Today: 26 June 2026
Social Security checks may see biggest increase in years, but there’s a catch
3 June 2026
2 mins read

Social Security checks may see biggest increase in years, but there’s a catch

Washington, June 2, 2026, 19:08 EDT

  • Preliminary estimates see the 2027 Social Security cost-of-living adjustment coming in close to 4%, topping the 2.8% bump scheduled for 2026.
  • Gasoline and energy costs are driving the higher projections.
  • The official figure is still months out. It will hinge on CPI-W inflation for the third quarter.

Social Security’s cost-of-living adjustment could rise close to 4% next year, according to early estimates, putting millions of retirees in line for the biggest boost since 2023. The Senior Citizens League says its model shows a 3.9% COLA for 2027. Independent analyst Mary Johnson puts her forecast at 4.2%.

Inflation data is rising fast just as the three-month window opens that will set the new cost-of-living adjustment for Social Security. The annual COLA aims to stop benefits from falling behind price increases. The Social Security Administration uses the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, the CPI-W, to figure the number.

Big numbers are in play. Social Security sent out payments to 71.1 million people in April, SSA data said, with 54.3 million retired workers getting checks averaging $2,081.16 a month. TSCL is projecting a 3.9% bump, which would add $81.17 to the average check, putting it at $2,162.33 for retired workers.

CPI-U climbed 3.8% in the year to April, up from a 3.3% rise in March, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said. Energy drove the gains, with the energy index up 17.9% and gasoline up 28.4% from last year. CPI-W, the index used to calculate Social Security adjustments, gained 3.9% over the same period.

Gas prices have come down some but are still high. AAA said the national average for regular was $4.290 a gallon on June 2. That’s down from $4.491 last week, and up from $3.142 a year back. The EIA figures via St. Louis Fed had regular gas at $4.305 for the week ended June 1.

Recent personal-finance coverage has called the move a possible silver lining from higher prices rather than a true windfall. The Motley Fool wrote that higher third-quarter inflation may push up the COLA, while Inc. and Fast Company said the expected bump might still fall short of covering basics like housing, groceries, or Medicare.

Shannon Benton, executive director at TSCL, said retirees living on fixed incomes are getting hit by the prices that matter most to older people. “Life still does not feel affordable,” Benton said. She added a lot of seniors report they’re “falling farther and farther behind.” The Senior Citizens League

Johnson said “massive jumps” in oil prices are hitting older and disabled Americans on Social Security hard. She mentioned price gains for heating oil, coffee, and fresh vegetables, saying that price pressure has moved beyond just the pump. Money

But the figure could change. The SSA sets the COLA using average CPI-W from July through September, measuring it against the same period last year, so inflation from the year’s first half isn’t part of the final decision. May’s CPI report comes out June 10. SSA is expected to announce the official 2027 COLA in October.

Downside here is simple: if gasoline prices keep dropping or supply fears cool, the final COLA might end up under the current forecasts. On June 1, Reuters said U.S. gasoline inventories had dropped for 15 weeks in a row. Reuters also noted a real Middle East peace could keep a lid on prices, but if fighting resumes, fuel prices might climb again.

A 4% COLA would remain far under the 8.7% boost paid in 2023, which was the biggest jump since the pandemic kicked off inflation. It would still come in above the 3.2% for 2024 and above the 2.5% expected in 2025 and 2.8% for 2026, based on SSA’s COLA records.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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