
Hi {{first_name}},
Today, I want to tell you about Margaret.
Margaret worked for 32 years — as a bookkeeper, then as an office manager for a small manufacturing company in Ohio. She was good at her job. She paid her taxes. Every paycheck, FICA came out automatically.
She retired at 66 and filed for Social Security. Her benefit came in at $1,340 per month. She assumed that was right.
It wasn't.
When Margaret sat down with the audit process I'm going to tell you about today, she pulled up her earnings record at ssa.gov/myaccount. It's a simple page — a year-by-year list of every dollar SSA has on record that you earned.
She scanned down the list.
Then she got to 1976. Zero.
She stared at it. She'd worked that entire year — full time, same job, same employer.
Zero.
Zero.
Eight years. Eight zeros. Eight years of full-time work that SSA had no record of.
What happened?
Margaret got married in 1974. She took her husband's last name. But her employer's payroll system kept reporting her wages under her maiden name — because that's what her original W-2 was filed under. SSA received eight years of wages and couldn't match them to anyone. They sat in what SSA calls the "earnings suspense file" — a holding account with hundreds of billions of dollars in unmatched wages — and Margaret's benefit was calculated as if those years never existed.
She had no idea.

When she sent the correction letter — one page, her name, the years in question, a copy of her old W-2s — SSA reviewed the record and confirmed the error.
The correction added $127 to her monthly benefit.
That is $1,524 per year. Over her expected remaining lifetime, that is more than $22,000.
Plus a retroactive check for the months that had passed since she filed — because once SSA confirms an earnings error, they recalculate from the effective date of your request.
Margaret is not unusual. She is typical.
I tell you this story because I want you to understand something about the guide I released last week:
This is not theoretical. Every audit in it comes from a pattern I have seen repeatedly — real people, real errors, real money sitting uncollected because nobody told them to look.
The earnings record audit alone — Audit 1 — applies to every single retiree. Because every one of you has an earnings record, and not one of you has had someone independently verify it.
The most common triggers I see:
Name change at marriage — wages reported under a prior name that SSA couldn't match
Self-employment income — Schedule SE errors, late filings, wrong tax years
Employer reporting errors — especially with companies that went out of business in the 80s and 90s
Transposed Social Security numbers — a single digit error on a W-2 sends your wages to someone else's record
You don't need all your old W-2s to start. You just need your ssa.gov account and about 45 minutes. The guide walks you through every step of what to look for and exactly what to send when you find something.

Margaret's story has a good ending.
But I think about the retirees who never check. Who assume the math is right. Whose benefit has been wrong for five years, or ten, or twenty — and who will never know.
The correction window does not close. You can fix an earnings record error whenever you find it.
But the retroactive payment does have a cap. Most corrections allow SSA to pay back a maximum of 6 months of the difference. Every month you wait is one month of that retroactive check that disappears permanently.
If you have not picked up the guide yet, this is the week I would encourage you to do it.
Not because I am trying to sell you something. Because Margaret's story is common, and if a version of it is yours, the sooner you find out, the more you recover.
167 pages. 7 audits. 8 letters ready to send. Instant download. Run Audit 1 first — it takes one afternoon and applies to everyone.
— Kwame, The Benefits Insider™
P.S. — The guide comes with a 100% satisfaction guarantee. Run all seven audits. If you do not find value, email me for a full refund. No questions asked. The risk is mine, not yours.
