What's Happening
7 minutes ago

Quantum Computing Aids Energy Efficiency For Blockchain Hashing: 'Require A Fraction Of The Electricity Used By Classical Resources,' Says D-Wave CEO

benzingabenzinga.com
19 minutes ago

Top Wall Street Forecasters Revamp Essent Group Expectations Ahead Of Q1 Earnings

benzingabenzinga.com
20 minutes ago

MARA CEO Fred Thiel Underscores Company's 'Twin Turbocharge Strategy' Of Bitcoin HODL And Mining: 'You See The Benefit Of Both The Sides'

benzingabenzinga.com
23 minutes ago

Tesla's India Country Head Resigns As Elon Musk-Led Company Finalizes Launch Plans In World's Third-Largest Auto Market: Report

benzingabenzinga.com
28 minutes ago

US 'Blatant' Tariffs Spark EU Backlash As Bloc Plans WTO Challenge, Proposes $107 Billion in Countermeasures

benzingabenzinga.com
31 minutes ago

Plains All American Pipeline Gears Up For Q1 Print; Here Are The Recent Forecast Changes From Wall Street's Most Accurate Analysts

benzingabenzinga.com
31 minutes ago

Should You Buy Nio While It's Below Its IPO Price?

foolfool.com
34 minutes ago

2 Popular AI Stock to Sell Before They Fall 64% and 67%, According to Certain Wall Street Analysts

foolfool.com
36 minutes ago

2 Magnificent Seven Stocks that are Screaming Buys Today

foolfool.com
37 minutes ago

Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri Testimony Reveals TikTok Led To Worrisome Engagement Drop For Meta's Platform: 'You're Either Growing, Or You're Slowly Dyi...

benzingabenzinga.com
40 minutes ago

Wall Street's Newest Stock-Split Stock -- Which Has Gained 343% in 5 Years -- Is Set to Make History

foolfool.com
41 minutes ago

With Warren Buffett Stepping Down as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, Could Coca-Cola and American Express Be on the Chopping Block?

foolfool.com
1 hour ago

10x Genomics CEO Calls NIH The 'Foundational Jewel' Of Biomedical Progress, Says 40% To 50% Of Revenue Supported By Academic And Government Research F...

benzingabenzinga.com
1 hour ago

Sam Altman Says 'Can't Wrap Our Heads Around' The Size Of The AI Revolution, Calls For 'Humility And Caution' To Guide The Future

benzingabenzinga.com
1 hour ago

Rumble Touts Ad Traction With Netflix, Crypto.com, Chevron As Q1 Revenue Jumps 34%

benzingabenzinga.com
1 hour ago

Gary Black Bullish On Lyft, Sees Investment Opportunity As Uber Rival Surprises With Q1 Profit And AV Adoption Plans

benzingabenzinga.com
2 hours ago

Celsius Founder Alex Mashinsky Gets 12-Year Prison Sentence For Securities and Commodities Fraud

benzingabenzinga.com
3 hours ago

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong Believes Traditional Banks Launching Own Stablecoins 'Not Necessarily The Best' Path— Pitches USDC As Option

benzingabenzinga.com
3 hours ago

Amazon Now Holds AMD Stake Worth $84.4 Million After Lisa Su-Led Chipmaker Acquires ZT Systems (CORRECTED)

benzingabenzinga.com
3 hours ago

Nvidia Modifies H20 Chip For China After US Restrictions Block Sales, Aims To Deliver New Version By July: Report

benzingabenzinga.com

The Latest Update on Social Security’s Financial Status Is Here — and the News Isn’t Great

Lately, all eyes have been on the 2025 Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) and the effect it will have on benefits next year. Checks will go up beginning in January, though we won’t know by how much until the COLA announcement on Oct. 10.

The increase will give retirees a little relief in the near term. But for those who expect to claim benefits for another decade or more, larger checks could be cause for concern, especially in light of new data on Social Security’s future.

A person with a serious expression while looking at documents.

Image source: Getty Images.

Social Security is a decade away from insolvency

Social Security has been spending more money than it has taken in every year since 2021, and this trend is expected to continue. So far, it has kept itself going because its trust funds have had excess cash to make up the shortfall, but that money won’t last forever.

The Old Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) trust fund, which pays for retirement and survivors benefits, is expected to be depleted in 2033, according to a Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report (opens PDF) from September. The Disability Insurance trust fund will be depleted in 2064.

And if the government combines the money in the two trust funds, it would be exhausted in 2034. This is because the Social Security Administration pays out significantly more in retirement and survivors benefits than it does in disability benefits.

If the government did nothing, beneficiaries would face a 23% cut to their checks beginning in 2035. This would gradually increase by another 5% by 2098. Benefits are expected to remain stable thereafter.

This would be devastating to millions of retirees, particularly those without adequate personal savings or another steady source of income. To give you some context, a 23% benefit cut would slash the $1,920 average retirement benefit (as of August) to $1,478 per month. That would amount to approximately $5,300 less per year in benefits.

A fix is possible but painful

The good news is the government isn’t likely to let such a benefit cut happen. This isn’t the first time Social Security has faced a funding crisis. When the program last confronted this issue in the 1980s, the government stepped in and made changes that allowed the program to largely maintain existing benefits.

However, the fixes had their drawbacks. Some of the key changes involved:

  • Raising the full retirement age (FRA): This is the age at which you become eligible for your full benefit based on your work history. Claiming early is possible, but it reduces your checks. A higher FRA means younger claimants face steeper penalties for starting benefits at the same age as their older counterparts.
  • Increasing the Social Security payroll tax: This is the tax all workers pay on their income up to an inflation-adjusted ceiling ($168,600 in 2024). This meant workers took home less money each year. Currently, this tax is 12.4%, split evenly between employer and employee.
  • Introducing taxes on some Social Security benefits: This is a tax that certain retirees pay if their provisional income — the sum of their adjusted gross income (AGI), nontaxable interest on their investments, and half their annual Social Security benefit — exceeds $25,000 for single adults or $32,000 for a married couple. These taxes leave some retirees with less money to put toward their expenses.

These fixes are some of the same options government officials and experts have thrown around this time as well. So far, there’s no clear solution. The CBO report says it would take a 4.3% payroll tax increase to resolve the shortfall or a 24% permanent benefit cut. But given the major financial implications each of these options would have, it’s likely to be some combination of strategies.

There might be a smaller payroll tax increase along with increases to the Social Security benefit taxes that retirees pay. This would at least spread the burden of the program’s increased funding needs around rather than targeting one particular group.

For now, all you can do is wait to see how the government handles the funding crisis and learn how to diversify your retirement income sources. The less dependent you are on Social Security, the easier time you’ll have weathering whatever comes your way.

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

Social Security probably forms a key part of your retirement plan — and that’s OK. It makes sense you’d factor these benefits into your retirement

A record-breaking 4.18 million Americans are set to turn 65 this year. And even if they’re not planning on retiring anytime soon, those 4.18 million

Several experts have suggested that instead of investing its $2.8 trillion in reserves exclusively in Treasury securities, Social Security could invest some of its money

Based on current economic and market conditions, I’d have to call 2025 a pretty scary time to be retiring. That doesn’t mean people can’t or