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Social Security Benefits: New Payments Come In Just a Few Days With Up to $5,108

Around 70 million Americans receive Social Security benefits: there are the upcoming payment dates in December

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Carlos Loria
29/11/2025 06:45
en Finance
December Social Security Benefits

December Social Security Benefits

There’s a lot of talk about Social Security in December 2025 being a bit of a payday bonanza. You might have heard that millions of people will get three deposits instead of two. Sounds too good to be true, right? Well, it is and it isn’t. Let me break it down for you as easy as possible.

Basically, this whole situation is a perfect storm caused by the calendar and the Social Security payment rules. It’s not free money; it’s more of a scheduling quirk that gives some folks an early January payment right at the end of December. Let’s find what’s all this about. 

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Social Security benefits: December dates easily explained

Here’s how it plays out. The first payment of the month is the regular December SSI check. That always goes out on the 1st of the month, and since December 1, 2025, is a Monday, it hits accounts right on time.

Then, we have the standard Social Security retirement or disability payments. These come on the usual Wednesdays, based on your birthday:

  • If you were born between the 1st and the 10th, you get paid on December 10.
  • People with birthdays from the 11th to the 20th get theirs on December 17.
  • And if your birthday falls between the 21st and the 31st, your check arrives on December 24.
  • There’s also a smaller group who’ve been on the system since before 1997 who get paid on the 3rd of every month.

Now, here’s the twist that causes all the excitement. The next payment, the one for January 2026, is supposed to go out on January 1st. But guess what? January 1st is New Year’s Day, a national holiday. So, the Social Security Administration moves that payment to the last business day of the previous month, which is Wednesday, December 31, 2025.

Social Security SSI benefits: the calendar changes to have in mind

So, let’s connect the dots. If you are one of the approximately 7.5 million people who receive both SSI and a retirement or disability benefit, your December looks like this:

  • Your December SSI payment (on the 1st).
  • Your regular Social Security payment (on your birthdate Wednesday or the 3rd).
  • Your advanced January SSI payment (on the 31st).

That’s three deposits in one month. But it’s critical to remember that the third check is just your January money arriving early. Your January will feel lean because you won’t see another SSI payment that month. It’s not a bonus; it’s an advance.

The SSA always recommends you double-check your specific payment schedule online through your “my Social Security” account, just to be sure.

What can people expect to see in these checks in 2025?

If someone played their cards perfectly—meaning they earned a high income for 35 years and waited until age 70 to retire—the absolute maximum they could get is $5,108 a month. But let’s be real, hardly anyone hits that mark—it’s less than 1% of people.

If you retire at what’s called “Full Retirement Age” (which is around 66 or 67 for most folks nowadays), the max is $4,018. And if you have to retire early at 62, the maximum drops to $2,831.

For the rest of us, the averages are a better guide. The typical retired worker gets about $2,015 a month. A retired couple, where both are receiving benefits, brings in around $3,120 on average.

For a widow or widower, it’s about $1,867, and for a disabled worker, it’s approximately $1,586. This is why financial experts constantly warn that Social Security was never meant to be your only income. It replaces only about 40% of what you used to make, so having your own savings is non-negotiable.

2026 COLA increase: How will SSA payments increase

Looking ahead to 2026, payments are getting a small bump thanks to the cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, which is projected to be around 2.8%. So, that person getting the maximum $5,108 will see an extra $143 or so, making their check about $5,251. The max payment for someone at full retirement age will go from $4,018 to about $4,131.

But—and there’s always a but—Medicare Part B premiums also go up. For many people, the increase in their Social Security check gets partially or even completely eaten up by the higher Medicare deduction. So, that “raise” might not feel as big as it looks on paper.

Tags: Social Security
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