March is almost over, and for millions of Americans who depend on Social Security, there’s one more deposit on the way. If your birthday falls anywhere between the 21st and the 31st of your birth month, the money should hit your account this Wednesday, March 25. Everyone else in the monthly rotation has already been paid on previous dates.
Now, why does your birthday decide your payday? It sounds like an odd system, but the logic holds up. The Social Security Administration splits recipients into three Wednesday groups based on date of birth: people born between the 1st and 10th get paid on the second Wednesday of each month, those born between the 11th and 20th on the third Wednesday, and those born between the 21st and 31st on the fourth Wednesday.
Worth noting: the deposit arriving on the 25th actually covers the February 2026 benefit. The SSA always pays one month behind, so what lands in your account this Wednesday is last month’s payment showing up now.
Who already got paid from Social Security and when
The March schedule started moving on the 3rd, when beneficiaries who receive both SSI and Social Security — along with those who began collecting before May 1997 — got their deposits.
After that came March 11 for anyone born in the first ten days of any month, then March 18 for those born between the 11th and 20th. Wednesday the 25th closes the calendar for everyone whose birthday falls in the last stretch of the month.
If you receive Supplemental Security Income and you’ve been watching your account waiting for a March deposit, it already arrived — before March even began. Because March 1 fell on a Sunday, the SSA moved that payment up to the nearest business day, which was Friday, February 27.
That’s not a skipped payment or a processing error. It’s a standard calendar adjustment the agency applies whenever the first of the month lands on a weekend or federal holiday. Regular SSI payments resume in April with a deposit going out on April 1.
Your Social Security Check Is a Little Bigger This Year
Anyone who noticed a slight increase in their deposits since January can credit the 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment that took effect at the start of 2026. For most retired workers, that translated to roughly $56 more per month. Married couples on Social Security saw a combined increase of around $88 monthly.
The exact figure varies depending on earnings history, the age at which benefits were claimed, and the type of benefit involved.
Some banks post Social Security deposits a day or two before the official payment date. The SSA transmits payment files to financial institutions ahead of time, and certain banks release the funds as soon as they receive them rather than holding until the scheduled date.
If Wednesday passes with nothing in your account, sit tight for an extra day or two before assuming something went wrong. If the deposit still hasn’t shown up by the end of the week, contact the SSA directly at 1-800-772-1213. Representatives take calls on weekdays from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. local time.
