You'll generally hear that the monthly Social Security benefit you lock in based on your filing age will be the same amount you collect for life. For this reason, it's important to sign up at the right time.
But the truth is that your monthly benefit is never truly locked in, because each year, Social Security recipients are eligible for an automatic cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). So you might, for example, start out with a monthly benefit of $2,000, only to see it increase to $2,050 the next year, $2,120 the year after that, and so forth.
In 2025, Social Security benefits are eligible for a 2.5% COLA. But unfortunately, most recipients aren't exactly jumping for joy over that news.
A 2.5% COLA is the smallest Social Security increase to arrive in years. So it's natural that seniors aren't thrilled about it. But while you may be inclined to think of a 2.5% COLA as a bad thing, there's a silver lining you should know about.
By itself, Social Security's 2025 COLA isn't terrible. A 2.5% raise is by no means the smallest increase benefits have ever seen.
What's making matters a bit worse is that the cost of Medicare Part B is rising substantially in 2025. Seniors enrolled in both Social Security and Medicare have their monthly Part B premiums deducted from their benefits off the bat. A roughly $10 increase in the cost of Part B will leave many seniors with even less money in their pockets after all is said and done.
You may not love the idea of your monthly Social Security checks only rising by 2.5% at a time when Medicare is going to cost you more. But one thing to remember is that Social Security COLAs are directly tied to inflation. So a less generous COLA in 2025 is a clear indication that the pace of inflation is slowing down.
Now, one misconception about cooling inflation is that it means that goods and services are getting cheaper. That's not necessarily the case.
Rather, what it means is that the cost of goods and services is increasing at a slower pace than what we've seen in recent years. And that could mean a world of financial relief.
In 2022 and 2023, many seniors on Social Security struggled to keep up with surging bills. In 2025, costs are expected to rise at a much slower pace. This means that even with just a 2.5% COLA, Social Security recipients may not end up losing out on so much buying power.
Put another way, at the start of 2024, Social Security beneficiaries got a 3.2% COLA. But inflation was also higher going into 2024 than it is going into 2025. So all told, a 2.5% COLA in 2025 might have the same buying power as a 3.2% raise in 2024.
In fact, that's the thing about COLAs: They're not designed to help seniors get ahead of inflation. Their goal is to merely keep up with it.
A 2.5% Social Security raise in 2025 is poised to do just that. And when you think about it in this light, that's not really something to get upset about.
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