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Social Security Is Changing Under President Donald Trump. Here’s What Retirees Need to Know.

In June 2024, President Donald Trump told supporters at a campaign rally, “As president, I will not cut one penny from Social Security or Medicare.” He made a virtually identical statement in July 2024 on social media. “I will not cut one penny from Social Security or Medicare, and I will not raise the retirement age by one day.”

President Trump has so far kept those campaign promises since returning to the White House for a second term. However, he has mentioned (and in some cases set in motion) changes that impact the Social Security program. Here’s what retired workers should know.

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President Donald Trump signing a document while seated at a desk bearing the presidential seal.

Image source: Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian.

President Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is cutting Social Security costs

In January, President Trump signed an executive order creating the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). The agency was initially tasked with improving productivity by modernizing federal technology and software, but more recent executive orders have expanded its purview to include workforce optimization, cost efficiencies, and deregulation.

The Social Security Administration (SSA) has responded by reducing its staffing target to 50,000 employees, down from the current level of approximately 57,000 employees. The agency has also identified cost savings opportunities in contracts, grants, property, and technology, as well as “common-sense approaches to printing, travel, and purchase card policies.”

The total savings will exceed $800 million in fiscal 2025, according to the SSA. While that’s a material portion of the estimated $6.5 billion in administrative spending, the sum is still inconsequential, compared to the $110 billion deficit built into its budget for fiscal 2025.

President Trump wants to end the taxation of Social Security benefits

During his campaign, President Trump wrote on social media, “Seniors should not pay tax on Social Security.” He has doubled down on that promise since the election. In February, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said President Trump would implement the “largest tax cut in history,” including the elimination of taxes on Social Security.

Trump was quick to identify inefficiencies and effect spending cuts through DOGE, but I’m skeptical about his plan to eliminate taxes on Social Security. While the idea certainly has merit, the Social Security trust fund is already on pace to be depleted by 2035. Ending taxes on benefits would accelerate the timeline and bring potential benefit cuts closer.

To elaborate, the trustees estimate tax revenue will cover only 83% of scheduled benefits when the trust fund becomes insolvent in 2035. That means benefits would automatically be cut by 17% unless Congress finds a fix for the funding problem.

Taxes assessed on Social Security account for 4% of program funding. While that’s a small percentage, the funding problem would still get worse if tax revenue was eliminated.

For instance, a budget model from renowned business school Penn Wharton shows Social Security could lose $1.5 trillion in revenue in the next decade if President Trump eliminates taxes on benefits. In that scenario, the trust fund would become insolvent two years earlier than currently anticipated. That means retired workers and other Social Security recipients could see benefit cuts in 2033 rather than 2035.

Having said that, Congress has never allowed the Social Security trust fund to become insolvent in the past, and I suspect lawmakers will find a solution for the financing problem before benefit cuts are necessary this time. However, eliminating taxes on Social Security would still be problematic because it would leave Congress with less time to find that solution.

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