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Social Security COLA set to fall again as seniors feel the pinch

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The cost-of-living adjustment for Social Security benefits is expected to drop in 2026, intensifying the financial burden on seniors who say that Social Security adjustments are already inadequate.

Annual cost-of-living adjustments, known as COLAs, can make or break budgets for many seniors who rely on Social Security benefits. In 2025, beneficiaries saw their benefits increase 2.5% to adjust for inflation — a roughly $50 increase in monthly benefits on average.

As inflation cools, the agency is projected to issue a lower cost-of-living adjustment of 2.2% for 2026, according to new estimates from The Senior Citizens League, a nonprofit senior group.

Over the past 50 years, Social Security benefits have been adjusted annually in relation to CPI-W, a measure of inflation that looks at a basket of expenses for urban wage earners and clerical workers. Although Social Security is tied to a direct measure of inflation, financial advisors say that seniors still feel their benefits lag behind the economic reality.

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“For those that are in their retirement ages, the COLA does not represent the true cost of many staples that seniors need to live on including food, gas, rent, insurance and energy,” said John Bell, founder of Free State Financial Planning in Highland, Maryland. “Those are non-negotiable costs that have gone up dramatically over the last five years and are not reflected accurately in the CPI-W.”

One non-negotiable cost many advisors point to is Medicare Part B premiums. According to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Part B premiums increased at more than twice the rate of Social Security’s COLA in 2025, with premiums up 5.9%. Because Part B premiums are commonly deducted from Social Security checks, that discrepancy can lead to beneficiaries seeing smaller monthly checks even after cost-of-living increases.

Rising premiums aren’t limited to Medicare. Noah Damsky, founder of Marina Wealth Advisors in Los Angeles, said that one of his clients was “furious” to see their home insurance premium increasing by 20%.

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“COLA adjustments are completely out of touch,” Damsky said. “We see costs increasing by far more than a few percent per year. With local minimum wage jumping to $20 per hour, insurance costs skyrocketing, stubborn gas prices, housing prices and mortgage-related [expenses] remaining elevated, costs are rising much faster than SSI [Supplemental Security Income] COLA adjustments.”


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