
Social Security Is Running Out of Money: What To Know
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
The trust funds that help pay Social Security benefits to millions of Americans are due to run out of money in less than a decade.
In an annual report released on Wednesday, trustees of the Social Security Administration (SSA) have said retirement benefit funds could be depleted by 2034, unchanged from last year's prediction, while disability funds will remain solvent until 2099.
Social Security forms the backbone of retirement security for tens of millions of Americans, with the Social Security Administration (SSA) distributing monthly checks to some 70 million people.
Here is everything you need to know about the report, and what it means for the future of your benefits.
What Are the Trust Funds?
There are two main sources that help pay benefits. These are the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) Trust Fund, which pays for retirement, spousal and survivor benefits, and the Disability Insurance (DI) Trust Fund, which endows programs like Supplemental Security Income (SSI) for disabled Americans.
The majority of benefit payments are funded by payroll taxes, income tax on Social Security benefits, and interest on trust-fund reserves; this is set at a rate of 6.2 percent for employees and companies, and 12.4 percent for self employed workers, up to the current threshold of $176,100 in earnings per year.
These funds are distinct and legally separate, but are often combined as "OASDI," to reflect the financial health of Social Security. When put together, the total funds that pay benefits are now expected to be depleted in 2034—a year earlier than previously expected.
Stock image/file photo: A Social Security card rests with U.S. dollars.
Stock image/file photo: A Social Security card rests with U.S. dollars.
GETTY
What Happens When the Trust Funds Run Out?
The report outlines that, if nothing is done to shore up the funds, from 2033 onward, retirement, spousal, and survivor benefits will be payable only at 77 percent of current rates.
When combined, benefits would be reduced to 81 percent of current rates starting in 2034—a year earlier than previously thought.
Why Are Trust Funds Running Out?
The long-term outlook for the combined Social Security trust fund worsened this year due to three main factors, according to the trustees report.
First, the repeal of the Windfall Elimination Provision and Government Pension Offset, implemented by the passing of the Social Security Fairness Act in January, increased benefits for some workers, accelerating the fund's depletion.
Second, the expected recovery in fertility rates was delayed by 10 years, now assumed to reach normal levels by 2050. In recent years, Social Security has faced paying out more benefits to older Americans while the pool of workers paying taxes is depleting, and fertility rates have also dropped, contributing to the problem.
Wednesday's report still projects that the U.S. fertility rate will eventually rise to 1.9 children per woman, up from the current rate of 1.6. However, trustees now expect this shift to happen by 2050—10 years later than previously predicted.
Third, projections for the share of gross domestic product (GDP) going to worker wages were lowered, reducing expected payroll tax revenue, according to the report.
How Can It Be Fixed?
Improving the funding outlook for Social Security benefits requires action from lawmakers.
This is not an unfamiliar situation—the trust funds faced insolvency back in the early 1980s. Following an act of Congress, a range of changes were made to how Social Security is funded, including accelerating payroll tax increases, gradually raising the retirement age, and making a portion of Social Security benefits taxable.
More changes are being considered as the threat of insolvency looms again. Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and Representative Brendan Boyle of Pennsylvania, both Democrats, recently reintroduced the Medicare & Social Security Fair Share Act, which would impose payroll taxes on wages and investment income above $400,000.
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has made similar proposals, albeit implementing payroll taxes on income above $250,000. He has also advocated for officially combining OASI and DI funds.
Republicans, on the other hand, have supported the raising of the retirement age. In March 2024, prior to the presidential election, the Republican Study Committee, comprising 170 GOP lawmakers, published a budget proposal that would include "modest adjustments to the retirement age for future retirees to account for increases in life expectancy" to tackle the solvency issue.
Social Security advocacy groups have called for lawmakers to prioritize taking action.
"It is time to enact common-sense legislation to bring more revenue into Social Security," Max Richtman, president and CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, said in a statement emailed to Newsweek. "Current and future seniors (nearly 50 percent of whom rely on their benefits for all or most of their income)—should not be asked to bear the cost of improving the program's finances."
"This report shows that Social Security is fully affordable, costing only about 6 percent of GDP at the end of the 21st century," Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works, said. "It has a modest funding shortfall, which is still years away. There is no question Congress will act to avert the shortfall, as it always has in the past. The question is what Congress will do."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
8 minutes ago
- The Hill
Former ambassador to EU: 15 percent tariff can be baked into profit margins
President Trump's first-term ambassador to the European Union, Gordon Sondland, brushed off concerns on Sunday about higher prices for Americans following news of the U.S.-EU trade deal, which set tariffs at 15 percent on European goods. In an interview with CNN's Jessica Dean, Sondland was asked to respond to folks who see the 15 percent tariff on imported goods and are worried that, for example, their perfume bottles from France will now be 15 percent more expensive. He said Americans might initially see higher prices, but they will soon adjust as competition returns to the market. 'At 15 percent, I think consumers will initially pay, but I also think that this will be baked into the profit margins — or a reduction of the profit margins — on a lot of these products, because the market will start to pull prices back down again as there's more competition,' he said. Sondland said a 15 percent rate will generate enough revenue to make a dent in the reduction of the annual deficit. 'I think at a 15 percent tariff, it's enough to generate. If everything that we imported bore a 15 percent tariff, that would generate about $450 billion for the United States Treasury, which would make an enormous dent in our annual deficit,' Sondland said. 'If the tariff were 30 or 40 or 50 percent, that would be an absolute shutdown, so that wouldn't work. But 10 to 15, I think we can swallow it, and I think it's going to generate a tremendous amount of money if Congress doesn't piss it away on other things,' he added. Trump and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen announced a trade deal on Sunday, setting tariffs at 15 percent for European goods, including automobiles. The European Union will purchase $750 billion worth of energy from the U.S. as part of the deal, Trump announced, and agreed to invest in the U.S. $600 billion more than the current investments for other goods. The agreement is lower than the 30 percent tariff Trump had threatened to impose on the EU, which would have begun on Friday, and avoids a trade war with the U.S.'s largest trading partner.


The Onion
8 minutes ago
- The Onion
Dunkin' Announces They No Longer Have Heart To Charge People For Such Depressing Meals
CANTON, MA—Stressing that whatever garbage they have on their menu couldn't possibly be better than what Americans had at home, Dunkin' officials announced Monday that they no longer have the heart to charge customers money for such horrible, depressing meals. 'While we take pride in our brand's popularity across 43 states, we cannot in good conscience let the public pay for one more completely pathetic sausage-and-cheese croissant,' said Dunkin' CEO David Hoffmann, adding that their greasy, miserable excuse for a breakfast was often sitting out for hours before being carelessly tossed in a microwave and reheated by pressing a button labeled 'egg.' 'There is nothing in this world that can justify having you waste your hard-earned money on Snackin' Bacon. When you purchase a Wake-Up Wrap, it just feels like we're preying on on someone who has reached rock bottom. Please stop buying our food. You deserve better.' At press time, Hoffmann reportedly urged anyone considering ordering a distressing Dunkin' meal to just put their credit card away and take it for free.


Hamilton Spectator
22 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Eleos Deepens Post-Acute Care Mission with Home Health, Palliative, and Hospice Care Expansion
CHICAGO and BOSTON, July 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Eleos Health, the market leader in AI for behavioral health, announced its expansion deeper into post-acute care, bringing its trusted, purpose-built AI platform to home health, palliative care and hospice settings. At the 2025 National Alliance for Care at Home Financial Summit on July 28 in Chicago, Eleos will showcase how AI can ease documentation burdens, ensure compliance and improve care quality across the post-acute landscape. By 2034, Americans over the age of 65+ will outnumber children 18 and under. The U.S. home hospice market alone is estimated to reach over $75 billion by 2032. The already heavy documentation burden for in-home care providers will explode as these demographic trends continue unless providers can access innovative tools and solutions. Eleos is trusted by leading behavioral health organizations and care systems across the United States. Its AI-powered platform is designed to work seamlessly with providers' existing workflows — including their preferred EMRs — ensuring zero friction and fast adoption in both clinical and community-based settings. 'Post-acute care providers deliver essential support in deeply human moments,' said Alon Joffe, CEO and Co-founder of Eleos. 'They deserve intelligent tools that make their work easier. Eleos is proud to bring proven purpose-built AI systems to this space, supporting care that's more efficient, compliant and compassionate.' Trusted by Providers, Built for the Field Post-acute providers often face unique barriers: limited time between visits, emotionally complex environments, and growing documentation and compliance demands. Eleos helps them work more efficiently by: Whether following up with a client at home or bedside for hospice care, Eleos empowers post-acute providers to stay present with clients and their families without worrying about quality and billing standards. Proven ROI and Operational Impact Since launching in 2020, Eleos has delivered proven outcomes across its partner organizations, including: By improving efficiency and documentation quality at scale, Eleos helps organizations reduce burnout, minimize delays, confidently prepare for audits and streamline reimbursement cycles. That repeatable ROI — on both the clinical and financial side of care — is essential. Innovative Partners Early Eleos strategic partners in home health, palliative, and hospice are organizations staying ahead of the healthcare AI revolution and regulatory shifts while prioritizing provider needs and exceptional patient care. Partners receive early access to tailored functionality, close collaboration with Eleos' product and clinical teams, and the opportunity to shape how purpose-built AI reimagines the post-acute care space. To meet Eleos at the Care at Home Financial Summit or explore a partnership, contact Isaac Greszes at isaacg@ or sign up for a meeting here . About Eleos At Eleos, we believe the path to better healthcare is paved with provider-focused technology. Our purpose-built AI platform streamlines documentation, simplifies compliance and surfaces deep care insights to drive better client outcomes. Created using real-world care sessions and fine-tuned by our in-house clinical experts, our AI tools are scientifically proven to reduce documentation time by more than 70% and boost client engagement by 2x. With Eleos, providers are free to focus less on administrative tasks and more on what got them into this field in the first place: caring for their clients.