Social Security’s trustees moved up their projection again this year: the trust fund that pays retirement benefits is now expected to run dry in late 2032, a full year earlier than last year’s estimate. On a combined basis with the disability fund, insolvency arrives in 2034. This sounds like a countdown to zero, but it isn’t.
Here is what “depletion” actually means. Social Security runs primarily on payroll taxes from today’s workers. The trust fund is the reserve that covers the gap between the two. When that reserve is exhausted, the program does not stop. Incoming payroll taxes still cover roughly 78% of scheduled benefits. The shortfall is real, but it is a 22% reduction, not a shutdown.
Why the Date Keeps Moving
Several forces are compressing the timeline. The population is aging, and the baby boom generation is now drawing benefits in full. Birth rates have fallen and stayed low, which means fewer future workers paying in. Immigration has slowed, shrinking the contributing workforce further.
A meaningful share of the latest acceleration traces to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed last summer. It did not exempt Social Security benefits from tax. What it did was create a temporary bonus deduction for taxpayers 65 and older – up to $6,000 per person, phasing out at higher incomes – that lowers taxable income enough to push many seniors below the thresholds where benefits get taxed at all. The practical effect is the same either way: less income tax collected on benefits, and since that revenue flows back into the trust fund, less money coming in. The program’s chief actuary flagged exactly this in a 2025 analysis, and this year’s trustees report reflects it.
What Congress Can Do To Restore Benefits
Lawmakers have a familiar menu, and every option reduces to the same arithmetic: bring in more revenue, or pay out less. They can raise the payroll tax rate, or lift the cap on the wages subject to it. They can gradually raise the full retirement age. They can change how initial benefits are calculated, particularly for higher earners, or tax a larger share of benefits. Congress can also borrow to bridge the gap. Most serious proposals combine several of these mechanisms.
This has been done before. In 1983, with insolvency only months away, Congress passed bipartisan reform that paired tax increases with benefit changes and bought the program four decades. The tools work, but what is missing is urgency as well as the political will to use them before a deadline forces the issue.
A program that, by Social Security’s own count, pays benefits to nearly 70 million Americans and sends out $1.6 trillion a year does not get quietly dismantled. Expect Social Security to be a defining issue in the 2028 and 2032 elections. The likeliest outcome is not collapse but compromise — probably late, probably uncomfortable, but a fix nonetheless.
The Mistake to Avoid Right Now
This is where the anxiety becomes expensive. Early claims have been rising, driven largely by the fear that benefits will be cut or disappear. The instinct is understandable: lock in payments now, before something changes. But for most people, this is the wrong move.
Claiming at 62, the earliest age of eligibility, instead of waiting until 70 can permanently reduce a monthly benefit by roughly 44%. That reduction lasts the rest of your life and it applies to an inflation-adjusted, government-backed income stream you cannot easily replace anywhere else. Waiting does the opposite: the benefit grows every month you delay, up to age 70. Put plainly, delaying is longevity insurance. The longer you live, the more it pays.
And the logic of claiming early to “beat the cut” does not hold. Any future reduction would apply whether you filed early or late. Claiming early in a panic does not shield you from anything – it simply locks in a smaller number first.
There are exceptions. If health or life expectancy is genuinely compromised, claiming early can be the right call. Married couples also have room to plan: sometimes the lower-earning spouse claims earlier while the higher earner delays, maximizing the household’s combined benefit and survivor protection. These are deliberate strategies as opposed to reactions to a headline.
The Bottom Line
Social Security faces a real and growing shortfall. It is not, however, vanishing. The right response to uncertainty is planning, not panic, because panic is what drives people to file early and leave money on the table.
Before making any decision about when to claim, talk it through with your Wealth Manager. The right timing depends on your health, your spouse, your other assets, and your income needs rather than the news cycle.
Weekly Commentary
Is Social Security Running Out?
Mallon FitzPatrick
Social Security’s trustees moved up their projection again this year: the trust fund that pays retirement benefits is now expected to run dry in late 2032, a full year earlier than last year’s estimate. On a combined basis with the disability fund, insolvency arrives in 2034. This sounds like a countdown to zero, but it isn’t.
Here is what “depletion” actually means. Social Security runs primarily on payroll taxes from today’s workers. The trust fund is the reserve that covers the gap between the two. When that reserve is exhausted, the program does not stop. Incoming payroll taxes still cover roughly 78% of scheduled benefits. The shortfall is real, but it is a 22% reduction, not a shutdown.
Why the Date Keeps Moving
Several forces are compressing the timeline. The population is aging, and the baby boom generation is now drawing benefits in full. Birth rates have fallen and stayed low, which means fewer future workers paying in. Immigration has slowed, shrinking the contributing workforce further.
A meaningful share of the latest acceleration traces to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed last summer. It did not exempt Social Security benefits from tax. What it did was create a temporary bonus deduction for taxpayers 65 and older – up to $6,000 per person, phasing out at higher incomes – that lowers taxable income enough to push many seniors below the thresholds where benefits get taxed at all. The practical effect is the same either way: less income tax collected on benefits, and since that revenue flows back into the trust fund, less money coming in. The program’s chief actuary flagged exactly this in a 2025 analysis, and this year’s trustees report reflects it.
What Congress Can Do To Restore Benefits
Lawmakers have a familiar menu, and every option reduces to the same arithmetic: bring in more revenue, or pay out less. They can raise the payroll tax rate, or lift the cap on the wages subject to it. They can gradually raise the full retirement age. They can change how initial benefits are calculated, particularly for higher earners, or tax a larger share of benefits. Congress can also borrow to bridge the gap. Most serious proposals combine several of these mechanisms.
This has been done before. In 1983, with insolvency only months away, Congress passed bipartisan reform that paired tax increases with benefit changes and bought the program four decades. The tools work, but what is missing is urgency as well as the political will to use them before a deadline forces the issue.
A program that, by Social Security’s own count, pays benefits to nearly 70 million Americans and sends out $1.6 trillion a year does not get quietly dismantled. Expect Social Security to be a defining issue in the 2028 and 2032 elections. The likeliest outcome is not collapse but compromise — probably late, probably uncomfortable, but a fix nonetheless.
The Mistake to Avoid Right Now
This is where the anxiety becomes expensive. Early claims have been rising, driven largely by the fear that benefits will be cut or disappear. The instinct is understandable: lock in payments now, before something changes. But for most people, this is the wrong move.
Claiming at 62, the earliest age of eligibility, instead of waiting until 70 can permanently reduce a monthly benefit by roughly 44%. That reduction lasts the rest of your life and it applies to an inflation-adjusted, government-backed income stream you cannot easily replace anywhere else. Waiting does the opposite: the benefit grows every month you delay, up to age 70. Put plainly, delaying is longevity insurance. The longer you live, the more it pays.
And the logic of claiming early to “beat the cut” does not hold. Any future reduction would apply whether you filed early or late. Claiming early in a panic does not shield you from anything – it simply locks in a smaller number first.
There are exceptions. If health or life expectancy is genuinely compromised, claiming early can be the right call. Married couples also have room to plan: sometimes the lower-earning spouse claims earlier while the higher earner delays, maximizing the household’s combined benefit and survivor protection. These are deliberate strategies as opposed to reactions to a headline.
The Bottom Line
Social Security faces a real and growing shortfall. It is not, however, vanishing. The right response to uncertainty is planning, not panic, because panic is what drives people to file early and leave money on the table.
Before making any decision about when to claim, talk it through with your Wealth Manager. The right timing depends on your health, your spouse, your other assets, and your income needs rather than the news cycle.
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