Office authorized to certify copies of original records in the agency's or office's files.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Uncertified copies of original records.</E> You may give us an uncertified photocopy of a birth registration notification as evidence where it is the practice of the local birth registrar to issue them in this way.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.708</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How we decide what is enough evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <P>When you give us evidence, we examine it to see if it is convincing evidence. If it is, no other evidence is needed. In deciding if evidence is convincing, we consider whether—</P>
          <P>(a) Information contained in the evidence was given by a person in a position to know the facts;</P>
          <P>(b) There was any reason to give false information when the evidence was created;</P>
          <P>(c) Information contained in the evidence was given under oath, or with witnesses present, or with the knowledge there was a penalty for giving false information;</P>
          <P>(d) The evidence was created at the time the event took place or shortly thereafter;</P>

          <P>(e) The evidence has been altered or has any erasures on it; and<PRTPAGE P="207"/>
          </P>
          <P>(f) Information contained in the evidence agrees with other available evidence, including our records.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.709</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Preferred evidence and other evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you give us the type of evidence we have shown as <E T="03">preferred</E> in the following sections of this subpart, we will generally find it is convincing evidence. This means that unless we have information in our records that raises a doubt about the evidence, other evidence of the same fact will not be needed. If preferred evidence is not available, we will consider any other evidence you give us. If this other evidence is several different records or documents which all show the same information, we may decide it is convincing evidence even though it is not <E T="03">preferred</E> evidence. If the other evidence is not convincing by itself, we will ask for additional evidence. If this additional evidence shows the same information, all the evidence considered together may be convincing. When we have convincing evidence of the facts that must be proven or it is clear that the evidence provided does not prove the necessary facts, we will make a formal decision about your benefit rights.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Evidence of Age, Marriage, and Death</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.715</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When evidence of age is needed.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) If you apply for benefits, we will ask for evidence of age which shows your date of birth unless you are applying for—</P>
          <P>(1) A lump-sum death payment;</P>
          <P>(2) A wife's benefit and you have the insured person's child in your care;</P>
          <P>(3) A mother's or father's benefit; or</P>
          <P>(4) A disability benefit (or for a period of disability) and neither your eligibility nor benefit amount depends upon your age.</P>
          <P>(b) If you apply for wife's benefits while under age 62 or if you apply for a mother's or father's benefit, you will be asked for evidence of the date of birth of the insured person's children in your care.</P>
          <P>(c) If you apply for benefits on the earnings record of a deceased person, you may be asked for evidence of his or her age if this is needed to decide whether he or she was insured at the time of death or what benefit amount is payable to you.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.716</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Type of evidence of age to be given.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Preferred evidence.</E> The best evidence of your age, if you can obtain it, is either: a birth certificate or hospital birth record recorded before age 5; or a religious record which shows your date of birth and was recorded before age 5.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Other evidence of age.</E> If you cannot obtain the preferred evidence of your age, you will be asked for other convincing evidence that shows your date of birth or age at a certain time such as: an original family bible or family record; school records; census records; a statement signed by the physician or midwife who was present at your birth; insurance policies; a marriage record; a passport; an employment record; a delayed birth certificate, your child's birth certificate; or an immigration or naturalization record.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.720</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a person's death.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When evidence of death is required.</E> If you apply for benefits on the record of a deceased person, we will ask for evidence of the date and place of his or her death. We may also ask for evidence of another person's death if this is needed to prove you are eligible for benefits.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Preferred evidence of death.</E> The best evidence of a person's death is—</P>
          <P>(1) A certified copy or extract from the public record of death, coroner's report of death, or verdict of a coroner's jury; or a certificate by the custodian of the public record of death;</P>
          <P>(2) A statement of the funeral director, attending physician, intern of the institution where death occurred;</P>
          <P>(3) A certified copy of, or extract from an official report or finding of death made by an agency or department of the United States; or</P>

          <P>(4) If death occurred outside the United States, an official report of death by a United States Consul or other employee of the State Department; or a copy of the public record of death in the foreign country.<PRTPAGE P="208"/>
          </P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Other evidence of death.</E> If you cannot obtain the preferred evidence of a person's death, you will be asked to explain why and to give us other convincing evidence such as: the signed statements of two or more people with personal knowledge of the death, giving the place, date, and cause of death.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.721</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence to presume a person is dead.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you cannot prove the person is dead but evidence of death is needed, we will presume he or she died at a certain time if you give us the following evidence:</P>

          <P>(a) A certified copy of, or extract from, an official report or finding by an agency or department of the United States that a missing person is <E T="03">presumed to be</E> dead as set out in Federal law (5 U.S.C. 5565). Unless we have other evidence showing an actual date of death, we will use the date he or she was reported missing as the date of death.</P>
          <P>(b) Signed statements by those in a position to know and other records which show that the person has been absent from his or her residence and has not been heard from for at least 7 years. If the presumption of death is not rebutted pursuant to § 404.722, we will use as the person's date of death either the date he or she left home, the date ending the 7 year period, or some other date depending upon what the evidence shows is the most likely date of death.</P>
          <P>(c) If you are applying for benefits as the insured person's grandchild or stepgrandchild but the evidence does not identify a parent, we will presume the parent died in the first month in which the insured person became entitled to to benefits.</P>
          <CITA>[43 FR 24795, June 7, 1978, as amended at 60 FR 19164, Apr. 17, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.722</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rebuttal of a presumption of death.</SUBJECT>

          <P>A presumption of death made based on § 404.721(b) can be rebutted by evidence that establishes that the person is still alive or explains the individual's absence in a manner consistent with continued life rather than death.
          </P>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 1:</HD>
            <P>Evidence in a claim for surviving child's benefits showed that the worker had wages posted to his earnings record in the year following the disappearance. It was established that the wages belonged to the worker and were for work done after his “disappearance.” In this situation, the presumption of death is rebutted by evidence (wages belonging to the worker) that the person is still alive after the disappearance.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <EXAMPLE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Example 2:</HD>
            <P>Evidence shows that the worker left the family home shortly after a woman, whom he had been seeing, also disappeared, and that the worker phoned his wife several days after the disappearance to state he intended to begin a new life in California. In this situation the presumption of death is rebutted because the evidence explains the worker's absence in a manner consistent with continued life.</P>
          </EXAMPLE>
          <CITA>[60 FR 19165, Apr. 17, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.723</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When evidence of marriage is required.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you apply for benefits as the insured person's husband or wife, widow or widower, divorced wife or divorced husband, we will ask for evidence of the marriage and where and when it took place. We may also ask for this evidence if you apply for child's benefits or for the lump-sum death payment as the widow or widower. If you are a widow, widower, or divorced wife who remarried after your marriage to the insured person ended, we may also ask for evidence of the remarriage. You may be asked for evidence of someone else's marriage if this is necessary to prove your marriage to the insured person was valid. In deciding whether the marriage to the insured person is valid or not, we will follow the law of the State where the insured person had his or her permanent home when you applied or, if earlier, when he or she died—see § 404.770. What evidence we will ask for depends upon whether the insured person's marriage was a ceremonial marriage, a common-law marriage, or a marriage we will deem to be valid.</P>
          <CITA>[43 FR 24795, June 7, 1978, as amended at 44 FR 34493, June 15, 1979]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.725</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a valid ceremonial marriage.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> A valid <E T="03">ceremonial marriage</E> is one that follows procedures set by law in the State or foreign country where it takes place. These procedures cover who may perform the marriage ceremony, what licenses or witnesses <PRTPAGE P="209"/>are needed, and similar rules. A ceremonial marriage can be one that follows certain tribal Indian custom, Chinese custom, or similar traditional procedures. We will ask for the evidence described in this section.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Preferred evidence.</E> Preferred evidence of a ceremonial marriage is—</P>
          <P>(1) If you are applying for wife's or husband's benefits, signed statements from you and the insured about when and where the marriage took place. If you are applying for the lump-sum death payment as the widow or widower, your signed statement about when and where the marriage took place; or</P>
          <P>(2) If you are applying for any other benefits or there is evidence causing some doubt about whether there was a ceremonial marriage: a copy of the public record of marriage or a certified statement as to the marriage; a copy of the religious record of marriage or a certified statement as to what the record shows; or the original marriage certificate.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Other evidence of a ceremonial marriage.</E> If preferred evidence of a ceremonial marriage cannot be obtained, we will ask you to explain why and to give us a signed statement of the clergyman or official who held the marriage ceremony, or other convincing evidence of the marriage.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.726</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of common-law marriage.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> A <E T="03">common-law marriage</E> is one considered valid under certain State laws even though there was no formal ceremony. It is a marriage between two persons free to marry, who consider themselves married, live together as man and wife, and, in some States, meet certain other requirements. We will ask for the evidence described in this section.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Preferred evidence.</E> Preferred evidence of a common-law marriage is—</P>
          <P>(1) If both the husband and wife are alive, their signed statements and those of two blood relatives;</P>
          <P>(2) If either the husband or wife is dead, the signed statements of the one who is alive and those of two blood relatives of the deceased person; or</P>
          <P>(3) If both the husband and wife are dead, the signed statements of one blood relative of each;</P>
          <NOTE>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Note:</HD>
            <P>All signed statements should show why the signer believes there was a marriage between the two persons. If a written statement cannot be gotten from a blood relative, one from another person can be used instead.</P>
          </NOTE>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Other evidence of common-law marriage.</E> If you cannot get preferred evidence of a common-law marriage, we will ask you to explain why and to give us other convincing evidence of the marriage. We may not ask you for statements from a blood relative or other person if we believe other evidence presented to us proves the common-law marriage.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.727</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a deemed valid marriage.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> A <E T="03">deemed valid marriage</E> is a ceremonial marriage we consider valid even though the correct procedures set by State law were not strictly followed or a former marriage had not yet ended. We will ask for the evidence described in this section.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Preferred evidence.</E> Preferred evidence of a deemed valid marriage is—</P>
          <P>(1) Evidence of the ceremonial marriage as described in § 404.725(b)(2);</P>
          <P>(2) If the insured person is alive, his or her signed statement that the other party to the marriage went through the ceremony in good faith and his or her reasons for believing the marriage was valid or believing the other party thought it was valid;</P>
          <P>(3) The other party's signed statement that he or she went through the marriage ceremony in good faith and his or her reasons for believing it was valid;</P>
          <P>(4) If needed to remove a reasonable doubt, the signed statements of others who might have information about what the other party knew about any previous marriage or other facts showing whether he or she went through the marriage in good faith; and</P>
          <P>(5) Evidence the parties to the marriage were living in the same household when you applied for benefits or, if earlier, when the insured person died (see § 404.760).</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Other evidence of a deemed valid marriage.</E> If you cannot obtain preferred evidence of a deemed valid marriage, <PRTPAGE P="210"/>we will ask you to explain why and to give us other convincing evidence of the marriage.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.728</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence a marriage has ended.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When evidence is needed that a marriage has ended.</E> If you apply for benefits as the insured person's divorced wife or divorced husband, you will be asked for evidence of your divorce. If you are the insured person's widow or divorced wife who had remarried but that husband died, we will ask you for evidence of his death. We may ask for evidence that a previous marriage you or the insured person had was ended before you married each other if this is needed to show the latter marriage was valid. If you apply for benefits as an unmarried person and you had a marriage which was annulled, we will ask for evidence of the annulment. We will ask for the evidence described in this section.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Preferred evidence.</E> Preferred evidence a marriage has ended is—</P>
          <P>(1) A certified copy of the decree of divorce or annulment; or</P>
          <P>(2) Evidence the person you married has died (see § 404.720).</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Other evidence a marriage has ended.</E> If you cannot obtain preferred evidence the marriage has ended, we will ask you to explain why and to give us other convincing evidence the marriage has ended.</P>
          <CITA>[43 FR 24795, June 7, 1978, as amended at 44 FR 34493, June 15, 1979]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Evidence for Child's and Parent's Benefits</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.730</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>When evidence of a parent or child relationship is needed.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you apply for parent's or child's benefits, we will ask for evidence showing your relationship to the insured person. What evidence we will ask for depends on whether you are the insured person's natural parent or child; or whether you are the stepparent, stepchild, grandchild, stepgrandchild, adopting parent or adopted child.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.731</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are a natural parent or child.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are the natural parent of the insured person, we will ask for a copy of his or her public or religious birth record made before age 5. If you are the natural child of the insured person, we will ask for a copy of your public or religious birth record made before age 5. In either case, if this record shows the same last name for the insured and the parent or child, we will accept it as convincing evidence of the relationship. However, if other evidence raises some doubt about this record or if the record cannot be gotten, we will ask for other evidence of the relationship. We may also ask for evidence of marriage of the insured person or of his or her parent if this is needed to remove any reasonable doubt about the relationship. To show you are the child of the insured person, you may be asked for evidence you would be able to inherit his or her personal property under State law where he or she had a permanent home (see § 404.770). In addition, we may ask for the insured persons signed statement that you are his or her natural child, or for a copy of any court order showing the insured has been declared to be your natural parent or any court order requiring the insured to contribute to you support because you are his or her son or daughter.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.732</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are a stepparent or stepchild.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are the stepparent or stepchild of the insured person, we will ask for the evidence described in § 404.731 or § 404.733 that which shows your natural or adoptive relationship to the insured person's husband, wife, widow, or widower. We will also ask for evidence of the husband's, wife's, widow's, or widower's marriage to the insured person—see § 404.725.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.733</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are the legally adopting parent or legally adopted child.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are the adopting parent or adopted child, we will ask for the following evidence:</P>
          <P>(a) A copy of the birth certificate made following the adoption; or if this cannot be gotten, other evidence of the adoption; and, if needed, evidence of the date of adoption;</P>

          <P>(b) If the widow or widower adopted the child after the insured person died, <PRTPAGE P="211"/>the evidence described in paragraph (a) of this section; your written statement whether the insured person was living in the same household with the child when he or she died (see § 404.760); what support the child was getting from any other person or organization; and if the widow or widower had a deemed valid marriage with the insured person, evidence of that marriage—see § 404.727;</P>
          <P>(c) If you are the insured's stepchild, grandchild, or stepgrandchild as well as his or her adopted child, we may also ask you for evidence to show how you were related to the insured before the adoption.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.734</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are an equitably adopted child.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In many States, the law will treat someone as a child of another if he or she agreed to adopt the child, the natural parents or the person caring for the child were parties to the agreement, he or she and the child then lived together as parent and child, and certain other requirements are met. If you are a child who had this kind or relationship to the insured person (or to the insured persons's wife, widow, or husband), we will ask for evidence of the agreement if it is in writing. If it is not in writing or cannot be gotten, other evidence may be accepted. Also, the following evidence will be asked for: Written statements of your natural parents and the adopting parents and other evidence of the child's relationship to the adopting parents.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.735</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence you are the grandchild or stepgrandchild.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are the grandchild or stepgrandchild of the insured person, we will ask you for the kind of evidence described in §§ 404.731 through 404.733 that shows your relationship to your parent and your parent's relationship to the insured.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.736</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a child's dependency.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When evidence of a child's dependency is needed.</E> If you apply for child's benefit's we may ask for evidence you were the insured person's dependent at a specific time—usually the time you applied or the time the insured died or became disabled. What evidence we ask for depends upon how you are related to the insured person.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Natural or adopted child.</E> If you are the insured person's natural or adopted child, we may ask for the following evidence:</P>
          <P>(1) A signed statement by someone who knows the facts that confirms this relationship and which shows whether you were legally adopted by someone other than the insured. If you were adopted by someone else while the insured person was alive, but the adoption was annulled, we may ask for a certified copy of the annulment decree or other convincing evidence of the annulment.</P>
          <P>(2) A signed statement by someone in a position to know showing when and where you lived with the insured and when and why you may have lived apart; and showing what contributions the insured made to your support and when and how they were made.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Stepchild.</E> If you are the insured person's stepchild, we will ask for the following evidence:</P>
          <P>(1) A signed statement by someone in a position to know—showing when and where you lived with the insured and when and why you may have lived apart.</P>
          <P>(2) A signed statement by someone in a position to know showing you received at least one-half of your support from the insured for the one-year period ending at one of the times mentioned in paragraph (a) of this section; and the income end support you had in this period from any other source.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Grandchild or Stepgrandchild.</E> If you are the insured person's grandchild or stepgrandchild, we will ask for evidence described in paragraph (c) of this section showing that you were living together with the insured and receiving one-half of your support from him or her for the year before the insured became entitled to benefits or to a period of disability, or died. We will also ask for evidence of your parent's death or disability.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.745</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of school attendance for child age 18 or older.</SUBJECT>

          <P>If you apply for child's benefits as a student age 18 or over, we may ask for evidence you are attending school. We may also ask for evidence from the <PRTPAGE P="212"/>school you attend showing your status at the school. We will ask for the following evidence:</P>
          <P>(a) Your signed statement that you are attending school full-time and are not being paid by an employer to attend school.</P>
          <P>(b) If you apply before the school year has started and the school is not a high school, a letter of acceptance from the school, receipted bill, or other evidence showing you have enrolled or been accepted at that school.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.750</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of a parent's support.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you apply for parent's benefits, we will ask you for evidence to show that you received at least one-half of your support from the insured person in the one-year period before he or she died or became disabled. We may also ask others who know the facts for a signed statement about your sources of support. We will ask you for the following evidence:</P>
          <P>(a) The parent's signed statement showing his or her income, any other sources of support, and the amount from each source over the one-year period.</P>
          <P>(b) If the statement described in paragraph (a) of this section cannot be obtained, other convincing evidence that the parent received one-half of his or her support from the insured person.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Other Evidence Requirements</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.760</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of living in the same household with insured person.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you apply for the lump-sum death payment as the insured person's widow or widower, or for wife's, husband's, widow's, or widower's benefits based upon a deemed valid marriage as described in § 404.727, we will ask for evidence you and the insured were living together in the same household when he or she died; or if the insured is alive, when you applied for benefits. We will ask for the following as evidence of this:</P>
          <P>(a) If the insured person is living, his or her signed statement and yours showing whether you were living together when you applied for benefits.</P>
          <P>(b) If the insured person is dead, your signed statement showing whether you were living together when he or she died.</P>
          <P>(c) If you and the insured person were temporarily living apart, a signed statement explaining where each was living, how long the separation lasted, and why you were separated. If needed to remove any reasonable doubts about this, we may ask for the signed statements of others in a position to know, or for other convincing evidence you and the insured were living together in the same household.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.762</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of having a child in your care.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If you are under age 65 and apply for wife's benefits based upon caring for a child, or for mother's benefits as a widow or divorced wife, or for father's benefits as a widower, we will ask for evidence that you have the insured person's child in your care. What evidence we will ask for depends upon whether the child is living with you or with someone else. You will be asked to give the following evidence:</P>
          <P>(a) If the child is living with you, your signed statement showing that the child is living with you.</P>
          <P>(b) If the child is living with someone else—</P>
          <P>(1) Your signed statement showing with whom he or she is living and why he or she is living with someone else. We will also ask when he or she last lived with you and how long this separation will last, and what care and contributions you provide for the child;</P>
          <P>(2) The signed statement of the one with whom the child is living showing what care you provide and the sources and amounts of support received for the child. If the child is in an institution, an official there should sign the statement. These statements are preferred evidence. If there is a court order or written agreement showing who has custody of the child, you may be asked to give us a copy; and</P>
          <P>(3) If you cannot get the preferred evidence described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, we will ask for other convincing evidence that the child is in your care.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <PRTPAGE P="213"/>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.770</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of where the insured person had a permanent home.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When evidence of the insured's permanent home is needed.</E> We may ask for evidence of where the insured person's permanent home was at the time you applied or, if earlier, the time he or she died if—</P>
          <P>(1) You apply for benefits as the insured's wife, husband, widow, widower, parent or child; and</P>
          <P>(2) Your relationship to the insured depends upon the State law that would be followed in the place where the insured had his or her permanent home when you applied for benefits or when he or she died.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">What evidence is needed.</E> We will ask for the following evidence of the insured person's permanent home:</P>
          <P>(1) Your signed statement showing where the insured considered his permanent home to be.</P>
          <P>(2) If the statement in paragraph (b)(1) of this section or other evidence we have raises a reasonable doubt about where the insured's permanent home was, evidence of where he or she paid personal, property, or income taxes, or voted; or other convincing evidence of where his or her permanent home was.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.780</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence of “good cause” for exceeding time limits on accepting proof of support or application for a lump-sum death payment.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When evidence of good cause</E> is needed. We may ask for evidence that you had <E T="03">good cause</E> (as defined in § 404.370(f)) for not giving us sooner proof of the support you received from the insured as his or her parent. We may also ask for evidence that you had <E T="03">good cause</E> (as defined in § 404.621(b)) for not applying sooner for the lump-sum death payment. You may be asked for evidence of <E T="03">good cause</E> for these delays if—</P>
          <P>(1) You are the insured person's parent giving us proof of support more than 2 years after he or she died, or became disabled; or</P>
          <P>(2) You are applying for the lump-sum death payment more than 2 years after the insured died.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">What evidence of good cause</E> is needed. We will ask for the following evidence of good cause:</P>
          <P>(1) Your signed statement explaining why you did not give us the proof of support or the application for lump-sum death payment within the specified 2 year period.</P>
          <P>(2) If the statement in paragraph (b)(1) of the section or other evidence raises a reasonable doubt whether there was good cause, other convincing evidence of this.</P>
          <CITA>[43 FR 24795, June 7, 1978, as amended at 44 FR 34493, June 15, 1979]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart I—Records of Earnings</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 205(a), (c)(1), (c)(2)(A), (c)(4), (c)(5), (c)(6), and (p), 702(a)(5), and 1143 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 405(a), (c)(1), (c)(2)(A), (c)(4), (c)(5), (c)(6), and (p), 902(a)(5), and 1320b-13).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>44 FR 38454, July 2, 1979, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">General Provisions</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.801</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <P>The Social Security Administration (SSA) keeps a record of the earnings of all persons who work in employment or self-employment covered under social security. We use these earnings records to determine entitlement to and the amount of benefits that may be payable based on a person's earnings under the retirement, survivors', disability and health insurance program. This subpart tells what is evidence of earnings, how you can find out what the record of your earnings shows, and how and under what circumstances the record of your earnings may be changed to correct errors.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.802</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>For the purpose of this subpart—</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Earnings</E> means wages and self-employment income earned by a person based on work covered by social security. (See subpart K for the rules about what constitutes wages and self-employment income for benefit purposes.)</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Period</E> means a taxable year when referring to self-employment income. When referring to wages it means a calendar quarter if the wages were reported or should have been reported <PRTPAGE P="214"/>quarterly by your employer or a calendar year if the wages were reported or should have been reported annually by your employer.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Record of earnings, earnings record,</E> or <E T="03">record</E> means SSA's records of the amounts of wages paid to you and the amounts of self-employment income you received, the periods in which the wages were paid and the self-employment income was received, and the quarters of coverage which you earned based on these earnings.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Survivor</E> means your spouse, divorced wife, child, or parent, who survives you. <E T="03">Survivor</E> also includes your surviving divorced wife who may be entitled to benefits as a surviving divorced mother.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Tax return</E> means, as appropriate, a tax return of wages or a tax return of self-employment income (including information returns and other written statements filed with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue under chapter 2 or 21 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended).</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Time limit</E> means a period of time 3 years, 3 months, and 15 days after any year in which you received earnings. The period may be extended by the Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act of 1940 because of your military service or the military service of certain relatives who survive you (50 U.S.C. App. 501 and following sections). Where the time limit ends on a Federal nonwork day, we will extend it to the next Federal work day.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Wage report</E> means a statement filed by a State under section 218 of the Social Security Act or related regulations. This statement includes wage amounts for which a State is billed and wage amounts for which credits or refunds are made to a State according to an agreement under section 218 of the Act.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">We, us,</E> or <E T="03">our</E> means the Social Security Administration (SSA).</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Year</E> means a calendar year when referring to wages and a taxable year when referring to self-employment income.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">You</E> or <E T="03">your</E> means any person for whom we maintain a record of earnings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.803</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conclusiveness of the record of your earnings.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Generally.</E> For social security purposes, SSA records are evidence of the amounts of your earnings and the periods in which they were received.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Before time limit ends.</E> Before the time limit ends for a year, SSA records are evidence, but not conclusive evidence, of the amounts and periods of your earnings in that year.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">After time limit ends.</E> After the time limit ends for a year—</P>
          <P>(1) If SSA records show an entry of self-employment income or wages for an employer for a period in that year, our records are conclusive evidence of your self-employment income in that year or the wages paid to you by that employer and the periods in which they were received unless one of the exceptions in § 404.822 applies;</P>
          <P>(2) If SSA records show no entry of wages for an employer for a period in that year, our records are conclusive evidence that no wages were paid to you by that employer in that period unless one of the exceptions in § 404.822 applies; and</P>
          <P>(3) If SSA records show no entry of self-employment income for that year, our records are conclusive evidence that you did not receive self-employement income in that year unless the exception in § 404.822(b)(2) (i) or (iii) applies.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Obtaining Earnings Information</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.810</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>How to obtain a statement of earnings and a benefit estimate statement.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Right to a statement of earnings and a benefit estimate.</E> You or your legal representative or, after your death, your survivor or the legal representative of your estate may obtain a statement of your earnings as shown on our records at the time of the request. If you have a social security number and have wages or net earnings from self-employment, you may also request and receive an earnings statement that will include an estimate of the monthly old-age, disability, dependents', and survivors' insurance benefits potentially payable on your earnings record, <PRTPAGE P="215"/>together with a description of the benefits payable under the medicare program. You may request these statements by writing, calling, or visiting a social security office.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Contents of request.</E> When you request a statement of your earnings, we will ask you to complete a prescribed form, giving us your name, social security number, date of birth, and sex. You, your authorized representative or, after your death, your survivor or the legal representative of your estate will be asked to sign and date the form. If you are requesting an estimate of the monthly benefits potentially payable on your earnings record, we will also ask you to give us the amount of your earnings for the last year, an estimate of your earnings for the current year, an estimate of your earnings for future years before your planned retirement, and the age at which you plan to retire, so that we can give you a more realistic estimate of the benefits that may be payable on your record. A request for a statement of earnings and a benefit estimate not made on the prescribed form will be accepted if the request is in writing, is signed and dated by the appropriate individual noted above, and contains all the information that is requested on the prescribed form.</P>
          <CITA>[57 FR 54918, Nov. 23, 1992]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.811</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>The statement of earnings and benefit estimates you requested.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> After receiving a request for a statement of earnings and the information we need to comply with the request, we will provide you or your authorized representative a statement of the earnings we have credited to your record at the time of your request. With the statement of earnings, we will include estimates of the benefits potentially payable on your record, unless you do not have the required credits (quarters of coverage) for any kind of benefit(s). (However, see paragraph (b)(3) of this section regarding the possibility of our estimating up to eight additional credits on your record.) If we do not provide a statement of earnings and an estimate of all the benefits potentially payable, or any other information you requested, we will explain why.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Contents of statement of earnings and benefit estimates.</E> The statement of your earnings and benefit estimates will contain the following information:</P>
          <P>(1) Your social security taxed earnings as shown by our records as of the date of your request;</P>
          <P>(2) An estimate of the social security and medicare hospital insurance taxes paid on your earnings (although we do not maintain such tax information);</P>
          <P>(3) The number of credits, i.e., quarters of coverage, not exceeding 40, you have for both social security and medicare hospital insurance purposes, and the number you need to be eligible for social security and also for medicare hospital insurance coverage. If you do not already have the required credits (quarters of coverage) to be eligible to receive social security benefits and medicare hospital insurance coverage, we may include up to eight additional estimated credits (four per year) based on the earnings you told us you had for last year and this year that we have not yet entered on your record;</P>
          <P>(4) A statement as to whether you meet the credits (quarters of coverage) requirements, as described in subpart B of this part, for each type of social security benefit when we prepare the benefit estimates, and also whether you are eligible for medicare hospital insurance coverage;</P>

          <P>(5) Estimates of the monthly retirement (old-age), disability, dependents' and survivors' insurance benefits potentially payable on your record if you meet the credits (quarters of coverage) requirements. The benefit estimates we send you will be based partly on your stated earnings for last year (if not yet on your record), your estimate of your earnings for the current year and for future years before you plan to retire, and on the age at which you plan to retire. The estimate will include the retirement (old-age) insurance benefits you could receive at age 62 (or your current age if you are already over age 62), at full retirement age (currently age 65 to 67, depending on your year of birth) or at your current age if you are already over full retirement age, and at age 70;<PRTPAGE P="216"/>
          </P>
          <P>(6) A description of the coverage under the medicare program;</P>
          <P>(7) A reminder of your right to request a correction of your earnings record; and</P>
          <P>(8) A remark that an annually updated statement is available on request.</P>
          <CITA>[61 FR 18076, Apr. 24, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.812</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Statement of earnings and benefit estimates sent without request.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Who will be sent a statement. Unless one of the conditions in paragraph (b) of this section applies to you, we will send you, without request, a statement of earnings and benefit estimates if:</P>
          <P>(1) You have a social security account number;</P>
          <P>(2) You have wages or net earnings from self-employment on your social security record;</P>
          <P>(3) You have attained age 25 or older, as explained in paragraph (c)(3) of this section; and</P>
          <P>(4) We can determine your current mailing address.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Who will not be sent a statement.</E> We will not send you an unrequested statement if any of the following conditions apply:</P>
          <P>(1) You do not meet one or more of the conditions of paragraph (a) of this section;</P>
          <P>(2) Our records contain a notation of your death;</P>
          <P>(3) You are entitled to benefits under title II of the Act;</P>
          <P>(4) We have already sent you a statement, based on your request, in the fiscal year we selected you to receive an unrequested statement;</P>
          <P>(5) We cannot obtain your address (see paragraph (c)(2) of this section); or</P>
          <P>(6) We are correcting your social security earnings record when we select you to receive a statement of earnings and benefit estimates.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">The selection and mailing process.</E> Subject to the provisions of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, we will use the following process for sending statements without requests:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">Selection.</E> We will use our records of assigned social security account numbers to identify individuals to whom we will send statements.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Addresses.</E> If you are living in one of the 50 States or the District of Columbia, our current procedure is to get your address from individual taxpayer files of the Internal Revenue Service, as authorized by section 6103(m)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 6103(m)(7)). If you live in Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, or Guam, we will get your address from the taxpayer records of the place in which you live.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">Age.</E> If you have attained age 60 on or before September 30, 1995, we will send you a statement by that date. If you attain age 60 on or after October 1, 1995 but no later than September 30, 1999, we will send you a statement in the fiscal year in which you attain age 60, or in an earlier year as resources allow. Also, we will inform you that an annually updated statement is available on request. Beginning October 1, 1999, we will send you a statement each year in which you are age 25 or older.</P>
          <P>(4) <E T="03">Ineligible.</E> If we do not send you a statement because one or more conditions in paragraph (b) of this section apply when you are selected, we will send a statement in the first appropriate fiscal year thereafter in which you do qualify.</P>
          <P>(5) <E T="03">Undeliverable.</E> If the statement we send you is returned by the Post Office as undeliverable, we will not remail it.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Contents of statement of earnings and benefit estimates.</E> To prepare your statement and estimate your benefits, we will use the earnings in our records. If there are earnings recorded for you in either of the two years before the year in which you are selected to get a statement, we will use the later of these earnings as your earnings for the current year and future years when we estimate your benefits. In addition, if you do not already have the required credits (quarters of coverage) to be eligible to receive benefits, we will use that last recorded earnings amount to estimate up to eight additional credits (four per year) for last year and the current year if they are not yet entered on your record. If there are no earnings entered on your record in either of the two years preceding the year of selection, we will not estimate current and future earnings or additional credits <PRTPAGE P="217"/>for you. Your earnings and benefit estimates statement will contain the following information:</P>
          <P>(1) Your social security taxed earnings as shown by our records as of the date we select you to receive a statement;</P>
          <P>(2) An estimate of the social security and medicare hospital insurance taxes paid on your earnings (although we do not maintain such tax information);</P>
          <P>(3) The number of credits, i.e., quarters of coverage, not exceeding 40 (as described in paragraph (d) of this section), that you have for both social security and medicare hospital insurance purposes, and the number you need to be eligible for social security benefits and also for medicare hospital insurance coverage;</P>
          <P>(4) A statement as to whether you meet the credit (quarters of coverage) requirements, as described in subpart B of this part, for each type of social security benefit when we prepare the benefit estimates, and also whether you are eligible for medicare hospital insurance coverage;</P>
          <P>(5) Estimates of the monthly retirement (old-age), disability, dependents' and survivors' insurance benefits potentially payable on your record if you meet the credits (quarters of coverage) requirements. If you are age 50 or older, the estimates will include the retirement (old-age) insurance benefits you could receive at age 62 (or your current age if you are already over age 62), at full retirement age (currently age 65 to 67, depending on your year of birth) or at your current age if you are already over full retirement age, and at age 70. If you are under age 50, instead of estimates, we may provide a general description of the benefits (including auxiliary benefits) that are available upon retirement;</P>
          <P>(6) A description of the coverage provided under the medicare program;</P>
          <P>(7) A reminder of your right to request a correction of your earnings record; and</P>
          <P>(8) A remark that an annually updated statement is available on request.</P>
          <CITA>[61 FR 18077, Apr. 24, 1996]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Correcting the Earnings Record</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.820</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing a request for correction of the record of your earnings.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">When to file a request for correction.</E> You or your survivor must file a request for correction of the record of your earnings within the time limit for the year being questioned unless one of the exceptions in § 404.822 applies.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Contents of a request.</E> (1) A request for correction of an earnings record must be in writing and must state that the record is incorrect.</P>
          <P>(2) A request must be signed by you or your survivor or by a person who may sign an application for benefits for you or for your survivor as described in § 404.612.</P>
          <P>(3) A request should state the period being questioned.</P>
          <P>(4) A request should describe, or have attached to it, any available evidence which shows that the record of earnings is incorrect.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Where to file a request.</E> A request may be filed with an SSA employee at one of our offices or with an SSA employee who is authorized to receive a request at a place other than one of our offices. A request may be filed with the Veterans Administration Regional Office in the Philippines or with any U.S. Foreign Service Office.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">When a request is considered filed.</E> A request is considered filed on the day it is received by any of our offices, by an authorized SSA employee, by the Veterans Administration Regional Office in the Philippines, or by any U.S. Foreign Service Office. If using the date we receive a mailed request disadvantages the requester, we will use the date the request was mailed to us as shown by a U.S. postmark. If the postmark is unreadable or there is no postmark, we will consider other evidence of the date when the request was mailed.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Withdrawal of a request for correction.</E> A request for correction of SSA records of your earnings may be withdrawn as described in § 404.640.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Cancellation of a request to withdraw.</E> A request to withdraw a request for correction of SSA records of your earnings may be cancelled as described in § 404.641.<PRTPAGE P="218"/>
          </P>
          <P>(g) <E T="03">Determinations on requests.</E> When we receive a request described in this section, we will make a determination to grant or deny the request. If we deny the request, this determination may be appealed under the provisions of subpart J of this part.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.821</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Correction of the record of your earnings before the time limit ends.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Before the time limit ends for any year, we will correct the record of your earnings for that year for any reason if satisfactory evidence shows SSA records are incorrect. We may correct the record as the result of a request filed under § 404.820 or we may correct it on our own.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.822</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Correction of the record of your earnings after the time limit ends.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Generally.</E> After the time limit for any year ends, we may correct the record of your earnings for that year if satisfactory evidence shows SSA records are incorrect and any of the circumstances in paragraphs (b) through (e) of this section applies.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Correcting SSA records to agree with tax returns.</E> We will correct SSA records to agree with a tax return of wages or self-employment income to the extent that the amount of earnings shown in the return is correct.</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">Tax returns of wages.</E> We may correct the earnings record to agree with a tax return of wages or with a wage report of a State.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Tax returns of self-employment income</E>—(i) <E T="03">Return filed before the time limit ended.</E> We may correct the earnings record to agree with a tax return of self-employment income filed before the end of the time limit.</P>
          <P>(ii) <E T="03">Return filed after time limit ended.</E> We may remove or reduce, but not increase, the amount of self-employment income entered on the earnings record to agree with a tax return of self-employment income filed after the time limit ends.</P>
          <P>(iii) <E T="03">Self-employment income entered in place of erroneously entered wages.</E> We may enter self-employment income for any year up to an amount erroneously entered in SSA records as wages but which was later removed from the records. However, we may enter self-employment income under this paragraph only if—</P>
          <P>(A) An amended tax return is filed before the time limit ends for the year in which the erroneously entered wages were removed; or</P>
          <P>(B) Net earnings from self-employment, which are not already entered in the record of your earnings, were included in a tax return filed before the end of the time limit for the year in which the erroneously entered wages were removed.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Written request for correction or application for benefits filed before the time limit ends</E>—(1) <E T="03">Written request for correction.</E> We may correct an earnings record if you or your survivor files a request for correction before the time limit for that year ends. The request must state that the earnings record for that year is incorrect. However, we may not correct the record under this paragraph after our determination on the request becomes final.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Application for benefits.</E> We may correct an earnings record if an application is filed for monthly benefits or for a lump-sum death payment before the time limit for that year ends. However, we may not correct the record under this paragraph after our determination on the application becomes final.</P>
          <P>(3) See subpart J for the rules on the finality of determinations.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Transfer of wages to or from the Railroad Retirement Board</E>—(1) <E T="03">Wages erroneously reported.</E> We may transfer to or from the records of the Railroad Retirement Board earnings which were erroneously reported to us or to the Railroad Retirement Board.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Earnings certified by Railroad Retirement Board.</E> We may enter earnings for railroad work under subpart O if the earnings are certified by the Railroad Retirement Board.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Other circumstances permitting correction</E>—(1) <E T="03">Investigation started before time limit ends.</E> We may correct an earnings record if the correction is made as the result of an investigation started before, but completed after the time limit ends. An investigation is started when we take an affirmative step leading to a decision on a question about <PRTPAGE P="219"/>the earnings record, for example, an investigation is started when one SSA unit asks another unit to obtain additional information or evidence. We will remove or reduce earnings on the record under this paragraph only if we carried out the investigation as promptly as circumstances permitted.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Error apparent on face of records.</E> We may correct an earnings record to correct errors, such as mechanical or clerical errors, which can be identified and corrected without going beyond any of the pertinent SSA records.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">Fraud.</E> We may change any entry which was entered on the earnings record as the result of fraud.</P>
          <P>(4) <E T="03">Entries for wrong person or period.</E> We may correct errors in SSA records resulting from earnings being entered for the wrong person or period.</P>
          <P>(5) <E T="03">Less than correct wages on SSA records.</E> We may enter wages paid to you by an employer for a period if no part of those wages or less than the correct amount of those wages is entered on SSA records.</P>
          <P>(6) <E T="03">Wage payments under a statute.</E> We may enter and allocate wages awarded to you for a period as the result of a determination or agreement approved by a court or administrative agency that enforces Federal or State statutes protecting your right to employment or wages.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 38454, July 2, 1979, as amended at 57 FR 21600, May 21, 1992]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.823</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Correction of the record of your earnings for work in the employ of the United States.</SUBJECT>
          <P>We may correct the record of your earnings to remove, reduce, or enter earnings for work in the employ of the United States only if—</P>
          <P>(a) Correction is permitted under § 404.821 or § 404.822; and</P>
          <P>(b) Any necessary determinations concerning the amount of remuneration paid for your work and the periods for which such remuneration was paid have been made as shown by—</P>
          <P>(1) A tax return filed under section 3122 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 3122); or</P>
          <P>(2) A certification by the head of the Federal agency or instrumentality of which you have been an employee or his or her agent. A Federal instrumentality for these purposes includes a nonappropriated fund activity of the armed forces or Coast Guard.</P>
          <CITA>[44 FR 38454, July 2, 1979, as amended at 55 FR 24891, June 19, 1990]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Notice of Removal or Reduction of an Entry of Earnings</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.830</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of removal or reduction of your wages.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If we remove or reduce an amount of wages entered on the record of your earnings, we will notify you of this correction if we previously notified you of the amount of your wages for the period involved. We will notify your survivor if we previously notified you or your survivor of the amount of your earnings for the period involved.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.831</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of removal or reduction of your self-employment income.</SUBJECT>
          <P>If we remove or reduce an amount of self-employment income entered on the record of your earnings, we will notify you of this correction. We will notify your survivor if we previously notified you or your survivor of the amount of your earnings for the period involved.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
    </SUBPART>
    <SUBPART>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart J—Determinations, Administrative Review Process, and Reopening of Determinations and Decisions</HD>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>Secs. 201(j), 204(f), 205(a), (b), (d)-(h), and (j), 221, 225, and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 401(j), 404(f), 405(a), (b), (d)-(h), and (j), 421, 425, and 902(a)(5)); 31 U.S.C. 3720A; sec. 5, Pub. L. 97-455, 96 Stat. 2500 (42 U.S.C. 405 note); secs. 5, 6(c)-(e), and 15, Pub. L. 98-460, 98 Stat. 1802 (42 U.S.C. 421 note).</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>45 FR 52081, Aug. 5, 1980, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Introduction, Definitions, and Initial Determinations</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.900</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Introduction.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Explanation of the administrative review process.</E> This subpart explains the procedures we follow in determining your rights under title II of the Social Security Act. The regulations describe the process of administrative review and explain your right to judicial <PRTPAGE P="220"/>review after you have taken all the necessary administrative steps. These procedures apply also to persons claiming certain benefits under title XVIII of the Act (Medicare); see 42 CFR 405.701(c). The administrative review process consists of several steps, which usually must be requested within certain time periods and in the following order:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">Initial determination.</E> This is a determination we make about your entitlement or your continuing entitlement to benefits or about any other matter, as discussed in § 404.902, that gives you a right to further review.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Reconsideration.</E> If you are dissatisfied with an initial determination, you may ask us to reconsider it.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">Hearing before an administrative law judge.</E> If you are dissatisfied with the reconsideration determination, you may request a hearing before an administrative law judge.</P>
          <P>(4) <E T="03">Appeals Council review.</E> If you are dissatisfied with the decision of the administrative law judge, you may request that the Appeals Council review the decision.</P>
          <P>(5) <E T="03">Federal court review.</E> When you have completed the steps of the administrative review process listed in paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(4) of this section, we will have made our final decision. If you are dissatisfied with our final decision, you may request judicial review by filing an action in a Federal district court.</P>
          <P>(6) <E T="03">Expedited appeals process.</E> At some time after your initial determination has been reviewed, if you have no dispute with our findings of fact and our application and interpretation of the controlling laws, but you believe that a part of the law is unconstitutional, you may use the expedited appeals process. This process permits you to go directly to a Federal district court so that the constitutional issue may be resolved.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Nature of the administrative review process.</E> In making a determination or decision in your case, we conduct the administrative review process in an informal, nonadversary manner. In each step of the review process, you may present any information you feel is helpful to your case. Subject to the limitations on Appeals Council consideration of additional evidence (see §§ 404.970(b) and 404.976(b)), we will consider at each step of the review process any information you present as well as all the information in our records. You may present the information yourself or have someone represent you, including an attorney. If you are dissatisfied with our decision in the review process, but do not take the next step within the stated time period, you will lose your right to further administrative review and your right to judicial review, unless you can show us that there was good cause for your failure to make a timely request for review.</P>
          <CITA>[45 FR 52081, Aug. 5, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 300, Jan 3, 1986; 51 FR 8808, Mar. 14, 1986; 52 FR 4004, Feb. 9, 1987]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.901</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>As used in this subpart:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Date you receive notice</E> means 5 days after the date on the notice, unless you show us that you did not receive it within the 5-day period.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Decision</E> means the decision made by an administrative law judge or the Appeals Council.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Determination</E> means the initial determination or the reconsidered determination.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Remand</E> means to return a case for further review.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Vacate</E> means to set aside a previous action.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Waive</E> means to give up a right knowingly and voluntarily.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">We, us,</E> or <E T="03">our</E> refers to the Social Security Administration.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">You</E> or <E T="03">your</E> refers to any person claiming a right under the old age, disability, dependents' or survivors' benefits program.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.902</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Administrative actions that are initial determinations.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Initial determinations are the determinations we make that are subject to administrative and judicial review. The initial determination will state the important facts and give the reasons for our conclusions. In the old age, survivors' and disability insurance programs, initial determinations include, but are not limited to, determinations about—</P>
          <P>(a) Your entitlement or your continuing entitlement to benefits;</P>
          <P>(b) Your reentitlement to benefits;<PRTPAGE P="221"/>
          </P>
          <P>(c) The amount of your benefit;</P>
          <P>(d) A recomputation of your benefit;</P>
          <P>(e) A reduction in your disability benefits because you also receive benefits under a workmen's compensation law;</P>
          <P>(f) A deduction from your benefits on account of work;</P>
          <P>(g) A deduction from your disability benefits because you refuse to accept rehabilitation services;</P>
          <P>(h) Termination of your benefits;</P>
          <P>(i) Penalty deductions imposed because you failed to report certain events;</P>
          <P>(j) Any overpayment or underpayment of your benefits;</P>
          <P>(k) Whether an overpayment of benefits must be repaid to us;</P>
          <P>(l) How an underpayment of benefits due a deceased person will be paid;</P>
          <P>(m) The establishment or termination of a period of disability;</P>
          <P>(n) A revision of your earnings record;</P>
          <P>(o) Whether the payment of your benefits will be made, on your behalf, to a representative payee, unless you are under age 18, legally incompetent, or you are disabled and drug addiction or alcoholism is a contributing factor material to the determination of disability (as described in § 404.1535);</P>
          <P>(p) Your drug addiction or alcoholism;</P>
          <P>(q) Who will act as your payee if we determine that representative payment will be made;</P>
          <P>(r) An offset of your benefits under § 404.408b because you previously received supplemental security income payments for the same period;</P>
          <P>(s) Whether your completion of or continuation for a specified period of time in an appropriate vocational rehabilitation program will significantly increase the likelihood that you will not have to return to the disability benefit rolls and thus, whether your benefits may be continued even though you are not disabled;</P>
          <P>(t) Nonpayment of your benefits under § 404.468 because of your confinement in a jail, prison, or other penal institution or correctional facility for conviction of a felony;</P>
          <P>(u) Whether or not you have a disabling impairment(s) as defined in § 404.1511;</P>
          <P>(v) Nonpayment of your benefits under § 404.469 because you have not furnished us satisfactory proof of your Social Security number, or, if a Social Security number has not been assigned to you, you have not filed a proper application for one; and</P>
          <P>(w) A claim for benefits under § 404.633 based on alleged misinformation.</P>
          <CITA>[45 FR 52081, Aug. 5, 1980, as amended at 47 FR 4988, Feb. 3, 1982; 47 FR 31543, July 21, 1982; 49 FR 22272, May 29, 1984; 50 FR 20902, May 21, 1985; 56 FR 41790, Aug. 23, 1991; 59 FR 44925, Aug. 31, 1994; 60 FR 8147, Feb. 10, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.903</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Administrative actions that are not initial determinations.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Administrative actions that are not initial determinations may be reviewed by us, but they are not subject to the administrative review process provided by this subpart, and they are not subject to judicial review. These actions include, but are not limited to, an action—</P>
          <P>(a) Suspending benefits pending an investigation and determination of any factual issue relating to a deduction on account of work;</P>
          <P>(b) Suspending benefits pending an investigation to determine if your disability has ceased;</P>
          <P>(c) Denying a request to be made a representative payee;</P>
          <P>(d) Certifying two or more family members for joint payment of benefits;</P>
          <P>(e) Withholding less than the full amount of your monthly benefit to recover an overpayment;</P>
          <P>(f) Determining the fee that may be charged or received by a person who has represented you in connection with a proceeding before us;</P>
          <P>(g) Disqualifying or suspending a person from acting as your representative in a proceeding before us (See § 404.1745);</P>
          <P>(h) Compromising, suspending or terminating collection of an overpayment under the Federal Claims Collection Act;</P>
          <P>(i) Extending or not extending the time to file a report of earnings;</P>
          <P>(j) Denying your request to extend the time period for requesting review of a determination or a decision;</P>

          <P>(k) Denying your request to use the expedited appeals process;<PRTPAGE P="222"/>
          </P>
          <P>(l) Denying your request to reopen a determination or a decision;</P>
          <P>(m) Withholding temporarily benefits based on a wage earner's estimate of earnings to avoid creating an overpayment;</P>
          <P>(n) Determining whether (and the amount of) travel expenses incurred are reimbursable in connection with proceedings before us;</P>
          <P>(o) Denying your request to readjudicate your claim and apply an Acquiescence Ruling;</P>
          <P>(p) Findings on whether we can collect an overpayment by using the Federal income tax refund offset procedure (see § 404.523);</P>
          <P>(q) Determining whether an organization may collect a fee from you for expenses it incurred in serving as your representative payee (see § 404.2040a);</P>
          <P>(r) Declining under § 404.633(f) to make a determination on a claim for benefits based on alleged misinformation because one or more of the conditions specified in § 404.633(f) are not met;</P>
          <P>(s) The assignment of a monthly payment day (see § 404.1807);</P>
          <P>(t) Determining whether we will refer information about your overpayment to a consumer reporting agency (see §§ 404.527 and 422.305 of this chapter); and</P>
          <P>(u) Determining whether we will refer your overpayment to the Department of the Treasury for collection by offset against Federal payments due you (see §§ 404.527 and 422.310 of this chapter).</P>
          <CITA>[45 FR 52081, Aug. 5, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 8808, Mar. 14, 1986; 55 FR 1018, Jan. 11, 1990; 56 FR 52469, Oct. 21, 1991; 57 FR 23057, June 1, 1992; 59 FR 44925, Aug. 31, 1994; 62 FR 6120, Feb. 11, 1997; 62 FR 64278, Dec. 5, 1997]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.904</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of the initial determination.</SUBJECT>
          <P>We shall mail a written notice of the initial determination to you at your last known address. The reasons for the initial determination and the effect of the initial determination will be stated in the notice. The notice also informs you of the right to a reconsideration. We will not mail a notice if the beneficiary's entitlement to benefits has ended because of his or her death.</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 300, Jan. 3, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.905</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Effect of an initial determination.</SUBJECT>
          <P>An initial determination is binding unless you request a reconsideration within the stated time period, or we revise the initial determination.</P>
          <CITA>[51 FR 300, Jan. 3, 1986]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 404.906</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Testing modifications to the disability determination procedures.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Applicability and scope.</E> Notwithstanding any other provision in this part or part 422 of this chapter, we are establishing the procedures set out in this section to test modifications to our disability determination process. These modifications will enable us to test, either individually or in one or more combinations, the effect of: having disability claim managers assume primary responsibility for processing an application for disability benefits; providing persons who have applied for benefits based on disability with the opportunity for an interview with a decision-maker when the decision-maker finds that the evidence in the file is insufficient to make a fully favorable determination or requires an initial determination denying the claim; having a single decision-maker make the initial determination with assistance from medical consultants, where appropriate; and eliminating the reconsideration step in the administrative review process and having a claimant who is dissatisfied with the initial determination request a hearing before an administrative law judge. The model procedures we test will be designed to provide us with information regarding the effect of these procedural modifications and enable us to decide whether and to what degree the disability determination process would be improved if they were implemented on a national level.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Procedures for cases included in the tests.</E> Prior to commencing each test or group of tests in selected site(s), we will publish a notice in the <E T="04">Federal Register.</E> The notice will describe which model or combinations of models we intend to test, where the specific test site(s) will be, and the duration of the test(s). The individuals who participate in the test(s) will be randomly assigned to a test group in each site <PRTPAGE P="223"/>where the tests are conducted. Paragraphs (b) (1) through (4) of this section lists descriptions of each model.</P>
          <P>(1) In the disability claim manager model, when you file an application for benefits based on disability, a disability claim manager will assume primary responsibility for the processing of your claim. The disability claim manager will be the focal point for your contacts with us during the claims intake process and until an initial determination on your claim is made. The disability claim manager will explain the disability programs to you, including the definition of disability and how we determine whether you meet all the requirements for benefits based on disability. The disability claim manager will explain what you will be asked to do throughout the claims process and how you can obtain information or assistance through him or her. The disability claim manager will also provide you with information regarding your right to representation, and he or she will provide you with appropriate referral sources for representation. The disability claim manager may be either a State agency employee or a Federal employee. In some instances, the disability claim manager may be assisted by other individuals.</P>
          <P>(2) In the single decision-maker model, the decision-maker will make the disability determination and may also determine whether the other conditions for entitlement to benefits based on disability are met. The decision-maker will make the disability determination after any appropriate consultation with a medical or psychological consultant. The medical or psychological consultant will not be required to sign the disability determination forms we use to have the State agency certify the determination of disability to us (see § 404.1615). However, before an initial determination is made that a claimant is not disabled in any case where there is evidence which indicates the existence of a mental impairment, the decision-maker will make every reasonable effort to ensure that a qualified psychiatrist or psychologist has completed the medical portion of the case review and any applicable residual functional capacity assessment pursuant to our existing procedures (see § 404.1617). In some instances the decision-maker may be the disability claim manager described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section. When the decision-maker is a State agency employee, a team of individuals that includes a Federal employee will determine whether the other conditions for entitlement to benefits are met.</P>

          <P>(3) In the predecision interview model, if the decision-maker(s) finds that the evidence in your file is insufficient to make a fully favorable determination or requires an initial determination denying your claim, a predecision notice will be mailed to you. The notice will tell you that, before the decision-ma