logo
Log In Subscribe e-Edition Archives
logo
Log In Subscribe e-Edition Archives
Google Play App Store
  • News
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Photo Gallery
  • Columns/Opinions
  • Obituaries
  • Classifieds
  • Public Notices
  • Special Sections
    • News
    • Sports
    • Lifestyle
    • Photo Gallery
    • Columns/Opinions
    • Obituaries
    • Classifieds
    • Public Notices
    • Special Sections
Advertisement
Can International College Students Get Social Security Benefits?
test 4
Columns/Opinions
May 9, 2023
Can International College Students Get Social Security Benefits?

Dear Rusty: We have hosted international college students for years, all of whom needed to apply for a Social Security Number upon arrival in the United States. Would these students be entitled to some Social Security funds at some point? Some have worked as paid graduate assistants, but others have not worked while going to school. Signed: Wondering Dear Wondering: In order to collect Social Security benefits later in life, the students you host would need to have at least 40 “quarters” of credit working and earning in the U.S. and contributing to U.S. Social Security from their “substantial” U.S. earnings. Forty is the minimum number of credits for anyone to claim Social Security retirement benefits. Foreign students who earn only some “quarters” of U.S. Social Security credit (minimum of 6) may, later in life, be able to collect U.S. benefits depending on their country of citizenship/ residence. The U.S. has bilateral “totalization” agreements regarding Social Security eligibility with most of its allies and, in some cases, a foreign citizen can “totalize” their Social Security credits from both countries to become eligible for U.S. benefits. Eligibility rules, however, vary somewhat by country, and Social Security payments cannot be made to certain countries (e.g., Cuba and North Korea). Payments to those living in countries with which the U.S. has no bilateral Social Security agreement may also be restricted. In any case, U.S. Social Security benefits would not be available to any of these students until they are at least 62 years old, and then only if they had worked and earned sufficient U.S. credits (40) to be independently eligible for U.S. benefits on their own U.S. earnings record, or they later became eligible for U.S. benefits because they worked some in the U.S. and were eligible for benefits under a “totalization” agreement between the U.S. and their home country. In any case, any U.S. Social Security benefits earned under a totalization agreement would be based only on their actual U.S. earnings (and not earnings in their home country) and, thus, would likely be very small. I assume that most international students you host are only in the U.S. for a short time, perhaps one year. The maximum Social Security credits that can be earned each year is four, so it’s highly doubtful that the students you host for such a short time would later become eligible for U.S. Social Security benefits, unless they extend their U.S. presence and continue to work and earn in the United States long enough to later become eligible for U.S. benefits.

ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
It might also interest you...
Data Shows Library Usage Strong
News
Data Shows Library Usage Strong
Staff Report 
December 24, 2025
Recent data released by the State Library of Louisiana shows that residents of LaSalle Parish are utilizing its local libraries by the thousands. The ...
this is a test
GPMS Students Travel Back in Time at CCC
News
GPMS Students Travel Back in Time at CCC
The 100-year-old Story of Mamaw Nellie Still Being Told
By Kimberly Franklin Staff Reporter 
December 24, 2025
Last week, students from Good Pine Middle School were able to travel back in timetothe“olddays”of the early 1900s during a visit to the Centennial Cul...
this is a test
The Biblical Account of Christmas
News
The Biblical Account of Christmas
December 24, 2025
Luke 2:1-16 1 And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be taxed. 2 (And this tax...
this is a test
LPSB Discusses Funding Championship Trips
News
LPSB Discusses Funding Championship Trips
Item proves more complex than expected
By Craig Franklin Editor 
December 24, 2025
Item proves more complex than expected With all of the recent attention of the Jena High School football team’s trip to New Orleans December 12 to pla...
this is a test
LaSalle Nurse Upset Over Tullos Water
News
LaSalle Nurse Upset Over Tullos Water
By Craig Franklin Editor 
December 24, 2025
When Tullos resident Bethany Weisskopf filled a bathtub with water to give her five-year-old daughter a bath Tuesday night, December 16, she knew the ...
this is a test
The Book That Won’t Bow
Features, Lifestyle
The Book That Won’t Bow
By Deborah Mayo Contributing Writer 
December 24, 2025
It’s been #1 on the Best Seller List since its publication, and its oldest contributions are verified to be over 3,400 years old. It’s been translated...
this is a test
ACE Circular
Advertisement
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
ACE Circular
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
Search Public Notices

The Jena Times
OLLA-TULLOS-URANIA SIGNAL
P: (318) 992-4121

Office Hours:
Mon-Fri, 8am-4pm
Sat-Sun, Closed

This site complies with ADA requirements

© The Jena Times

  • Advertisers
  • Contact
  • Privacy Accessibility Policy