Washington, April 19, 2026, 14:40 EDT
Social Security’s 2027 cost-of-living adjustment is still tracking at 2.8%, unchanged from this year, despite March inflation coming in hot and nudging a competing projection upward. The Senior Citizens League calculates that a 2.8% COLA translates to roughly $56.69 more each month for average retirees.
The figure is key: COLA, the yearly inflation-based bump, is the primary pay raise for a lot of older Americans. Social Security Administration data puts the March tally at 70.9 million beneficiaries, with retired workers accounting for 54.1 million of them. The typical monthly check for a retired worker? $2,079.49.
The actual 2027 number won’t be known for months. Under federal rules, Social Security waits for the third-quarter average of the CPI-W—the Labor Department’s inflation tracker for urban wage earners and clerical staff—before making its official call. The announcement comes each October, after collecting inflation data from July, August, and September.
But March took things in a different direction. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, CPI-W posted a 3.3% year-over-year increase, and rose 1.3% from February before seasonal adjustment. Gasoline prices surged 21.2% in March; energy overall was up 10.9%.
Forecasters remain divided. TSCL stuck with its 2.8% estimate for 2027. Independent analyst Mary Johnson, who covers Social Security and Medicare, bumped her projection up to 3.2%—a jump from her 1.7% figure just last month. She described the March report as “the tip of the inflation iceberg” in separate remarks. The Motley Fool
Shannon Benton, executive director at TSCL, called the current COLA outlook a real concern for Americans, and pointed out that seniors typically live on just 58% of what working-age households bring in. TSCL’s model factors in unemployment and interest rates alongside CPI data.
A 2.8% bump would match the official 2026 COLA figure. According to SSA, the adjustment for 2025 was 2.5%, following a 3.2% cost-of-living hike in 2024. Back in 2023, beneficiaries saw an 8.7% spike, reflecting the previous run-up in inflation.
The outlook is anything but clear. Should energy prices ease ahead of the third quarter, the ultimate COLA might align with TSCL’s projection—or even come in below it. But if March’s jump lingers into summer, Johnson’s higher number gets more plausible. That’s tied to how the COLA formula leans on July-to-September CPI-W, and it explains the difference between those two predictions.
Even with a bigger COLA, retirees don’t end up ahead. Because the adjustment lags, households face higher prices first—benefits catch up later. Shelter costs climbed 3.0% and medical care rose 3.1% in the past year, according to BLS data. Retiree groups argue older Americans feel the impact more, since necessities like housing and groceries eat up a larger slice of their budgets.
April CPI numbers are on deck from BLS at 8:30 a.m. ET May 12. After that, the 2027 COLA stays up in the air until summer inflation figures land.