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Social Security overhaul: 7-year countdown to major benefit changes begins

The seven-year countdown is no longer an abstract warning buried in a government report. It is now the central fact hanging over the future of Social Security retirement benefits. According to the Social Security Administration’s 2025 trustees report, the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance trust fund, the part of the system that pays retirement and survivor…

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How much you need to earn to qualify for the maximum Social Security benefit

Workers who want the biggest possible Social Security retirement check in 2026 need more than a high salary in a single year. To qualify for the maximum benefit, they generally must earn at or above Social Security’s taxable wage cap for about 35 years, because the program bases benefits on a worker’s 35 highest-earning years…

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Social Security cuts could hit within a decade unless Congress acts on funding shortfall

Social Security’s financing problem is no longer an abstract debate for future lawmakers. The latest official projections show the program moving closer to the point where it can no longer pay full scheduled benefits from its trust fund reserves, putting pressure on Congress to act before automatic cuts become the default outcome. The warning is…

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Social Security earnings test limit rises to $24,480 for workers under full retirement age in 2026

Older Americans who claim Social Security before reaching full retirement age got a little more room to keep working in 2026 without triggering benefit withholding. The annual earnings test limit for beneficiaries who remain below full retirement age for the entire year rose to $24,480, up from $23,400 in 2025. That change may not sound…

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Social Security cost-of-living adjustment set at 2.8% for 2026

Social Security’s cost-of-living adjustment for 2026 is set at 2.8%, giving beneficiaries a modest increase after the unusually large raises of the past few years. For the average retired worker, that translates to about $56 more per month, according to federal estimates. The increase reaches far beyond retirees alone. The adjustment affects Social Security and…

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Social Security trust fund now forecast to run dry by 2032, one year earlier than prior estimate

Social Security’s financing debate just took a sharper turn. A new Congressional Budget Office forecast moved up the expected depletion date for the program’s main retirement trust fund. The new estimate puts the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance fund, the account that pays retirement and survivor benefits, on track to run out of reserves in 2032….

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How delaying Social Security from 62 to 70 adds $144,000 to lifetime benefits

Delaying Social Security is one of the few retirement decisions that can permanently raise guaranteed monthly income. For workers with strong earnings histories, the difference between claiming at 62 and waiting until 70 is not small. It can amount to well over $2,000 a month, every month, for life. That is where a six-figure lifetime…

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Social Security’s retirement trust fund could run dry by 2032 if Congress fails to act

Social Security’s financing problem is no longer an abstract warning buried in an annual report. The latest projections now point to a much tighter timetable, with the program’s main retirement trust fund potentially reaching exhaustion early in the next decade if Congress does nothing. That does not mean Social Security disappears. It does mean the…

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Social Security in 2026: 5 essential monthly bills the average check cannot cover

Retired workers collecting Social Security in 2026 receive an average monthly benefit of $2,076.41. On paper, that can still sound like a meaningful monthly cushion. In practice, a social security check rarely stretches as far as people assume once the most basic bills start hitting. For millions of older Americans, the problem is not one…

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Social Security overpayment clawbacks leave retirees facing unexpected repayment demands

The latest Social Security overpayment crackdown has left some retirees confronting a jarring possibility: a benefits problem they did not know existed can suddenly turn into a demand for repayment that cuts deeply into the monthly income they rely on to cover housing, food, utilities, and medicine. That is the practical effect of a rapid…

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