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Just been thinking about something that's probably on a lot of retirees' minds right now - what's actually going to happen with Social Security in 2027?
So here's the thing. We got a 2.8% boost this year for 2026, which honestly isn't terrible. But if you've been paying attention to inflation lately, the early projections for 2027 are looking... smaller. The Senior Citizen League is estimating around 2.5% for next year. Not exactly exciting news if you're living on Social Security.
The frustrating part? We won't know for sure until October when the official number drops. COLAs are based on inflation data from July, August, and September, so there's still time for things to shift. But yeah, it's starting to feel like 2027 might not bring much relief.
Here's what really gets me though - even when we do get a COLA, it's barely keeping up with what retirees actually spend money on. The calculation is based on what urban workers spend, but seniors have completely different costs. Healthcare is the killer. Retirees dump huge chunks of their income into medical expenses, and healthcare inflation keeps running way ahead of everything else. So that 2.5% bump in 2027? Probably won't feel like much when your doctor bills keep climbing.
I think the real move is to stop obsessing over what the COLA will be and start thinking about what you can actually control. Whether that's picking up some part-time work (you can totally do that while collecting), cutting expenses, or just being more intentional about your money now - that's where the actual impact happens.
The 2027 COLA will be what it is. But your financial situation in 2027 doesn't have to be left to chance.