SSI Payments for May: Dates, Maximum Amounts, and Who Qualifies Under Federal Rules

Find out when will your SSI payment arrive and what to know regarding eligibility, limitations, and more

Supplemental Security Income Updates for May

Supplemental Security Income Updates for May

The Social Security Administration has set May 1, 2026 as the disbursement date for Supplemental Security Income (or SSI, for short) payments covering that month. The schedule follows the program’s standard structure: benefits go out on the first calendar day of each month, provided that date does not fall on a weekend or federal holiday. Since May 1 lands on a Friday, no adjustment is required.

Recipients who collect both SSI and Social Security retirement or disability benefits under the pre-1997 rules will receive their Social Security deposit on the third of the month and their SSI payment separately on the first. Those drawing SSDI alongside SSI — a combination that occurs when the disability payment falls below the federal benefit rate — will also see both deposits arrive on May 1.

Not every recipient collects the maximum SSI benefit

The federal benefit rate for 2026 stands at $994 per month for an eligible individual and $1,491 per month for a married couple where both partners qualify. A third category, designated for what the SSA calls an essential person — typically a caregiver whose presence is required by the recipient — carries a maximum of $498 monthly. These figures reflect a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment applied across all Social Security programs beginning in January 2026.

The actual amount a beneficiary receives depends on several variables the SSA calculates each month: earned income, unearned income, living arrangements, and whether the applicant also receives support in the form of housing or meals from another party. Each of those factors can reduce the payment below the federal maximum.

State SSI supplements: Where are they available?

Several states supplement the federal base with their own state supplementary payments. The size of those additions ranges from roughly $10 to $400 a month depending on the state and the specific living situation.

Four states — Arizona, Mississippi, North Dakota, and West Virginia — offer no supplementary payment at all. In states where the SSA administers the supplement directly, the combined amount arrives in a single deposit. In others, a separate application must be filed with the relevant state agency.

Recipients should also be aware that SNAP benefits and Medicaid do not count as income for SSI calculation purposes. Qualifying for SSI, in most states, automatically triggers Medicaid enrollment; the exceptions include Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, and Virginia, where Medicaid eligibility must be established through a separate process.

Three conditions govern SSI eligibility

To qualify for SSI, an applicant must simultaneously satisfy three requirements. The first concerns medical or age status: the individual must be 65 or older, legally blind, or living with a medically documented condition that prevents substantial employment and that has lasted — or is expected to last — at least one year, or that is terminal. Children under 18 are included if the qualifying condition substantially limits daily functioning.

The second requirement addresses income. For 2026, a single applicant must keep monthly wages below $2,073 and income from non-work sources — such as pensions, disability payments, or unemployment — below $1,014 monthly. For couples, those thresholds rise to $3,067 and $1,511 respectively.

The SSA does not count all income toward those limits. The first $20 of most monthly income is excluded, as are the first $65 of earned wages plus half of anything above that, tax refunds, scholarships, and direct payments made by third parties for expenses other than food or shelter.

The third requirement sets limits on countable resources. An individual cannot hold more than $2,000 in assets that the SSA considers countable — bank balances, cash, stocks, and bonds. The ceiling for couples is $3,000.

The primary residence and one vehicle are excluded from that calculation, as are funds held in ABLE accounts, a savings mechanism that allows individuals with qualifying disabilities to accumulate money without affecting SSI eligibility. The Plan to Achieve Self-Support (PASS) program similarly permits certain funds to be set aside for education or work-related expenses without triggering a reduction in benefits.

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