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    Home » How Much Is the Average Social Security Check in 2026?
    Social Security

    How Much Is the Average Social Security Check in 2026?

    TECHBy TECHJuly 10, 2026No Comments11 Mins Read
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    The size of your Social Security check depends on your work history, lifetime earnings, retirement age and the year you start claiming benefits.

    Following a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) from 2025, the average Social Security retirement benefit is approximately $2,083 per month as of May 2026, equivalent to just under $25,000 per year.

    The nonprofit Senior Citizens League (TSCL) has projected a 3.8% increase in Social Security benefits for 2027. That would boost the average benefit check by about $79 a month, “but it won’t be enough,” TSCL Executive Director Shannon Benton said in a statement.

    “We’re seeing inflation on the rise, when more than half of seniors already can’t afford basic living standards,” Benton added. “We’re talking about food, a roof over their head and transportation. Many seniors already have to skip doctor’s appointments due to costs.”

    Find out how Social Security benefits are calculated, how much the average retiree receives in 2026, what a higher 2027 COLA could mean for your monthly check and why experts recommend additional retirement savings.

    How is Social Security calculated?

    Social Security benefits are based on your highest 35 years of earnings, adjusted for wage growth, and the age at which you claim benefits.

    The Social Security Administration (SSA) reviews your lifetime earnings and averages your 35 highest-earning years into a monthly amount known as your Average Indexed Monthly Earnings (AIME).

    Your AIME is then applied to a progressive formula to determine your Primary Insurance Amount (PIA), or the benefit you should receive when you reach your full retirement age (FRA)

    Workers who claim before their FRA receive permanently reduced monthly payments, while delaying benefits until age 70 increases monthly checks.

    • Claiming at your FRA: You receive 100% of your calculated PIA.
    • Claiming early ( 62 to FRA): Your benefits are reduced for each month you claim before your Full Retirement Age
    • Delay claiming: You earn credits that increase your monthly check by a percentage (about 8% per year) for every month you wait past your FRA, up to age 70.

    If your FRA is 67, claiming at 62 reduces your monthly benefit by about 30%, according to AARP. Waiting until 70, however, would boost your check by about 24%.

    How to calculate your Social Security benefits

    If you want to see how much your benefits would be in retirement, the SSA has calculators that can give a rough estimate based on your current earnings or a more detailed analysis if you know your annual earnings for each year that you worked.

    Is Social Security enough to live on in retirement?

    Signed into law by President Franklin Roosevelt, Social Security was never intended to cover all of a retiree’s expenses. 

    “We can never insure one hundred percent of the population against one hundred percent of the hazards and vicissitudes of life,” Roosevelt said at the signing on Aug. 14, 1935. “But we have tried to frame a law which will give some measure of protection … against the loss of a job and against poverty-ridden old age.”

    Retirement income has long been described as a “three-legged stool” consisting of Social Security, employer pensions and individual savings accounts, such as a 401(k) or an IRA. 

    Fewer and fewer companies offer pensions, however, making that stool increasingly wobbly.

    Nearly 14% of retirees aged 65 to 69 rely on their Social Security benefits for 90% or more of their household income, according to data from the Congressional Research Service. For retirees 70 to 74, it rises to 16.7%, and for those 80 and older, it’s up to 26.9%.

    The average benefit check is a bit more than $2,080 per month. According to TSCL, factoring basic living expenses and rent for a 1-bedroom apartment, the average cost of living for a senior citizen is about $2,700 per month.

    Over the course of a year, that’s a deficit of about $7,400.

    If the 3.8% COLA increase is accurate, that would increase the average Social Security benefit check to about $2,162, or just under $26,000 per year.

    How to start saving for retirement beyond Social Security

    When it comes to retirement savings, start as early as you can, with whatever you can — whether that’s through an employer-sponsored 401(k) or an individual retirement account (IRA).

    If you started saving for retirement at age 25 and had investments yielding a 6% return, you would need to set aside about $500 per month to reach $1 million by age 65. If you waited until you were 40, you would need to invest approximately $1,450 per month until 65 to reach the same goal.

    Experts recommend saving between 10% and 20% of your annual income, but anything you can contribute is a good start, especially to reap the benefits of compound interest.

    401(k) accounts

    With a 401(k), pre-tax money is deducted from your paycheck, your investments grow tax-free and you pay income tax when you make withdrawals in retirement.

    If your employer matches your 401(k) contributions, focus on maximizing that match — it’s as close to free money as you can get. There is usually a cap on this benefit: You might put 10% of your paycheck into your 401(k), but your employer may only match the first 5%.

    Employer contributions can be a dollar-to-dollar or a partial match. The most common formula is a combination of the two that maxes out at 5%: Your employer might offer a full match up to 3% of your salary, then move to a partial match of 50 cents for every dollar on the next 2%.

    IRAs

    After you’ve maximized your employer’s 401(k) match, consider opening an IRA. Traditional IRA contributions are made with after-tax money — your investments grow tax-deferred and withdrawals in retirement are generally taxed as ordinary income.

    There are no income caps, and your account is not tied to your workplace, so you can keep contributing as long as you’re earning income. (If you don’t have access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan, your contributions may be tax-deductible. )

    With a Roth IRA, contributions are made with after-tax dollars, and qualified withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. This can be especially beneficial if you expect to be in a higher tax bracket in retirement. However, the IRS imposes annual income caps on Roth IRA eligibility, so check whether you qualify.

    Opening a traditional or Roth IRA through Charles Schwab gives you access to $0 account minimums, zero-commission trades and the powerful thinkorswim trading platform, which is perfect for self-directed savers. You also get 24/7 customer service and access to a nationwide network of more than 300 branch locations.

    Charles Schwab

    • Minimum deposit and balance

      Minimum deposit and balance requirements may vary depending on the investment vehicle selected. No account minimum for active investing through Schwab One® Brokerage Account. Automated investing through Schwab Intelligent Portfolios® requires a $5,000 minimum deposit

    • Fees

      Fees may vary depending on the investment vehicle selected. Schwab One® Brokerage Account has no account fees, $0 commission fees for stock and ETF trades, $0 transaction fees for over 4,000 mutual funds and a $0.65 fee per options contract

    • Bonus

    • Investment vehicles

      Robo-advisor: Schwab Intelligent Portfolios® and Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Premium™ IRA: Charles Schwab Traditional, Roth, Rollover, Inherited and Custodial IRAs; plus, a Personal Choice Retirement Account® (PCRA) Brokerage and trading: Schwab One® Brokerage Account, Brokerage Account + Specialized Platforms and Support for Trading, Schwab Global Account™, Schwab Organization Account and Schwab Trading Powered by Ameritrade™

    • Investment options

      Stocks, bonds, mutual funds, CDs and ETFs

    • Educational resources

      Extensive retirement planning tools

    Pros

    • $0 minimum deposit for active investing
    • No commission fees for stock and ETF trades and no transaction fees for over 4,000 mutual funds
    • Offers extensive retirement planning tools
    • Users can get on-demand advice from a professional advisor/Schwab expert
    • Robo-advisor Schwab Intelligent Portfolios® available as a no-fee automated service option (with Premium version available for a fee)
    • Award-winning thinkorswim® trading platforms and all their cutting-edge tools are now available at Schwab.
    • 24/7 customer support access by phone or chat
    • Charles Schwab offers over 300 brick-and-mortar branches across the U.S. for in-person support

    Cons

    • Specific transactions may require commission fee
    • Robo-advisor Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Premium charges a one-time planning fee of $300, then a $30 per month advisory fee. For that price, you get unlimited 1:1 guidance from a CFP, interactive planning tools, plus a personalized roadmap for reaching your goals

    If you’re new to investing, a robo-advisor can create a portfolio based on your financial goals, retirement horizon and risk tolerance. Robo-advisors typically invest in low-fee mutual and ETFs, using an algorithm to rebalance your portfolio by periodically buying and selling funds and securities to meet your financial goals. 

    Wealthfront and Betterment are two of our top picks for robo-advisors, based on fees, account minimums and investments offered. Betterment is well-tailored to beginner investors, thanks to its no-minimum-balance requirement and automated algorithms that manage, adjust and rebalance your portfolio over time.

    Wealthfront also provides automated rebalancing, as well as robust tax-optimization features and a low 0.25% annual management fee. If you want hands-on support, though, it doesn’t have human financial advisors.

    Wealthfront

    Investment advisory services provided by Wealthfront Advisers LLC, an SEC-registered investment adviser. Securities investments: not bank deposits, bank-guaranteed or FDIC-insured, and may lose value.

    • Minimum deposit and balance

      Minimum deposit and balance requirements may vary depending on the investment vehicle selected. $500 minimum deposit for investment accounts.

    • Fees

      Fees may vary depending on the investment vehicle selected. Zero account, transfer, trading or commission fees (fund ratios may apply). Wealthfront annual management advisory fee is 0.25% of your account balance

    • Bonus

    • Investment vehicles

    • Investment options

      Stocks, bonds, ETFs and cash. Additional asset classes to your portfolio include real estate, natural resources and dividend stocks

    • Educational resources

      Offers free financial advice for college planning, retirement and homebuying

    Pros

    • No trade or transfer fees
    • Highly automated investing with portfolios built around your risk tolerance and timeline
    • Daily tax-loss harvesting available to all accounts to help reduce your tax bill
    • High-yield Cash Account earns 3.30% APY base rate (up to 4.20% promotional APY for new clients with direct deposit) with no account fees or minimum balance
    • Offers a cash management account with a debit card and access to 19,000+ fee-free ATMs
    • Path financial planning tool gives personalized projections for retirement, home purchases and college savings
    • Refer a friend and both parties receive $5,000 managed fee-free

    Cons

    • $500 minimum deposit for investment accounts
    • 0.25% annual management fee
    • No access to human financial advisors
    • Tax optimization features (stock-level tax-loss harvesting, smart beta) only available at higher account balances

    Betterment

    • Minimum deposit and balance

      Minimum deposit and balance requirements may vary depending on the investment vehicle selected. For example, Betterment doesn’t require clients to maintain a minimum investment account balance, but there is a ACH deposit minimum of $10. Premium Investing requires a $100,000 minimum balance.

    • Fees

      Fees may vary depending on the investment vehicle selected, account balances, etc. Base price is $5/month for investing accounts; automatically switches to 0.25% annually once you reach $24,000 in total balance or set up $200/month in recurring deposits. Premium plan is 0.65% annually.

    • Investment vehicles

    • Investment options

      Stocks, bonds, ETFs and cash

    • Educational resources

      Betterment’s resources hub offers expert-written guides on investing basics, retirement planning and personal finance that are designed to help investors at every level make more informed decisions.

    Terms apply. Does not apply to crypto asset portfolios.

    Pros

    • No trade or transfer fees
    • Automated investing with portfolios built around your financial goals, timeline and risk tolerance
    • Assign specific goals to each portfolio and invest using different strategies
    • Quick and easy account setup with the ability to sync external retirement accounts
    • Advanced features include automatic rebalancing, tax-loss harvesting and socially responsible investing
    • Premium plan users ($100,000 minimum) get unlimited access to certified financial planners (CFPs)

    Cons

    • $5/month fee for investing accounts (switches to 0.25% annually once you hit $200/month in recurring deposits or $24,000 in total balance)
    • Premium plan requires a $100,000 minimum balance

    FAQs

    How much is the average Social Security check?

    The average monthly Social Security retirement benefit is approximately $2,083 per month, as of May 2026.

    When can I start collecting Social Security?

    You can begin claiming Social Security at 62, but your benefits will be reduced each year you get a check before you reach Full Retirement Age (FRA). For people born in 1959, the FRA is 66 and 10 months. For anyone born in 1960 or later, it’s 67.

    What’s the most you can collect in Social Security benefits?

    Individual benefits depend on your lifelong earnings and the age and year you retire. If you earned the maximum income subject to the Social Security tax for your entire working life and started claiming benefits at age 70, the most you could receive would be $5,181 per month.

    Subscribe to the CNBC Select Newsletter!

    The CNBC Select Recommends newsletter delivers practical money tips each week along with expert-picked financial product recommendations. Sign up here.

    Why trust CNBC Select?

    At CNBC Select, our mission is to provide our readers with high-quality service journalism and comprehensive consumer advice so they can make informed decisions with their money. Every personal finance article is based on rigorous reporting by our team of expert writers and editors with extensive knowledge of financial products. While CNBC Select earns a commission from affiliate partners on many offers and links, we create all our content without input from our commercial team or any outside third parties, and we pride ourselves on our journalistic standards and ethics.

    Catch up on Select’s in-depth coverage of personal finance, tech and tools, wellness and more, and follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter to stay up to date.

    Editorial Note: Opinions, analyses, reviews or recommendations expressed in this article are those of the Select editorial staff’s alone, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any third party.

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