Social Security fund to run dry in 2032, automatic cuts loom
Social Security’s retirement trust fund will be depleted in 2032, triggering an automatic 22% reduction in benefits for about 70 million Americans unless Congress acts, federal trustees warned Tuesday.
Social Security paid $1.6 trillion in benefits to 70 million Americans in 2025. The program provides a majority of income for 43% of older Americans, more than 25 million families, according to AARP, an advocacy organization representing older Americans. Any reduction would apply across the board to all beneficiaries.
The combined Social Security retirement and disability trust funds are projected to be depleted in 2034. At that point, payroll tax revenue and other income would be sufficient to pay about 83% of scheduled benefits, according to the 2026 annual report of the Social Security Board of Trustees.
The program’s financial outlook worsened over the past year. Trustees said Social Security’s 75-year funding shortfall increased to $29.3 trillion, while the long-range actuarial deficit grew from 3.82% to 4.42% of taxable payroll.
The projected depletion date for the retirement trust fund moved one year earlier than last year’s estimate. The $29.3 trillion shortfall is about equivalent to three-quarters of the current national debt of $39.2 trillion, according to Treasury Department data, and about 15 times the $1.9 trillion federal deficit projected for this year by the Congressional Budget Office.
The trustees attributed the deterioration to three factors: lower long-range fertility assumptions, reduced projected immigration levels and provisions of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a Republican-passed tax and spending law signed by President Trump on July 4, 2025. Lower projected immigration translates into a smaller future workforce and less payroll tax revenue.
The trustees also said changes affecting the taxation of benefits reduced projected income to the trust funds. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projected in June 2025 that the legislation would reduce revenue from the taxation of Social Security benefits by roughly $30 billion annually, enough to accelerate depletion of the retirement trust fund by one year.
Commissioner of Social Security Frank Bisignano said improving service and eliminating waste, fraud and abuse remain priorities for the agency.
“To protect the promise of Social Security, it is important for lawmakers and the Social Security Administration to work together to ensure the trust funds continue to provide financial stability now and for future generations,” Bisignano said.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, the board’s managing trustee, said the reports “reinforce the need for lawmakers to take action to support the long-term viability of these programs.”
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said in a radio interview Monday that mandatory spending programs must be addressed.
“That’s your entitlement programs like Medicare, Medicaid, and then things like Social Security – they have to be adjusted and fixed,” Johnson said on “The Moon Griffon Show.” “We have a plan to do that next year.”
Romina Boccia, director of budget and entitlement policy at the Cato Institute, said the administration’s focus on fraud does not address the program’s underlying financial challenges.
“Social Security’s long-term shortfall is driven by demographics and benefit promises that outpace dedicated revenues – not by widespread fraud,” Boccia told The Center Square. “Focusing on waste, fraud, and abuse is good governance, but it should not distract from the structural reforms needed.”
She added that “delaying reform only makes the eventual adjustments more difficult” and that “every year of delay means fewer choices, steeper adjustments, and a larger burden on younger workers and future taxpayers.”
Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, said policymakers continue to underestimate the urgency of the situation.
“In just six years – during the next Senate class’s term – Social Security’s retirement fund will run out of money,” she said. “Yet our leaders have no plan to prevent the abrupt 22% benefit cut that would ensue.”
Michael Peterson, CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, echoed the concern.
“The senators we elect this year will be in office when Social Security becomes unable to pay out full benefits,” he said.
House Ways and Means Committee Ranking Member Richard Neal, D-Mass., and two Democratic colleagues said in a joint statement that the report “demonstrates the urgent need for Congress to act to protect Social Security and Medicare.”
“This crisis is both highly predictable and fully avoidable, as there are many well-known solutions available,” Peterson said. “Now is the time for responsible, bipartisan leadership to strengthen Social Security and Medicare.”
Latest News Stories
Will County Transportation Department Announces Open House for Manhattan-Monee Road Expansion
Will County Community Mental Health Board Faces $5 Million Shortfall in 2026 Grant Requests
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Public Health & Safety Committee for March 5, 2026
Will County Officials Warn of Zoom Court Scam Targeting Defendants for Fraudulent Dismissal Fees
Will Land Use Committee Evaluates Multi-Million Dollar Buyout for Flooded Harris Drive Homes
Behavioral Health Division Drops Wait Times, Reports Zero Opioid Deaths in February
Harris Drive Residents Plead for County Intervention Amid Failing Septic Systems and Flooding
Will County Sheriff’s Office Investigates Fatal Hit-and-Run in Homer Glen
Federal Funding Freezes Threaten Will County Public Health Programs Amid Ongoing Lawsuits
Board Splits Along Party Lines to Approve 2026 Federal Legislative Agenda
Peotone 207U Board Votes to Close Intermediate School for 2026–27
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Landfill Committee for February 10, 2026