Social Security benefits could increase by 2.7% in 2026

Updated:

person counting twenty dollar bills: Photo by Igal Ness on Unsplash

Retirees are another month closer to learning what the 2026 Social Security cost-of-living adjustment will be. In its latest update, The Senior Citizens League projects a 2.7% increase in monthly benefits, beginning in January.

TSCL’s predictive model, which incorporates inflation trends, interest rates, and unemployment data, initially forecast a 2.5% COLA in December 2024, equal to the 2025 increase. By mid‑May 2025, as inflation moderated further, the projection slipped slightly to 2.4%, marking the smallest raise since 2021.

However, escalating inflationary pressures and recent economic developments, including the enactment of the “One Big Beautiful Bill” and rising prices, prompted upward revisions over the summer. By July, TSCL had raised its estimate to 2.6%, and by mid‑August, the forecast climbed further to 2.7%. 

If the 2.7% projection holds through the October announcement, retirees would see a modest bump, slightly better than 2025, but still far below the inflation spikes of recent years. TSCL notes that even this adjustment may not fully counteract increased living costs, especially housing and healthcare.

What it means for retirees

A 2.7% COLA would equate to roughly an extra $54 per month for someone currently receiving a $2,000 benefit. But rising Medicare Part B premiums, expected to increase by about $21.50 per month, could significantly erode that gain, especially for lower‑income beneficiaries. Meanwhile, many seniors continue to voice frustration that COLA calculations based on the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI‑W) fail to reflect inflation as seniors experience it. 

As always, the Social Security Administration’s final COLA announcement in October remains the definitive figure. Until then, TSCL’s evolving projections offer the closest insight into what’s shaping up for 2026—pointing to a modest, albeit slightly improved, cost-of-living adCOLA is announced in October.