Millions of Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients checked their bank apps in March and found nothing. No deposit, no alert, no explanation. Just an empty balance where the money was supposed to be.
What many read as a mistake, a cut, or a government glitch turns out to have a straightforward mechanical explanation: one the Social Security Administration (SSA) built into its own calendar years ago.
Millions didn’t get their SSI check in March
The March 2026 SSI payment didn’t arrive in March because it was already delivered before March began. The first of the month landed on a Sunday, and federal rules require the SSA to push payments forward when the scheduled date falls on a weekend or federal holiday.
That meant the agency sent the money on Friday, February 27. Anyone who checked their account that day and saw the deposit was, without realizing it, already holding their March payment.
The SSA applies this rule consistently every time the first of the month is not a business day. What creates real confusion is the gap that follows — the stretch between that early February disbursement and the next scheduled payment, which is set for Wednesday, April 1, 2026.
Who’s the SSI Intended For?
SSI is a federal assistance program run by the SSA that sends monthly payments to low-income adults 65 and older, as well as to adults and children with qualifying disabilities or blindness. It requires no work history and no prior contributions to the Social Security system, which sets it apart from retirement benefits and SSDI. More than 7.4 million Americans rely on those payments to cover rent, food, utilities, and transportation.
For 2026, the cost-of-living adjustment — known as COLA — raised SSI payments by 2.8%. For a single filer, the maximum payment is set as $994, while for a couple filing together the top is $1,450 a month. A third category is the “essential person”, an individual that helps a beneficiary with their basic need every day, and there’s up to $484 a month for them.




