Beneficiaries receive payments as part of the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) in August 2025, will see their deposit arranged according to birthdates. If your birthday falls between the 1st and 10th, the funds were already sent on Wednesday, August 13.
Those born from the 11th to 20th get paid Wednesday, August 20. Anyone with birthdays between the 21st and 31st sees deposits on Wednesday, August 27. All these groups are part of the category of those who claimed their benefits after May 1997, when de birthdate rule was implemented.
Changes in the SSDI schedule due to particularities
Now, people collecting benefits since before May 1997 qualify for payments on the month’s first business day. The same applies to recipients getting both SSDI and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). When the 1st lands on weekends or holidays, deposits shift to the prior workday.
Labor Day’s September 1 timing disrupts SSI payments. Consequently, September’s SSI payment moves to August 29. This adjustment means SSI recipients get two August deposits: their normal payment plus September’s early payment. No SSI payments will occur in September.
SSDI’s highest possible monthly payout reaches $4,018 for 2025. This maximum applies only to those meeting full work-history requirements without deductions. Verification of lifetime Social Security contributions determines eligibility.
Contrastingly, most beneficiaries receive far less. Actual average SSDI payments range from $1,580 to $1,590 monthly in 2025. Broader historical data suggests an even lower mean value—approximately $1,537—across disabled workers nationwide. Individual contribution levels create this payment variation.
All Social Security payments (retirement, SSDI, SSI) undergo yearly cost-of-living adjustments (COLA). The 2025 COLA increase was fixed at 2.5% and it’s valid up to December 2025, included. This mechanism counters inflation’s erosion of purchasing power, preserving benefit values through federal measurements.
How are SSDI benefits calculated
SSDI requires satisfying two SSA conditions: First, a medically confirmed disability preventing “substantial gainful activity,” expected to last 1 year or cause the passing of the beneficiary. Second, adequate work credits through FICA-taxed employment or self-employment.
Payment calculations follow rigorous protocols. SSA computes your Average Indexed Monthly Earnings (AIME) using your 35 highest-earning years. A progressive formula then converts AIME into your Primary Insurance Amount (PIA)—the baseline figure before COLA or other modifications.
We must stop here to remark that SSDI differs from SSI. SSDI mandates work history; SSI is needs-based, requiring neither employment history nor tax contributions. Federal SSI maximums for 2025 are: $967 (individuals), $1,450 (qualifying couples), and $484 (“essential persons”).
How much is the expected COLA for 2026
Right now, experts are kinda hopeful about next year’s Social Security COLA increase. Most guesses land somewhere around 2.7%, just a tick above 2025’s 2.5% adjustment. Blame it on stubborn inflation, especially those urban prices (the CPI-W index that actually decides the COLA).
Groups like the Senior Citizens League keep nudging their forecasts higher as costs climb. Other analysts play it safer, figuring the final number could dip between 2.6% and 2.7%, if prices behave from July to September.
Even that modest raise might get swallowed up by Medicare Part B premiums, expected to jump hard in 2026. After those premium hikes, many retirees could see zero real gain. That’s why some advocates are pushing to overhaul the COLA formula itself. Their argument? Quit leaning so hard on CPI-W and start tracking what seniors actually spend money on – think healthcare bills and housing costs. Ideas gaining steam:
Proposals like switching to a CPI-E (specifically for seniors’ expenses) or adjusting calculations for seniors living into advanced age are gaining traction, even amid fiscal concerns about long-term Social Security solvency.