Under current law, Social Security retirement and survivors benefits are paid from the OASI Trust Fund plus ongoing payroll tax revenue.
The 2025 Trustees Report projects the OASI Trust Fund will be depleted in 2033.
At that point, incoming payroll taxes would cover only about 77% of scheduled benefits—an automatic, across-the-board 23% reduction unless Congress changes the law.
What That Would Mean For A Typical Retiree
As of July 2025, the average retired worker benefit is roughly $2,006.69/month.
A 23% cut would lower that to about $1,545/month, a loss near $462 per month (about $5,538 per year).
Key point: Benefits would not stop—they would be paid on time at a reduced level if the trust fund is depleted and Congress does nothing.
Snapshot: Facts And Figures You Should Know
- Depletion year (OASI): 2033 (no change from last year’s estimate). Payable share: ~77% of scheduled benefits.
- Magnitude of cut: Broadly discussed as ~23% for current and future retirees if no fix passes.
- 2025 COLA: 2.5%; average retired worker benefit estimated $1,976 in Jan 2025 (SSA), trending to about $2,006.69 by July 2025.
- 2025 taxable maximum (wage cap): $176,100—earnings above this aren’t subject to Social Security payroll tax.
Potential Impact If The Worst-Case Scenario Happens
Scenario | When | What Happens Under Current Law | Estimated Impact On Average Retiree |
---|---|---|---|
Status quo (2025) | Now | 100% of scheduled benefits paid | Avg retired worker: $2,006.69/mo (July 2025) |
Trust fund depletion | 2033 | Benefits limited to payroll tax income (~77% payable) | Payment falls to ~$1,545/mo (~23% reduction) |
Annual loss from cut | Starting 2033 | Paid on time but at reduced level | ~$5,538/year less for the average retiree |
Figures use SSA/Trustees projections and the July 2025 average benefit for illustration.
Who Would Be Affected
If Congress does nothing, the 23% reduction would apply across the board to retirement and survivors beneficiaries, regardless of income or age.
Disability Insurance (DI) has a separate trust fund that is not projected to deplete over the 75-year horizon, but the retirement side is where the shortfall exists.
What Fixes Are Being Discussed
Lawmakers are weighing different paths to avoid the 23% cut:
- Raise revenue: Options include lifting or eliminating the taxable wage cap (currently $176,100 in 2025) or adding new taxable compensation. Some proposals would tax high earners above $250,000 and use the revenue to shore up the program.
- Adjust benefits or eligibility: Policymakers sometimes consider gradual benefit formula changes or claiming-age adjustments.
- Combination plans: Analyses suggest closing the long-term gap could be achieved via a ~3.82-percentage-point payroll tax increase (split roughly 1.91% each for workers and employers) or an equivalent mix of revenue and benefit adjustments if enacted promptly.
What You Can Do Now
- Plan for uncertainty: Build flexibility into retirement budgets to absorb potential benefit changes.
- Optimize claiming: The age you claim affects your monthly check for life; delaying can raise your benefit.
- Track official updates: Watch for annual Trustees Reports, COLA notices, and legislative developments that could change timelines or amounts.
The warning is clear: without action, Social Security could face an automatic 23% reduction in 2033, leaving the average retiree with hundreds less each month.
The system remains salvageable, but every year of delay narrows the options and raises the cost.
Understanding the timeline, the size of the potential cut, and the policy tools on the table helps you prepare—and underscores why timely, balanced reform is critical to preserving the program’s promise.
FAQs
No. Checks would still go out on time, but at reduced amounts—about 77% of what’s scheduled—unless Congress acts.