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Social Security recipients to get 8.7% increase next year — highest since 1981

Major boost in Social Security benefits
Social Security benefits to get biggest boost in more than four decades 04:54

The Social Security Administration announced Thursday that its 66 million beneficiaries will receive an 8.7% cost-of-living increase for 2023, the largest annual boost since 1981. 

The increase means the average benefit check will rise more than $140 to $1,827 a month, compared with the typical monthly payment of $1,681 in 2022. 

The annual cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, is based on the inflation rate during the third quarter, or July through September — with the government releasing its September inflation report earlier today. The question is whether the biggest boost in more than four decades can help shore up seniors' diminished purchasing power, with the annual rate of inflation in the U.S. far outpacing the 5.9% COLA Social Security recipients got for 2022.

"This may be the first, and possibly the last, time that beneficiaries today receive a COLA this high," said Mary Johnson, Social Security and Medicare policy analyst at The Senior Citizens League, in an email to CBS MoneyWatch. "There were only three other times since the start of automatic inflation adjustments that COLAs were higher (1979-1981)."

Social Security recipients saw record COLA hikes during that period because of searing inflation in the late 1970s and early 1980s. In 1981, seniors and other beneficiaries received an 11.2% hike.

Since 2000, the annual cost-of-living increase has averaged 2.3%. In some years, however, beneficiaries received no bump. In 2009 and 2010, the COLA was 0% due to flatlining inflation in the years that followed the 2008 financial crisis. 

In the 1970s, lawmakers implemented an automatic annual increase in benefits for Social Security beneficiaries that boosts payments to keep up with inflation. Prior to that, Congress had to authorize increases to keep up with inflation, which meant that sometimes several years would pass before seniors received a cost-of-living adjustment. 

When will I get the COLA increase?

Alhough the Social Security Administration announced the adjustment this week, seniors and others on the program will have to wait until January to receive their higher payments. 

While the COLA will actually take effect with the December 2022 benefits, those payments will be made in January of next year. Your January 2023 check will be sent based on your birth date:

  • If your birthday falls on the 1st to 10th of the month, your payments arrive on the second Wednesday of the month. That means the first check with the 2023 COLA will land on January 11.
  • If your birthday falls on the 11th to 20th, your payments come on the third Wednesday of each month. Your first 2023 COLA will arrive with your January 18 benefit.
  • If your birthday falls on the 21st to 31st, your payments are scheduled for the fourth Wednesday of each month. Your first 2023 COLA will arrive with your January 25 check.

How can I check on my benefit increase?

The Social Security Administration on Thursday said it will mail notices to recipients about their COLA increase throughout December. 

Beneficiaries can also log into their "my Social Security account" on the agency's website to view their benefit increase online through the message center, although the Social Security Administration said this data won't be available until early December. 

"Since you will receive the COLA notice online or in the mail, you don't need to contact us to get your new benefit amount," the agency said.

—The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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