What's Happening
7 minutes ago

Short-Squeeze Target Anavex Life Sciences Gains Traction

marketbeatmarketbeat.com
8 minutes ago

NIO Announces Repurchase Opportunity For Convertible Senior Notes Due 2027; Firefly App Gains Traction In China

benzingabenzinga.com
22 minutes ago

Forging Ahead: 2 Stocks Fueling the Manufacturing Revival

marketbeatmarketbeat.com
36 minutes ago

Asia’s crypto powerhouses: Singapore and Hong Kong lead 2024 regulatory advances

theblocktheblock.co
36 minutes ago

Assessing Progressive: Insights From 14 Financial Analysts

benzingabenzinga.com
39 minutes ago

US Stocks Likely To Open In Red After Christmas Break But Analysts Still Expect A Santa Rally Into The New Year

benzingabenzinga.com
56 minutes ago

Asian Markets Up, Europe Closed; Dollar Hovers Near 2-Year High - Global Markets Today While US Slept

benzingabenzinga.com
1 hour ago

MicroStrategy Stock Tumbles Over 4% In Thursday Premarket: What's Going On?

benzingabenzinga.com
1 hour ago

Nio's Onvo Brand Helps Spur Delivery Growth With Cheaper Offering

benzingabenzinga.com
1 hour ago

AI Smartphones To Cushion Semiconductor Industry Amid Data Center Uncertainty: Report

benzingabenzinga.com
2 hours ago

BYD Contractor Denies Allegations Of 'Slavery-Like' Working Conditions At Factory Site In Brazil

benzingabenzinga.com
2 hours ago

S&P 500 Surges Over 1% As Santa Rally Kicks Off, Tesla, Nvidia Gain: Greed Index Remains In 'Fear' Zone

benzingabenzinga.com
3 hours ago

New Congress, new crack at crypto legislation: what’s up next on the Hill in 2025

theblocktheblock.co
3 hours ago

Tesla, Toyota And 3 Stocks To Watch Heading Into Thursday

benzingabenzinga.com
3 hours ago

Alibaba Nears $4B E-Commerce Merger With South Korea's E-Mart: Report

benzingabenzinga.com
3 hours ago

Peter Thiel Once Said He Would Bet On The Reversal Of Silicon Valley's Math Bias As AI Continues To Rise: 'Isn't That A Long Overdue Rebalancing Of Ou...

benzingabenzinga.com
4 hours ago

Tesla Or BYD: Which EV Giant Will Sell More Battery Electric Vehicles In Q4?

benzingabenzinga.com
4 hours ago

Earnings Scheduled For December 26, 2024

benzingabenzinga.com
4 hours ago

'Stressed' Amazon Driver Dumps 80 Packages In Massachusetts Woods Amid Christmas Holiday Rush

benzingabenzinga.com
5 hours ago

What’s next at the SEC in a post-Gary Gensler era

theblocktheblock.co

Does Social Security’s 2025 Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) Spell Trouble for Your Retirement Income?

If you are retired or nearing retirement, you may be uneasy about your financial situation. You wouldn’t be alone. A recent survey from The Senior Citizens League (TSCL) — a senior citizen advocacy organization — showed 62% of seniors fear that soon they won’t be able to cover basic essentials like food and utilities. That’s a pretty dire picture.

For these seniors, Social Security is a lifeline, an essential part of their income without which they’d be unable to get by. In fact, about 40% of retirees receive at least half of their income from the Social Security Administration (SSA). One in seven rely almost entirely on the program, receiving more than 90% of their income from benefits.

The SSA wants to help seniors avoid the squeeze brought on by inflation, which has been abnormally high over the last few years. Every year, it makes a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA), raising benefits for the coming year to — hopefully — account for rising costs. This year is no different, but as seniors have felt for a while, it might seem a bit light. Why?

How the COLA is calculated

Prior to 1975, an act of Congress was required for any COLA. That meant large stretches of years could go by with no raise. Thankfully, in the early ’70s, Congress made the COLAs a bureaucratic issue, rather than a legislative one. Beginning in 1975, COLAs would happen every year and and would be calculated automatically using a specific formula. As prices rose, so too would SSA benefits, protecting retirees from income erosion.

The SSA takes the CPI-W — a measure of inflation released every month from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) — from July, August, and September and then adjusts benefits for the following year accordingly.

The COLA is far from perfect

Here’s the issue. That BLS metric, the CPI-W? It’s an acronym for the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers. When the BLS is looking at changes in pricing to calculate the CPI-W, it’s looking at items that a person of typical working age is buying. While there is a lot of overlap — most people eat eggs and buy gas whether they are retired or working — there are some significant differences between the spending habits of workers and retirees.

Chief among these are healthcare costs, which have largely been rising faster than other spending categories. Retirees spend a significantly larger portion of their income on healthcare than their working counterparts. This means that the COLA is more often than not falling a bit short. TSCL estimates seniors have lost more than 30% of their actual purchasing power since 2000.

2025’s COLA is here

The SSA announced earlier this month that 2025’s COLA will be 2.5%. This is certainly less than the last few years but it’s actually closer to the historic mean. Will that be enough for you if you are in retirement? Will it actually keep up with inflation? Likely not.

If you look closer at the numbers released by the BLS, you can see where the use of a metric that isn’t specific to seniors is a mistake. While prices for many items are still rising, prices for many others, like new cars, have actually fallen significantly in the last year, keeping the overall CPI-W relatively low. How many retirees do you know who are buying new cars? Sure, some do, but this is a much more common purchase if you are still working. Healthcare services, on the other hand, saw prices rice by 3.6%.

All of this means that retirees — and those who are looking ahead to retirement — will want to do all they can to save and invest for their golden years ahead. If you haven’t already, now is always a great time to start.

The $22,924 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook

If you’re like most Americans, you’re a few years (or more) behind on your retirement savings. But a handful of little-known “Social Security secrets” could help ensure a boost in your retirement income. For example: one easy trick could pay you as much as $22,924 more… each year! Once you learn how to maximize your Social Security benefits, we think you could retire confidently with the peace of mind we’re all after. Simply click here to discover how to learn more about these strategies.

View the “Social Security secrets” »

The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Related Posts

Many people find retirement to be a beautiful time. After years of working and sacrificing, it’s a moment finally to enjoy the fruits of your

Required minimum distributions (RMDs) are mandatory annual withdrawals the government makes you take from most retirement accounts beginning the year you turn 73. If you

Got a 401(k)? This employer-sponsored retirement account makes it easy to make pre-tax contributions straight from your paycheck. Your contributions lower your taxable income in

You’ve decided that 2025 is the year you’re finally going to claim Social Security. Perhaps it’s the year you’re retiring as well. It’s an exciting