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Medicare

Social Security COLA 2026: Your $56 Raise Is Already Being Eaten by Medicare

By Margaret Collins
April 20, 2026 3 Min Read
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Millions of seniors celebrated when the Social Security Administration announced a 2.8% Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) for 2026. For the average retiree, that translated to about $56 more per month. But here’s what the headlines didn’t tell you: $17.90 of that raise is already gone — taken directly by the Medicare Part B premium increase before you see a single cent.

Your real net gain? About $38 per month. And for many seniors, that won’t come close to keeping up with inflation.

What Is the COLA and How Is It Calculated?

The Cost-of-Living Adjustment is an annual increase tied to the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). Every October, the SSA measures inflation from the third quarter of the prior year and announces the following year’s COLA.

For 2026, that figure came in at 2.8% — down from 3.2% in 2025 and significantly lower than the 8.7% peak COLA in 2023. The adjustment affects nearly 71 million Americans who receive Social Security or SSI benefits.

The Real Numbers: What You Actually Take Home

Benefit TypeAverage 2025Average 2026Change
Retired Worker$2,015/mo$2,071/mo+$56
Disabled Worker$1,542/mo$1,585/mo+$43
Widow/Widower$1,509/mo$1,551/mo+$42
Part B Premium Deducted-$185-$202.90-$17.90
Net Monthly Change~+$38 for average retiree

Why the COLA Formula Fails Seniors

Here’s a fact that senior advocacy groups have been fighting to change for decades: the COLA is calculated using the CPI-W, which measures the spending patterns of working-age urban employees — not retirees. Seniors spend a much larger share of their income on healthcare and housing, two categories that consistently outpace general inflation.

According to The Senior Citizens League, seniors have lost an estimated 20% of their purchasing power since 2010 because the CPI-W consistently underestimates what retirees actually spend. Congress has repeatedly debated switching to the CPI-E (Consumer Price Index for the Elderly), which would more accurately reflect senior spending — but no legislation has passed yet.

6 Key Social Security Changes in 2026

  1. COLA: 2.8% — Average benefit rises by $56/month
  2. Taxable earnings cap: $184,500 — Up from $176,100 in 2025
  3. Earnings limit (before full retirement age): $24,480 — If you earn over this while collecting benefits early, $1 is withheld for every $2 earned above the limit
  4. Credit threshold: $1,890 — That’s what you need to earn to get one Social Security credit in 2026
  5. Full Retirement Age (FRA) — Remains 67 for those born in 1960 or later
  6. Maximum benefit at FRA: $4,018/month — Only achievable with 35 years of maximum earnings history

Is 2.8% Enough? The Real Cost of Living for Seniors

The honest answer is: for many seniors, no. Here’s why:

  • Grocery inflation continues to run above 3% in many regions
  • Medicare premiums rose 9.7% — more than triple the COLA
  • Prescription drugs, even with the new $2,000 Part D cap, still represent a major expense
  • Rent and housing costs are rising 5–8% annually in most major metro areas

For the roughly 40% of seniors who rely on Social Security as their primary income source, this gap between COLA and real inflation is not just uncomfortable — it’s a financial emergency.

What Seniors Can Do to Stretch Their Benefits

  1. Apply for Medicare Savings Programs — These state programs pay your Part B premium ($202.90/month) if your income qualifies. That’s $2,434/year back in your pocket.
  2. Use the Extra Help (Low Income Subsidy) Program — If you spend a lot on prescriptions, this federal program can reduce or eliminate Part D costs.
  3. Check SNAP eligibility — Many seniors qualify for food assistance but never apply. In 2026, average SNAP benefits for seniors run $80–$200/month.
  4. Review your withholding — If taxes are being withheld from your Social Security, check whether you’re over-withholding and adjust Form W-4V.
  5. Claim all senior discounts — Utilities, property taxes, medications, and transportation often have senior discount programs that most people never use.

The Bottom Line

The 2026 COLA is better than nothing, but it’s not enough. A 2.8% raise that gets partially absorbed by a 9.7% Medicare premium increase leaves most seniors with a real gain of under $40/month. Understanding this reality — and taking proactive steps to access every benefit and assistance program available — is how seniors protect their financial health in 2026 and beyond.

Sources: Social Security Administration, CNBC, Kiplinger, Morningstar, The Senior Citizens League

Related Articles You May Find Helpful

  • Medicare Advantage 2026: Benefits Being Cut That Millions of Seniors Are Losing
  • Social Security COLA 2026: Your $56 Raise Is Already Being Eaten by Medicare
  • Best Medicare Advantage Plans 2026: Top Rankings & Picks
  • Switching From Medicare Advantage to Original Medicare
  • Harvard Study: Omega-3 + Vitamin D + Exercise Slows Biological Aging

Tags:

Medicare premium offsetretirement incomesenior benefits 2026Social Security COLA 2026Social Security increase 2026
Author

Margaret Collins

Margaret Collins is a Senior Health Expert and Certified Medicare Counselor (SHIP) with over 20 years of experience helping older Americans navigate Medicare, Social Security, and senior wellness. She holds a Master of Public Health (MPH) from Johns Hopkins University and has been quoted in AARP, Healthline, and The Wall Street Journal on issues affecting seniors. Margaret is dedicated to making complex health and benefits information accessible, accurate, and actionable for adults 65 and over.

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