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The cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) may be the most widely anticipated way Social Security changes from year to year, but it’s far from the only one.
Inflation, wage trends and new policies directly affect not just the more than 68 million people receiving Social Security benefits but also the estimated 184 million workers (and future beneficiaries) paying into the system. Social Security field offices are changing how they do business, and millions of retirees will no longer see their benefits reduced because they also get a government pension.
Here are eight important ways Social Security will be different in 2025.
1. Cost-of-living adjustment
Inflation continued to cool last year, resulting in a 2.5 percent COLA for 2025 for people receiving Social Security payments, down from 3.2 percent in 2024. The estimated average retirement benefit will increase by $49 a month, from $1,927 to $1,976, starting in January, according to the Social Security Administration (SSA).
It’s the lowest COLA in four years, reflecting a return to pre-pandemic inflation trends. The average COLA since 2000 has been about 2.6 percent, even factoring in the spike in consumer prices that produced benefit increases of 5.9 percent in 2022 and 8.7 percent in 2023.
The COLA is applied to all Social Security payments — survivor benefits, family benefits and disability benefits, as well as retirement benefits — and to Supplemental Security Income (SSI), a monthly benefit administered by the SSA for people with low incomes and limited assets who are 65 or older, blind or have a disability.
2. Medicare premiums
The standard monthly premium for Medicare Part B, which covers doctor visits and other outpatient treatment, goes up from $174.70 to $185 in January. Most Medicare enrollees pay this standard rate, typically as a deduction from their Social Security payments, so the premium increase has the effect of partially offsetting the COLA, by $10.30 a month.
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