
Hey {{first_name}},
Your Social Security check arrived this month.
But here's a question almost no one asks:
Is it the right amount?
Not "did it arrive" — you know it did.
Not "did the COLA adjustment happen" — you saw that too.
I mean: is SSA calculating your benefit correctly? Did they credit every year you worked? Did they apply every benefit you're entitled to based on your marital history, your work history, your spouse's record?
Because here's what 15 years of helping retirees navigate this system has taught me:
The check arrives every month. But no one at SSA is auditing it for you.

This quiet assumption costs retirees thousands.
Most retirees carry a quiet belief that the government got the math right.
They filed. The benefit was calculated. The check started coming. And somewhere in that process, they assumed someone checked the work.
That assumption is wrong.
SSA's system is automated — not audited. Errors in your earnings record don't trigger alerts. Spousal benefits you're entitled to don't get applied automatically. Benefits that changed under new laws don't always get recalculated on their own.
The system pays what it calculated. It doesn't go back and look for what it missed.
That's your job. And most retirees never do it.
Here's what I've seen in real cases:
A woman who worked under her maiden name before marriage — a decade of earnings never credited to her record. Her monthly check had been wrong for years.
A widower who didn't know he could claim up to 100% of his late wife's benefit — and switch strategies to maximize his lifetime income.
A retired teacher whose WEP penalty was reversed by the Social Security Fairness Act in January 2025 — owed a retroactive lump sum that SSA hadn't proactively paid.
A divorced woman who didn't know she could claim on her ex-husband's record — without his knowledge, without affecting his check, and without his cooperation.
In each case, the money was already owed to them. They just hadn't asked for it.

Today I'm releasing something I've been building for a long time.
The Social Security Benefit Audit is a 167-page working kit — not a book to read, but a system to run.
It walks you through 7 specific audits — each one designed to find a different kind of money that retirees commonly leave with SSA. And each one ends with a ready-to-send letter you fill in and mail.
No attorney. No phone calls. No arguing with anyone. You fill in your name, drop it in the mail certified, and wait for SSA's response.
Here's what's inside:
Audit 1 — Your Earnings Record (applies to every retiree) Your benefit is calculated from your top 35 earning years. If any of those years are missing or wrong — due to employer errors, name mismatches, or payroll mistakes — your check is permanently lower than it should be. This audit shows you exactly how to find and fix it.
Audit 2 — The Missed Spousal Top-Off (married couples) If your spouse's benefit is significantly higher than yours, you may be entitled to a monthly top-off you're not receiving. SSA doesn't apply it automatically in every case.
Audit 3 — Divorced Spouse Benefits (divorced retirees) If you were married for 10 or more years, you may be entitled to up to 50% of your ex's benefit — without their knowledge, without their cooperation, and without affecting their check or their current spouse's check in any way. This is the most under-claimed benefit in Social Security.
Audit 4 — Survivor Benefits & The Switch (widows and widowers) Up to 100% of a late spouse's benefit — with a strategic switching lever that exists nowhere else in Social Security. If you remarried at 60 or later, you may still qualify.
Audit 5 — WEP/GPO Recovery (teachers, firefighters, government workers) The Social Security Fairness Act, signed in January 2025, reversed decades of penalties. SSA has been paying retroactive lump sums since spring 2025. If you or your spouse worked in covered public employment, this audit may be the most valuable thing you read this year.
Audit 6 — The Three Do-Overs (filed in the last 12 months) There is a reset button — but it closes permanently at month 13. Plus: an 8%-per-year benefit growth lever between your Full Retirement Age and 70 that most retirees don't fully understand.
Audit 7 — Working After You Filed (still working) Two automatic benefit recalculations should happen when you continue working after filing. Both can silently fail. If your benefit has only ever moved by the COLA, at least one recalculation may be missing.

About the investment
The guide is $47.
I want to be honest with you about that number — because I know many of you are on a fixed income and you think carefully before spending anything.
Here's how I'd like you to think about it:
One corrected earnings year with $50,000 in wages adds approximately $38 per month to your benefit. Over 20 years, that's $9,120 — plus a retroactive check for every month that correction was late.
One claimed divorced spouse benefit, where none was being collected, can add hundreds of dollars per month for the rest of your life.
One retroactive WEP/GPO correction under the Fairness Act can mean a lump sum check in the thousands — paid once, tax-treated separately, arrived in the mail.
$47 is not a cost. It is the lowest-risk investment you will make this year. If you run all seven audits and find nothing — your benefits are confirmed correct, and that peace of mind alone has value. If you find one thing, the guide pays for itself many times over in the first month.
There is also a 100% satisfaction guarantee: run all seven audits, and if you don't find value, email me and I'll refund every penny. No questions asked.

One important thing about timing
I want to say this plainly, because it matters:
Most missed benefit claims have a 6-month retroactive cap.
That means every month that passes without filing is one month of recovery you can never get back. Not delayed — permanently gone.
If Audit 3 applies to you — divorced spouse benefits — and you've been eligible for years without claiming, the clock on what you can recover is running right now.
If Audit 5 applies to you — the Fairness Act — SSA has been processing retroactive payments since spring 2025. The longer you wait to file your claim, the smaller your retroactive window becomes.
I'm not saying this to pressure you. I'm saying it because it's true, and because the whole point of this guide is to help you recover money you've already earned — and the sooner you run these audits, the more of it you can actually get.

Instant download. 167 pages. Works on any device — read it on your phone, tablet, or computer, or print a personal copy.
You'll also receive the Annual Numbers Insert — a separate reference sheet with every SSA figure that updates each year (COLA, earnings limits, benefit maximums), refreshed each January so the guide stays current.
The 15-Minute Triage at the front of the guide tells you exactly which of the 7 audits apply to your situation — so you're not reading 167 pages before you find out what matters for you. Most people find 2 or 3 audits that apply. Run those first.
As always — I'm in your corner.
— Kwame, The Benefits Insider™
P.S. — If only one of these audits applies to you, this guide still pays for itself many times over. But if you've been divorced, widowed, or worked a public-sector job — and you haven't checked these specific boxes — there is a real chance SSA owes you money right now. Today is a good day to find out.

