How many Social Security payments are still to be sent out in January? Find out the full benefits schedule
The U.S.’s Social Security Administration (SSA) is coming to the end of its benefits-distribution schedule for January – a month in which many recipients have faced a lengthy wait to get their first payment of 2026.
Of the just over 70.5 million Americans who claim one of the SSA’s retirement, disability or survivor benefits, only one group of recipients is still to receive its January money.
Who is Social Security yet to pay for January 2026?
Most beneficiaries of retirement, disability or survivor benefits are paid on one of three Wednesdays: the second, third or fourth in each month. A beneficiary’s chosen Wednesday depends on the date of birth of the worker whose employment history has generated the entitlement.
On Jan. 28 – the fourth Wednesday in January – payments covering birthdays between the 21st to 31st of any month are to be sent out. This is the final batch of January benefits on the SSA’s distribution calendar.
Who has Social Security already paid for January 2026?
- 2nd and 3rd-Wednesday recipients
As January began on a Thursday, the three-Wednesdays cycle did not kick in until Jan. 14 – the latest possible point in the month. Benefits for birthdays between the first and 10th were issued on this date, before birthdays falling from the 11th to 20th were catered for on Jan. 21.
- Certain long-term beneficiaries
The birthday-dependent, three-Wednesdays system is not used for beneficiaries who have been claiming any of the SSA’s retirement, disability and survivor benefits since before May 1997. In January, these long-term recipients were to be paid on Friday 2nd.
- Dual beneficiaries: Social Security + SSI
On Jan. 2, retirement/disability/survivor pay was also distributed to Americans who combine one of these benefits with the SSA’s Supplemental Security Income (SSI).
A program for low-income individuals who are over 65 or have a disability, the SSI scheme benefits nearly 7.4 million people in the U.S., of which just over 2.5 million also claim regular Social Security benefits.
- SSI recipients
The first SSI benefits of the new year actually went out slightly before 2026. As New Year’s Day is a federal holiday, program recipients were to get their January payments on Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025.
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At a glance – payment dates for Jan. 2026 benefits:
Retirement, disability and survivor
- Fri., Jan. 2: Pre-May ’97/dual recipients
- Weds., Jan. 14: If born on 1st-10th
- Weds., Jan. 21: If born on 11th-20th
- Weds., Jan. 28: If born on 21st-31st
Supplement Security Income
- Weds., Dec. 31, 2025
Are there any other payments on the SSA’s January schedule?
Yes: After Jan. 28’s payment run, the SSA will actually have one final batch of benefits to send out. As February begins on a Sunday, next month’s SSI pay is slated to go out on the final working day in January: Friday 30th.
You can check out the SSA’s full payment schedule for 2026 in this online calendar.
How much are retirement, survivor, disability and SSI benefits?
Per the most recent figures published by the SSA, retired workers were paid $2,071.30 a month on average as of December. Disabled workers got $1,633.19 a month on average, and beneficiaries of survivor pay received an average of $1,620.95 a month. SSI recipients were paid a monthly average of $714.53 a month.
However, January’s benefits are the first to incorporate the SSA’s 2026 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). Last fall, the SSA revealed that recipients of its retirement, disability and survivor benefits, as well as beneficiaries of the SSI scheme, will get a 2.8% increase in their payments.
For retirees, who represent the overwhelming majority of the SSA’s beneficiaries, this will mean an average monthly increase of $56, the SSA said. You can find out more about how the 2026 COLA affects benefit amounts in this explainer published by the agency.
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How does Social Security make payments?
Benefits recipients have a choice between two electronic payment methods:
- Recipients can have their money transferred into their bank account by direct deposit
- The SSA can load their benefits onto the Direct Express Card, a debit card for federal disbursements made to people without a bank account
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