In March 2026, more than 56 million retirees in the United States will receive a check from the Social Security that, on average, is less than $2,100. The exact figure is $2,074.53 per month. For those who spent decades working and paying taxes into the system, the amount may be disappointing.
For the government, it’s proof that the annual adjustment worked. For economists, it’s just the starting point of a much more uncomfortable conversation. And there’s an awkward truth: Social Security wasn’t designed to be the sole source of income in old age.
Is the Social Security Check Enough?
The Social Security Administration readily admits this: the system was intended to replace about 40% of pre-retirement wages. The problem is that millions of Americans reached retirement age without enough savings to cover the remaining 60%.
The result is a generation of retirees who depend almost exclusively on a check that, translated into labor terms, is equivalent to earning $11.97 an hour working full-time.
The cost-of-living adjustment (known as COLA) applied in January, known as COLA, was set at 2.8% for 2026. In concrete terms, that represents an additional $56 per month, or $672 per year. The SSA calculated this percentage based on the variation in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Workers (or CPI-W) between the third quarter of 2024 and the same period in 2025.
The system is complex, but the impact is daily: this increase is insufficient to cover the real increase in the costs of housing, medicine, or food faced by senior citizens in the country, as per retirees defense organizations.
The Social Security Check is Different for Everyone
The check, moreover, is not the same for everyone. The average of $2,074.53 masks a gap that reflects decades of wage inequality between men and women. As of the end of December 2025, retired men received an average of $2,283.98 per month, while women received $1,875.32.
With the 2.8% COLA applied, that difference is projected to be approximately $2,347 for men and $1,927 for women in the following months. The gap is not a flaw in the system. It is the accumulated result of historically lower wages, interrupted careers, and jobs with less pension coverage.
Does Age Impact the Benefits?
The age at which one decides to collect their pension also matters a great deal. Those who accessed the benefit at age 62, the minimum age allowed, receive an average of $2,019.92 per month, or about $24,239 per year.
At the other extreme, someone who worked a full 35 years, always contributed based on the maximum taxable salary, and had the discipline or the privilege of waiting until age 70 to collect, can receive up to $5,181 per month.
This theoretical ceiling, however, is far from the reality for most people. It represents a minority with uninterrupted work histories and salaries that are always above average.
Taxable Income in 2026
In 2026, the income threshold subject to Social Security tax rose from $176,100 to $184,500. Salaries exceeding this threshold are not taxed. It’s a technical detail that few retirees question, but it determines how much money goes into the fund and, consequently, how much can be withdrawn.




