Washington, July 14, 2026, 11:09 (EDT). Odds for a 3.8% Social Security COLA in 2027 fell after June’s CPI decline.
June’s steep drop in inflation offered some relief to bond and stock investors, but it also put a 3.8% Social Security COLA for 2027 out of easier reach. The CPI-W index, which feeds into the benefit calculation, dropped 0.5% for the month to 327.075. If that level holds through Q3, the COLA would be closer to 3.1% than to 3.8%. The difference is what matters now.
Social Security checks the average CPI-W for July, August and September against last year’s Q3 average of 317.265 in 2025. June numbers don’t count. For a 3.8% increase, the Q3 average needs to hit 329.321, which is about 0.69% higher than June. The previous 4.7% “high case” needs 332.176, up 1.56% from June. The timing of these months matters. Social Security
CPI slid 0.4% in June, the biggest drop since April 2020. Annual inflation came in at 3.5%, down from 4.2%. Energy fell 5.7%, and gasoline prices dropped 9.7%. Core CPI was flat. Stocks jumped on the news. Two-year Treasury yields slipped seven basis points to 4.189%. The same move in energy took pressure off rate hike bets and cooled the short-term COLA pace.
The Social Security Administration issued $138.058 billion in benefits in June. With that steady monthly payout, each 0.1 percentage point change in COLA equals about $1.66 billion extra on an annualized basis. A 3.8% COLA would add $11.6 billion a year compared to June’s levels, while a 4.7% bump would add nearly $26.5 billion. For investors, that’s a notable swing in federal spending and cash into households.
| 2027 COLA scenario | Third-quarter CPI-W level | Annualized benefit increase on June run rate | Difference from 3.1% case |
|---|---|---|---|
| If June stays flat, COLA comes out at 3.1% | 327.075 | $51.4 billion | — |
| TSCL projection, 3.8% | 329.321 | $63.0 billion | $11.6 billion |
| Previous high from analysts, 4.7% | 332.176 | $77.9 billion | $26.5 billion |
Numbers are based on the present Social Security benefit base and leave out SSI, with no adjustment for shifts in beneficiary counts before 2027. The official figure is rounded to a single decimal.
The Senior Citizens League said Tuesday it’s holding its model cost-of-living adjustment forecast at 3.8%, matching June. The group said that figure would increase the average benefit for all recipients by $73.62, moving from $1,937.53 to $2,011.15 if applied today. Their model includes interest rates and unemployment in the calculation, not just the latest CPI-W data. The forecast is wider than a basic straight-line math.
The average benefit for retired workers is now $2,084.40 per month, so some estimates put the likely bump at almost $79. Medicare trustees expect the standard Part B premium will go up $6.60 to $209.50 in 2027, though CMS will make the final call later this year. Retirees on the standard premium could see the COLA headline figure outpace what actually hits their bank accounts.
| COLA scenario | Gross monthly boost on $2,084.40 benefit | Expected Part B hike | Net monthly change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.1% | $64.62 | $6.60 | $58.02 |
| 3.8% | $79.21 | $6.60 | $72.61 |
| 4.7% | $97.97 | $6.60 | $91.37 |
Numbers are for example only and do not include taxes, Medicare surcharges linked to income, or other personal changes.
Analysts were looking for a COLA range of 3.8% to 4.7% ahead of Tuesday’s CPI numbers, with July flagged as the starting point for the Social Security calculation. Mary Johnson, an independent Social Security analyst, saw “a considerable likelihood” her 4.7% call could go higher as more gas price data came in. But June’s gasoline prices dropped, so the higher estimate now leans on a rebound in prices later in the quarter. The numbers so far haven’t supported that. Yahoo Finance
But June’s dip might not last. Gasoline was already climbing again in July as tensions rose in the Middle East, and Skyler Weinand, chief investment officer at Regan Capital, said inflation from the war “may just be a temporary relief.” With June outside the official calculation window, a July bounce could still bring the 3.8% forecast back into play. The market wants to see real evidence. Reuters
July CPI-W comes out August 12. August data follows September 11, with September figures due October 14, which is when the official adjustment gets calculated. For now, 3.8% is just an estimate, not a set payment, until the first Q3 read lands. The key figure now is the $11.6 billion annualized gap.