Millions of Americans are about to get their Social Security deposits in May (not paper checks, from this year on), and they’re seeing the highest adjustment in a while. But the gap between the average payment and the absolute maximum is still enormous—and barely anyone knows exactly how big it is.
Back in January, the Social Security Administration put through a 2.8% cost-of-living bump—the so-called COLA—based on how consumer prices changed between the third quarter of 2024 and the same stretch in 2025.
May Social Security Payments: What’s the Average Deposit?
For retirees, that bump pushed the average monthly payment to $2,079, according to the latest Monthly Statistical Snapshot from the SSA using March 2026 data. That number keeps creeping up, but there’s a less visible reality underneath: the system was only ever designed to replace about 40% of what you earned before retiring.
For those getting disability through SSDI, the 2026 average is around $1,630 a month—about $44 more than last year. The theoretical maximum under that program is $4,152 at full retirement age, but hitting that ceiling takes decades of really high earnings and paying taxes on every single dollar you made. Most beneficiaries land way below that number.
The SSI Benefits in May
The Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program works differently—it’s not about your work history but your financial need. For 2026, the federal maximum is $994 a month for individuals and $1,491 for couples. But the actual average payment is $697 a month, and it varies quite a bit by age. People under 18 get about $813 on average; those over 65 get just $576.
Retirement age is still the single biggest factor for retirees. If you claim at 62, the max you can get in 2026 is $2,969 a month. Wait until 70 and you could get up to $5,181. That’s a $2,212 difference per month—which adds up to tens of thousands of dollars over your later years, and plenty of people never do the math before signing the application.
Quick Review of the Payments Schedule
May payments follow the same schedule that’s been in place since January. Retirees who started getting benefits before May 1997, along with SSI recipients, get their checks on the 3rd of the month.
Everyone else gets them based on birth date: if you were born between the 1st and 10th, you get paid on the second Wednesday; born between the 11th and 20th, the third Wednesday; and if you’re born between the 21st and 31st, the fourth Wednesday.
With over 71 million active beneficiaries and trust fund assets under constant pressure, May’s payments are arriving on time.




