Is Social Security Going Broke? The Real Answer — And What It Means for Your Retirement
70 million Americans receive Social Security. Millions more are counting on it for retirement. So when politicians say it’s “going broke” — is that true? The honest answer is more complicated.
TRC RETIREMENT SECURITY ANALYSIS — Social Security is the largest government program in American history. It pays benefits to 70 million Americans every month — retirees, disabled workers, and survivors. And for decades, politicians have been warning that it’s headed for crisis.
So what is actually happening? TRC analyzed the latest Social Security Trustees Report, Congressional Budget Office projections, and independent economic research to give you the most accurate picture possible.
THE SHORT ANSWER: IT’S NOT “GOING BROKE” — BUT THERE IS A REAL PROBLEM
Social Security does not “go broke” in the way people imagine — where the program suddenly runs out of money and stops sending checks. What the Trustees project is a depletion of the trust fund reserve by approximately 2035.
After that, Social Security can still pay 83% of promised benefits from ongoing payroll tax revenue — indefinitely. The program continues. Benefits don’t stop. But they get cut by 17% unless Congress acts.
THE NUMBERS
- Current trust fund balance: ~$2.8 trillion
- Annual deficit (spending exceeds revenue): ~$41 billion and growing
- Projected trust fund depletion: 2035
- Benefit cut if nothing done: 17% across the board
- For a retiree receiving $2,000/month: cut to $1,660/month
WHY IS THIS HAPPENING?
Three converging forces:
- Baby Boomer retirement wave — 10,000 Boomers turn 65 every day. The ratio of workers to retirees has fallen from 5:1 in 1960 to 2.7:1 today.
- Longer lifespans — People who claim Social Security at 62 now live, on average, 20+ more years. The program was designed when most people died within 5-10 years of claiming.
- Lower birth rates — Fewer young workers entering the workforce means fewer payroll tax contributions.
THE SOLUTIONS CONGRESS IS CONSIDERING
| Option | Effect | Political Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Raise full retirement age to 69 | Solves ~40% of shortfall | High — cuts effective benefits |
| Raise payroll tax cap ($168,600 → no limit) | Solves ~70% of shortfall | Very High — tax increase on high earners |
| Reduce benefits for high earners | Solves ~20% of shortfall | Medium |
| Increase payroll tax rate (6.2% → 7.2%) | Solves ~50% of shortfall | High — tax increase on all workers |
WHAT SHOULD YOU DO TO PROTECT YOUR RETIREMENT?
Regardless of what Congress does, the lesson is clear: do not count on Social Security as your only retirement income.
- Maximize your 401(k) contributions (2026 limit: $23,500)
- Open and fund a Roth IRA (2026 limit: $7,000)
- Delay claiming Social Security as long as possible — every year you wait past 62 increases your benefit by 7-8%
- At 70, your benefit is 77% higher than if you claimed at 62
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I start claiming Social Security?
The break-even point for waiting is approximately age 80-82. If you expect to live past 82, waiting until 70 pays more in total lifetime benefits. If you have health issues or need the money, claiming earlier makes sense.
Do I pay taxes on Social Security benefits?
Yes, if your combined income (adjusted gross income + nontaxable interest + half your Social Security) exceeds $25,000 (single) or $32,000 (married). Up to 85% of your benefits may be taxable.
Can Social Security be cut for current retirees?
Technically yes, but politically almost impossible. The most likely scenario is a gradual benefit reduction for future retirees while protecting current recipients. Congress has fixed Social Security before (1983 reforms) and will almost certainly do so again before automatic cuts kick in.