Current:Home > MarketsSocial Security is boosting benefits in 2024. Here's when you'll get your cost-of-living increase. -Thrive Financial Network
Social Security is boosting benefits in 2024. Here's when you'll get your cost-of-living increase.
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:21:28
The nation's 72 million Social Security recipients are just days away from getting a boost to their monthly benefits.
The 2024 cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, has been set for a 3.2% bump — the smallest increase in three years. That's because the Social Security Administration bases its annual adjustment on the inflation rate, which has been rapidly cooling.
By comparison, recipients in 2023 received a historic 8.7% increase to keep up with the hottest inflation in four decades.
Even though the new COLA increase will take effect with the December benefits, those payments will reach most recipients in January, according to the Social Security Administration. With the increase, the average benefit check will increase $49, rising to $1,907 from this year's $1,858, the agency said.
Here's when Social Security beneficiaries will see the higher amounts in their monthly checks.
COLA 2024: Social Security payment dates
The new COLA will go into effect in January for most Social Security recipients, with the notable exception of Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients, who will receive their payments early this year, according to the agency's calendar.
- Dec. 29, 2023: The benefits hike for the nation's 7.5 million SSI recipients will begin on this day. Typically, SSI payments are issued on the first of each month, but because January 1 is a holiday, recipients will get their payments on the Friday before January 1.
- Jan. 3, 2024: If you started claiming Social Security before May 1997 or if get both Social Security and SSI benefits, you'll get the new COLA in a Dec. 29, 2023 check and your Social Security payment on January 3.
- Jan. 10, 2024: If your birthday falls between the 1st to the the 10th day of your birth month, this is when you'll get your first benefit check with the new COLA. For instance, if your birthday is June 1, you'll get paid on this day.
- Jan. 17, 2024: If your birthday falls between the 11th to 20th day of your birth month, you'll get your higher payment on this day.
- Jan. 24, 2024: If your birthday falls between the 21st to 31st of your birth month, your benefit check will reflect the new COLA on this day.
How much will I get in my check?
That depends on your current benefit level, which is based on your earnings while working and other factors, such as your age when you first claimed Social Security. Nevertheless, the overall boost should be 3.2% higher than your December check.
However, Social Security began sending letters to recipients in early December to alert them of their new benefit amount. People who have a mySocialSecurity account can log into the site to view their letter online.
Recipients need to have signed up for mySocialSecurity prior to November 14 to be able to see their COLA notice on the site, the agency said.
How does 2024's COLA compare with prior years?
2024's benefit increase is higher than most years, but still lower than what seniors received in 2022 and 2023. Here are COLAs over the last decade:
- January 2014: 1.5%
- January 2015: 1.7%
- January 2016: 0.0%
- January 2017: 0.3%
- January 2018: 2.0%
- January 2019: 2.8%
- January 2020: 1.6%
- January 2021: 1.3%
- January 2022: 5.9%
- January 2023: 8.7%
- January 2024: 3.2%
- In:
- Social Security
Aimee Picchi is the associate managing editor for CBS MoneyWatch, where she covers business and personal finance. She previously worked at Bloomberg News and has written for national news outlets including USA Today and Consumer Reports.
TwitterveryGood! (61587)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Rangers win ALDS Game 1 thanks to Evan Carter's dream October, Bruce Bochy's steady hand
- A man was given a 72-year-old egg with a message on it. Social media users helped him find the writer.
- Six basketball blue bloods have made AP Top 25 history ... in the college football poll
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Americans reported $2.7 billion in losses from scams on social media, FTC says
- Should the next House speaker work across the aisle? Be loyal to Trump?
- Florida man, sons sentenced to years in prison after being convicted of selling bleach as fake COVID-19 cure
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- AJ Allmedinger wins at Charlotte; Kyle Busch, Bubba Wallace eliminated from NASCAR playoffs
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Banned in Iran, a filmmaker finds inspiration in her mother for 'The Persian Version'
- Sophie Turner Makes a Bold Fashion Statement Amid Joe Jonas Divorce and Outings With Taylor Swift
- Timeline of surprise rocket attack by Hamas on Israel
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Simone Biles finishes with four golds at 2023 Gymnastics World Championships
- What we know about the Hamas attack on Israel, and Israel's response in Gaza
- ‘Without water, there is no life’: Drought in Brazil’s Amazon is sharpening fears for the future
Recommendation
The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
9 rapes reported in one year at U.K. army's youth training center
Man arrested over alleged plot to kidnap and murder popular British TV host Holly Willoughby
What was the Yom Kippur War? Why Saturday surprise attack on Israel is reminiscent of 1973
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Israeli hostage crisis in Hamas-ruled Gaza becomes a political trap for Netanyahu
Powerful earthquakes kill at least 2,000 in Afghanistan
Schools’ pandemic spending boosted tech companies. Did it help US students?