Every month, the Social Security Administration (SSA) sends out benefits to over 70 million people across the U.S. In May 2026, those payments are spread out over different dates depending on the type of benefit you’re on and your birth date. The schedule hasn’t changed from the official one the agency put out—each group gets a specific Wednesday of the month.
The first money to go out in May goes to SSI (Supplemental Security Income) recipients. That payment lands on May 1. Meanwhile, people who get both SSI and retirement Social Security, or folks who started getting benefits before May 1997, usually get paid on the 3rd of each month. But since May 3 falls on a Saturday, the SSA moves that deposit up to Friday, May 2.
Social Security Payment Schedule by Birth Date
Everyone else follows the Wednesday schedule the agency rolled out back in 1997. Which Wednesday you get paid depends solely on the day of the month you were born.
- If your birthday falls between the 1st and the 10th of any month, you get paid on the second Wednesday, which is May 13.
- Born between the 11th and the 20th? Your payday is the third Wednesday, which is May 20.
- Born between the 21st and the 31st? You’re on the fourth Wednesday, which is May 27.
That last group ends up with the longest gap between their April payment and their May one. It’s just a quirk of the calendar—sometimes the wait can hit around 35 days. The SSA says that’s totally normal for how the system works. No changes to benefit amounts or payment procedures have been reported for this month.
Maximum Benefit Amounts for 2026
The cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) that kicked in back in January 2026 was 2.8%, based on the rise in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners (CPI-W) from the third quarter of 2024 to the same period in 2025. That percentage set the new caps for each benefit type.
For retirement, the max you can get per month depends on how old you are when you start collecting. If you retire at 62—the earliest possible age—you’re looking at up to $2,969 a month. Retire at your full retirement age (FRA, which is between 66 and 67 depending on your birth year), and the max jumps to $4,152 per month.
Wait all the way until 70, and that ceiling goes up to $5,181 a month. Keep in mind, these numbers only apply to workers who paid into the system at the maximum taxable wage base their whole career, starting at age 22.
For SSDI (disability benefits), the monthly max in 2026 is also $4,152—same as the full retirement age cap. Unlike retirement, disability benefits don’t get reduced if you claim them early. You get your full amount as soon as your disability is approved.
SSI works differently. It’s not based on your work history; it’s about your financial situation. The federal maximum for SSI in 2026 is $994 a month for an individual and $1,491 for a couple where both spouses qualify. Some states kick in extra money on top of that, but the federal amount is the baseline everywhere.




