Social Security is not going broke. But the fund that pays its checks is set to run dry sooner than thought.
The new date is late 2032. If Congress does nothing, checks could drop by more than a fifth.
What The New Report Says
Each year, the government runs a checkup on the program's books. The latest trustees report moved the date up by three months.
The new mark is late 2032. Here is how the program works.
Payroll taxes from today's workers pay today's retirees. A savings fund covers any gap.
When that fund runs dry, the law caps payouts at what is coming in. That works out to about 78 cents on every promised dollar.
It would hit anyone who leans on the program for retirement income.
Experts stress the program is not vanishing. Checks would shrink, not stop.
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Why The Date Moved Up
The shift traces back to Trump's new tax law. It changes how the checks get taxed.
That change hurt the fund's finances and helped pull the date forward.
The program's chief actuary flagged this last year. He warned it would have "material effects" on the funds.
There is a possible patch. The retirement fund could be joined with the disability fund.
That fund is healthy for the next 75 years. Joining them would stretch full checks to 2034.
Even then, the combined funds could only pay about 83%. And current law does not allow the move without an act of Congress.
But that just borrows from one pocket to fill another. "That solution is merely a band-aid," said Shai Akabas of the Bipartisan Policy Center.
He says the bigger worry is time. "We've known about this problem for several decades, and Congress has not done anything," he said.
What A Cut Would Mean
A 22% trim is not small. The average retiree could lose about $500 a month.
In 29 states the hit would be worse. The typical check in 2026 is about $2,071.
That check already includes a 2.8% raise for 2026. A 22% cut would erase years of those raises.
The program is the main income source for 43% of seniors. So a cut would land hard.
About 71 million people get a check from it. That group includes retirees, survivors, and people with disabilities.
AARP wants action now.
"This should be a wake-up call: Congress needs to act," said its CEO.
What To Watch
We have been here before. In 1983, Congress faced the same cliff.
It fixed the gap by taxing checks and slowly raising the retirement age. The tools to fix it still exist.
So the smart move for investors is to keep building their own retirement savings too.
Congress fixed it once before. This time the clock reads late 2032.
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