Washington, May 11, 2026, 08:05 EDT
Social Security’s first major May 2026 payout lands Wednesday, May 13, targeting beneficiaries born between the 1st and the 10th. That marks the initial main Wednesday deposit this month for a wide range of retirement, disability, and survivor recipients. According to the Social Security Administration, the upcoming payment dates are set for May 20 and May 27.
Timing’s key here: those checks are a big deal for U.S. households. In April, 75.488 million people were getting either Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, or both, SSA data show—71.077 million of them received Social Security benefits. Average monthly payments? Retired workers saw $2,081.16, disabled workers took home $1,634.70, and survivor benefits averaged out at $1,625.56.
Payments go out based on birth dates: those born from the 1st to the 10th get theirs on the month’s second Wednesday; the 11th through 20th land on the third Wednesday; birthdays from the 21st to 31st see checks on the fourth Wednesday. If you’re collecting off someone else’s work record—say, a spouse or survivor claim—the pay date tracks the worker’s birthday, not yours.
But not everyone fits the standard timeline. Folks who started getting Social Security checks before May 1997, anyone collecting both Social Security and SSI, certain recipients overseas, and people whose Medicare premiums are covered by their state all landed in the May 1 payment batch.
June’s payment calendar is locked in: SSI hits on June 1, with the exception group following on June 3. The standard Social Security payouts go June 10 for those born the 1st through 10th, June 17 if your birthday falls from the 11th to 20th, and June 24 for anyone with a birth date from the 21st to 31st.
This year, Social Security checks get a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment—COLA—tied to inflation. The SSA confirms the hike covers Social Security and SSI payments, reaching 75 million Americans. For retirees, the average monthly benefit climbs to $2,071 in January with the boost.
The top-line boost doesn’t always show up in full on beneficiaries’ statements. Medicare Part B—the piece that pays for outpatient visits and doctors—moves up to a $202.90 monthly standard premium in 2026, an increase of $17.90 over 2025. For many, that’s automatically pulled from their Social Security checks.
AARP’s Myechia Minter-Jordan described the COLA as a “lifeline of independence and dignity,” though she noted many older adults continue to struggle with day-to-day expenses. SSA Commissioner Frank Bisignano said the adjustment aims to keep benefits aligned with the current economy. Emerson Sprick at the Bipartisan Policy Center cautioned that cost-of-living hikes “can’t solve all” issues facing households or the program. AP News
Congress is still the big question mark for the long run. According to the 2025 trustees’ summary, the combined Social Security trust funds should be able to pay full benefits through 2034. After that, unless lawmakers step in, incoming funds would only cover about 81% of promised benefits.
If a payment doesn’t show up, SSA’s official schedule says recipients should wait three more mailing days before reaching out. That guidance goes for direct deposits, too—a bank delay might make a benefit seem missing at first.