Social Security Payments Going Out April 15: Here’s Who Gets Paid This Wednesday

If you’re waiting on a Social Security deposit this week, you might want to check your calendar and your birthday

One Social Security payment comes this week

One Social Security payment comes this week

April 15, 2026, falls on the third Wednesday of the month, and for Social Security, that’s not just another random day. The SSA organizes payments like this on purpose to keep the banking system from getting slammed and their phone lines from melting down all at once.

If your birthday lands somewhere between the 11th and the 20th of any month, this Wednesday is your day. That’s the only real rule that matters here. It doesn’t matter if you’re retired, on SSDI, or getting a survivor benefit—the payment schedule hinges on the birthdate of the person receiving the check, not the spouse or the original earner.

April Social Security Payments: Confirmed Dates

Just so you have the full picture, the month started with SSI folks getting paid on April 1st. Then, on April 3rd, the deposit hit for people who’ve been on the rolls since before May 1997, plus the folks who pull both SSI and regular Social Security (they’ve always been on a bit of a different rhythm).

After that, it’s all about the birthdate breakdown:

Birth Date Range April 2026 Payment Date Claiming Date
1st – 10th Wednesday, April 8 These are payment dates for those
who claimed after May 1997
11th – 20th Wednesday, April 15
21st – 31st Wednesday, April 22
Source: Social Security Administration 2026 schedule and COLA adjustments.

What to Expect in That Deposit

The numbers you’re seeing this month are already bumped up by the 2026 COLA. We’re looking at a 2.8% increase from last year, based on the inflation numbers from the third quarter.

For context, the average retired worker was pulling in about $2,071 by the end of last year. With the bump, that’s an extra fifty-six bucks or so a month. If you’re a couple, you’re likely seeing something in the neighborhood of $3,395 combined now. Disability benefits (SSDI) ticked up from around $1,537 to roughly $1,580 on average.

Now, before anyone panics comparing their check to the max limits: Those high numbers you see in headlines—like $5,251 a month—only happen if you waited until full retirement age and maxed out your earnings your whole career. If you took it early at 62, the cap is way lower, around $2,969.

Most people land somewhere in the middle, and the exact number just comes down to your own work history. Also worth noting, the income cap for payroll taxes went up this year too—now it’s $184,500, up from $176,100.

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