Fast Facts & Figures About Social Security, 2023

 

Did You Know That…

70.6 million people received benefits from programs administered by the Social Security Administration (SSA) in 2022.

5.6 million people were newly awarded Social Security benefits in 2022.

55% of adult Social Security beneficiaries in 2022 were women.

55.6 was the average age of disabled-worker beneficiaries in 2022.

85% of Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients received payments because of disability or blindness in 2022.

General Information

Tax rates, 2023 (in percent)
Program Employee Employer Self-employed
Total 7.65 7.65 15.30
OASI 5.30 5.30 10.60
DI 0.90 0.90 1.80
HI a 1.45 1.45 a 2.90
a. Earned income exceeding $200,000 for individual filers and $250,000 for married couples filing jointly is subject to an additional HI tax of 0.90 percent.
Taxes payable, 2023 (in dollars)
Type of earner OASI DI HI
Average 3,371 572 922
Maximum 8,491 1,442 No limit
Self-employed maximum 16,981 2,884 No limit
Maximum earnings subject to Social Security taxes, 2023 (in dollars)
Program Amount
OASDI 160,200
HI No limit

Earnings required for work credits, 2023: $1,640 for one work credit (one quarter of coverage)

NOTE: A worker may earn a maximum of four credits a year. Doing so in 2023, therefore, requires $6,560 in earnings.

Benefit payments as a percentage of gross domestic product, 2021–2022
Calendar year Total OASI DI
2021 4.86 4.26 0.60
2022 4.84 4.28 0.56
NOTE: Figures are subject to change.

Cost-of-living adjustment, 2023: 8.70%

Age for full retirement benefit for retired workers
Year of birth Full retirement age (FRA)
1937 and earlier 65
1938 65 and 2 months
1939 65 and 4 months
1940 65 and 6 months
1941 65 and 8 months
1942 65 and 10 months
1943–1954 66
1955 66 and 2 months
1956 66 and 4 months
1957 66 and 6 months
1958 66 and 8 months
1959 66 and 10 months
1960 and later 67

Maximum monthly Social Security benefit: $3,627 for workers retiring at FRA in 2023

NOTE: Higher benefits are possible for those who work or delay benefit receipt after reaching FRA.

Benefit formula bend points (for workers with first eligibility in 2023):

Primary insurance amount (PIA) equals
90% of the first $1,115 of average indexed monthly earnings (AIME), plus
32% of AIME over $1,115 through $6,721, plus
15% of AIME over $6,721

Average wage index, 2021–2023
Year Dollars Increase from previous year (in percent)
2021 60,575.07 8.9
2022 (estimated) 63,467.98 4.8
2023 (estimated) 66,147.17 4.2
Exempt amounts under the retirement earnings test, 2023 (in dollars)
Age of retired person in 2023 Annually Monthly
Under FRA ($1 for $2 withholding rate) 21,240 1,770
FRA ($1 for $3 withholding rate) a 56,520 4,710
Above FRA No limit No limit
NOTE: Retired-worker beneficiaries younger than FRA have some of their benefit withheld if they have earnings above the exempt amounts.
a. The test applies only to earnings made in months prior to the month of attainment of FRA.
SSI payment rates and resource limits, January 2023 (in dollars)
Program aspect Individual Couple
Federal benefit rate 914 1,371
Resource limit 2,000 3,000
Monthly earnings levels affecting disability program eligibility, 2023 (in dollars)
Determinant Monthly amount
Substantial gainful activity  
For nonblind persons 1,470
For blind persons 2,460
Trial work period 1,050
Trust fund operations, 2022–2023 (in billions of dollars)
Calendar year and trust fund Income Outgo Fund at end of year
2022 (actual)  
Total 1,221.8 1,243.9 2,829.9
OASI 1,056.7 1,097.5 2,711.9
DI 165.1 146.5 118.0
2023 (estimated)  
Total 1,334.7 1,387.9 2,776.7
OASI 1,153.3 1,235.1 2,630.2
DI 181.4 152.9 146.5
NOTE: Totals do not necessarily equal the sum of rounded components.
Poverty thresholds, 2022 (in dollars)
Family unit Amount
Aged individual 14,036
Family of two, aged head 17,689
Family of four 30,186
SOURCE: U.S. Census Bureau, “Poverty Thresholds” (https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/income-poverty/historical-poverty-thresholds.html).

OASDI administrative expenses: Costs were 0.6% of contributions in calendar year 2022

Workload, fiscal year 2022 (in millions)
Type of filing Number
OASI claims 6.6
DI claims 2.1
SSI applications 1.5

OASDI Program

Earnings in Covered Employment, 1937–2022

People contribute to Social Security through payroll taxes or self-employment taxes, as required by the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) and the Self-Employment Contributions Act (SECA). The maximum taxable amount is updated annually on the basis of increases in the average wage. Of the 181 million workers with earnings in Social Security–covered employment in 2022, about 7% had earnings that equaled or exceeded the maximum amount subject to taxes, compared with 3% when the program began and a peak of 36% in 1965. About 83% of earnings in covered employment were taxable in 2022, compared with 92% in 1937.

Chart. Taxable earnings as a percentage of earnings in covered employment and percentage of workers with maximum taxable earnings, selected years. Line chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Taxable earnings as a percentage of earnings in covered employment and percentage of workers with maximum taxable earnings, selected years
Year Taxable earnings Workers with maximum taxable earnings
1937 92.0 3.1
1945 87.9 13.7
1955 80.3 25.6
1965 71.3 36.1
1975 84.4 15.0
1985 88.9 6.5
1995 85.8 5.8
2005 84.1 6.1
2015 82.9 6.2
2022 82.7 6.9
SOURCE: SSA, Office of the Chief Actuary.

Insured Status, 1970–2022

The percentage of persons aged 20 or older who are insured for benefits has changed very little in recent years. To be fully insured, a worker must have at least one work credit (quarter of coverage) for each year elapsed after age 21 (but no earlier than 1950) and before the year in which he or she attains age 62, becomes disabled, or dies. The maximum number of work credits needed to be fully insured is 40. An individual is said to be permanently insured if he or she has earned 40 work credits. To be insured for disability, the worker must be fully insured and have at least 20 work credits during the last 40 calendar quarters. (Requirements for disability-insured status are somewhat different for persons younger than age 31.) Disability benefits are available up to FRA.

Insured workers as a percentage of the corresponding Social Security area population, selected years
Year Population aged 20 or older Population aged 20 to FRA a
Millions Percentage permanently insured Percentage fully insured Millions Percentage insured for disability
1970 135.1 50 77 113.9 63
1975 147.4 50 80 123.8 66
1980 161.8 53 83 135.2 70
1985 174.9 57 84 145.5 72
1990 186.0 63 86 153.7 75
1995 196.0 66 86 161.6 76
2000 206.9 68 87 171.3 78
2005 219.5 68 87 183.2 78
2010 230.6 69 87 191.8 76
2015 242.6 69 88 197.5 76
2020 251.1 70 89 198.7 77
2021 252.4 70 89 199.4 78
2022 254.3 70 89 200.4 78
SOURCE: SSA, Office of the Chief Actuary.
NOTES: The population in the Social Security area includes residents of the 50 states and the District of Columbia adjusted for net census undercount; civilian residents of American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and U.S. Virgin Islands; federal civilian employees and persons in the U.S. armed forces abroad and their dependents; noncitizens living abroad who are insured for Social Security benefits; and all other U.S. citizens abroad.
Figures are subject to revision.
a. Insured for disability excludes those who have reached FRA.

Insured Status, by Sex, 1970 and 2022

Although men historically were more likely than women to be insured, the gender gap is shrinking. The proportion of men who are insured declined slightly from 1970 to 2022, with 91% fully insured and 80% insured for disability in 2022. By contrast, the proportion of women who are insured increased dramatically—from 63% to 88% fully insured and from 41% to 76% insured for disability.

Chart. Percentage of population in the Social Security area fully insured and insured for disability benefits, by sex. Bar chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Percentage of population in the Social Security area fully insured and insured for disability benefits, by sex
Sex 1970 2022
Fully insured  
Men 93 91
Women 63 88
Insured for disability a  
Men 84 80
Women 41 76
SOURCE: SSA, Office of the Chief Actuary.
NOTES: The population in the Social Security area includes residents of the 50 states and the District of Columbia adjusted for net census undercount; civilian residents of American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and U.S. Virgin Islands; federal civilian employees and persons in the U.S. armed forces abroad and their dependents; noncitizens living abroad who are insured for Social Security benefits; and all other U.S. citizens abroad.
Figures are subject to revision.
a. Insured for disability excludes those who have reached FRA.

New Benefit Awards, 2022

Benefits were awarded to about 5.6 million persons; of those, 61% were retired workers and 9% were disabled workers. The remaining 30% were survivors or the spouses and children of retired or disabled workers. These awards represent not only new entrants to the benefit rolls but also persons already on the rolls who become entitled to a different benefit, particularly conversions of disabled-worker benefits to retired-worker benefits at FRA.

New awards, by type of beneficiary
Beneficiary Number (thousands) Percent
Total 5,609 100
Retired workers and dependents 3,895 69
Workers 3,413 61
Spouses and children 481 9
Disabled workers and dependents 732 13
Workers 509 9
Spouses and children 222 4
Survivors of deceased workers 982 18
Chart. New awards. Pie chart described in the text.
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.
NOTE: Totals do not necessarily equal the sum of rounded components.

New Awards to Workers, 1982–2022

Awards to retired workers increased considerably over the past four decades, at a higher rate than that by which awards to disabled workers increased. The annualized rate of increase over the period from 1982 to 2022 is 1.9% for retired workers and 1.4% for disabled workers. The annual number of awards to retired workers rose from 1.6 million in 1982 to 3.4 million in 2022, while for disabled workers it increased from 297,000 in 1982 to 509,000 in 2022.

Chart. New awards to retired and disabled workers. Line chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. New awards to retired and disabled workers (in millions)
Year Retired workers Disabled workers
1982 1.618 0.297
1983 1.670 0.312
1984 1.607 0.362
1985 1.690 0.377
1986 1.734 0.417
1987 1.682 0.416
1988 1.654 0.409
1989 1.657 0.426
1990 1.665 0.468
1991 1.695 0.536
1992 1.708 0.637
1993 1.661 0.635
1994 1.625 0.632
1995 1.609 0.646
1996 1.581 0.624
1997 1.719 0.587
1998 1.632 0.608
1999 1.690 0.620
2000 1.961 0.622
2001 1.779 0.691
2002 1.813 0.750
2003 1.791 0.777
2004 1.883 0.796
2005 2.000 0.830
2006 1.999 0.799
2007 2.036 0.805
2008 2.279 0.877
2009 2.740 0.971
2010 2.634 1.027
2011 2.578 0.999
2012 2.735 0.960
2013 2.794 0.869
2014 2.772 0.779
2015 2.839 0.741
2016 2.911 0.706
2017 2.975 0.716
2018 3.082 0.687
2019 3.175 0.679
2020 3.368 0.620
2021 3.186 0.540
2022 3.413 0.509
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.

Beneficiaries in Current-Payment Status, December 2022

Sixty-six million beneficiaries were in current-payment status; that is, they were being paid a benefit. Seventy-four percent of those beneficiaries were retired workers and 12% were disabled workers. The remaining 15% of beneficiaries were survivors or the spouses and children of retired or disabled workers.

Beneficiaries in current-payment status
Beneficiary Number (thousands) Percent
Total 65,994 100
Retired workers and dependents 51,293 78
Workers 48,588 74
Spouses and children 2,705 4
Disabled workers and dependents 8,841 13
Workers 7,604 12
Spouses and children 1,237 2
Survivors of deceased workers 5,861 9
Chart. Beneficiaries, by type. Pie chart illustrating the Percent data from the previous table. The chart presents the spouses and children of both retired and disabled workers as a combined category that accounts for 6% of beneficiaries in current-payment status.
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.
NOTE: Totals do not necessarily equal the sum of rounded components.

Average Benefit Amounts, 2022

Benefits payable to workers who retire at FRA and to disabled workers are equal to 100% of the PIA (subject to any applicable deductions). At FRA, widow(er)s' benefits are also payable at 100% of the insured worker's PIA. Nondisabled widow(er)s can receive reduced benefits at age 60. Disabled widow(er)s can receive reduced benefits at age 50. Spouses, children, and parents receive a smaller proportion of the worker's PIA than do widow(er)s.

Average monthly benefit for new awards and for benefits in current-payment status (in dollars)
Beneficiary New awards Benefits in current-payment status, December
Retired workers 1,909 1,825
Spouses 592 901
Children 826 857
Disabled workers 1,722 1,483
Spouses 430 408
Children 479 471
Survivors of deceased workers  
Nondisabled widow(er)s 1,272 1,705
Disabled widow(er)s 920 893
Widowed mothers and fathers 1,199 1,232
Surviving children 1,065 1,067
Parents 1,424 1,538
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.

Beneficiaries, by Age, December 2022

More than four-fifths of all OASDI beneficiaries in current-payment status were aged 62 or older, including 26% aged 75–84 and 9% aged 85 or older. About 10% were persons aged 18–61 receiving benefits as disabled workers, survivors, or dependents. Another 4% were children under age 18.

Chart. Beneficiaries, by age. Pie chart described in the text. Chart also shows that 7% of all O A S D I beneficiaries in current-payment status were aged 62 to 64 and 44% were aged 65 to 74.
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.

Age of Disabled and Retired Workers, 1960–2022

The average age of disabled-worker beneficiaries in current-payment status declined between 1960, when DI benefits first became available to persons younger than age 50, and 2022. In 1960, the average age of a disabled worker was 57.2 years. The rapid drop in average age in the following years reflects a growing number of awards to workers under 50. By 1995, the average age fell to a low of 49.8, but by 2022, it rose to 55.6. By contrast, the average age of retired workers has changed little over time, rising from 72.4 in 1960 to 74.2 in 2022.

Chart. Average age of disabled-worker and retired-worker beneficiaries, selected years. Line chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Average age of disabled-worker and retired-worker beneficiaries, selected years
Year Retired-worker beneficiaries Disabled-worker beneficiaries
1960 72.4 57.2
1965 72.5 54.7
1970 72.3 54.2
1975 72.3 53.8
1980 72.4 53.2
1985 72.8 52.1
1990 73.1 50.5
1995 73.6 49.8
2000 73.9 50.8
2005 73.9 51.8
2010 73.7 52.8
2015 73.7 53.9
2020 74.0 55.0
2022 74.2 55.6
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 10 percent sample for 1990–2005 and 100 percent data for all other years.

Beneficiaries, by Sex, December 2022

Of all adults receiving monthly Social Security benefits, 45% were men and 55% were women. Eighty-five percent of the men and 72% of the women received retired-worker benefits. Eleven percent of the women received survivor benefits.

Chart. Adult beneficiaries, by type of beneficiary and sex (in percent). One bar chart for Men and one bar chart for Women described in the text. Charts also show that 14% of the men and 11% of the women received disabled-worker benefits and 6% of the women received benefits as spouses of retired and disabled workers.
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.
a. Less than 1 percent of men received benefits as survivors (widowers or fathers) or as spouses of retired and disabled workers.

Average Monthly Benefit, by Sex, December 2022

Among retired and disabled workers who collected benefits based on their own work records, men received a higher average monthly benefit than did women. For those with benefits based on another person's work record (spouses and survivors), women had higher average benefits.

Average monthly benefit (in dollars)
Beneficiary Men Women
Workers  
Retired 2,020 1,638
Disabled 1,628 1,338
Spouses of—  
Retired workers 714 915
Disabled workers 393 410
Survivors of deceased workers  
Nondisabled widow(er)s 1,509 1,714
Disabled widow(er)s 689 912
Mothers and fathers 1,082 1,245
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.

Women Beneficiaries, 1940–2022

The proportion of women among retired-worker beneficiaries quadrupled between 1940 and 2022. The percentage climbed from 12% in 1940 to 47% in 1980, 48% in 1990, and 51% in 2022. The proportion of women among disabled-worker beneficiaries more than doubled between 1957, when DI benefits first became payable, and 2022. The percentage rose steadily from 19% in 1957 to 35% in 1990 and 50% in 2022.

Chart. Women as a percentage of retired-worker and disabled-worker beneficiaries, selected years. Line chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Women as a percentage of retired-worker and disabled-worker beneficiaries, selected years
Year Retired-worker beneficiaries Disabled-worker beneficiaries
1940 11.6 --
1950 17.1 --
1957 -- 19.1
1960 35.3 21.8
1970 42.4 28.4
1980 46.5 32.6
1990 47.7 34.7
2000 48.2 43.3
2010 49.0 47.0
2020 50.6 49.7
2022 51.0 49.9
NOTE: -- = not available.
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.

Women with Dual Entitlement, 1960–2022

The proportion of women aged 62 or older who are receiving benefits as dependents (that is, on the basis of their husbands' earnings record only) declined from 57% in 1960 to 17% in 2022. At the same time, the proportion of women with dual entitlement (that is, paid on the basis of both their own earnings records and those of their husbands) increased from 5% in 1960 to 23% in 2022.

Chart. Women aged 62 or older, by basis of entitlement, selected years. Area chart described in the text. Chart also shows that the percentage of women who are entitled solely on their own earnings records remained fairly close to 40% from 1960 to 2000, before slowly rising in recent years to 60% in 2022.
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record. All data for 2005 and dual entitlement data for 1995 and 2000 are based on a 10 percent sample. All other years are 100 percent data.

Child Beneficiaries, December 2022

About 2.7 million children under age 18 and students aged 18–19 received OASDI benefits. Children of deceased workers had the highest average payments, in part because they are eligible to receive monthly benefits based on 75% of the worker's PIA, compared with 50% for children of retired or disabled workers. Overall, the average monthly benefit amount for children was $793.

Chart. Number of and average monthly benefit for children of worker beneficiaries. Two bar charts with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Number and average monthly benefit for children receiving OASDI, by type of beneficiary, December 2022
Type of beneficiary Number (thousands) Average monthly benefit (dollars)
Children of retired workers 338 821
Children of disabled workers 1,036 456
Children of deceased workers 1,334 1,048
SOURCE: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record, 100 percent data.

SSI Program

Number of Recipients, 1974–2022

The Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program provides income support to needy persons aged 65 or older, blind or disabled adults, and blind or disabled children. Eligibility requirements and federal payment standards are nationally uniform. SSI replaced the former federal/state adult assistance programs in the 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Payments under SSI began in January 1974, with 3.2 million persons receiving federally administered payments. By December 1974, this number had risen to nearly 4 million and remained at about that level until the mid-1980s, then rose steadily, reaching nearly 6 million in 1993 and 7 million by the end of 2004. As of December 2022, the number of recipients was about 7.5 million. Of this total, 4.2 million were between the ages of 18 and 64, 2.3 million were aged 65 or older, and 1.0 million were under age 18.

Chart. Persons receiving federally administered S S I payments, December. Line chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Persons receiving federally administered SSI payments, December (in millions)
Year Total Under 18 18–64 65 or older
1974 4.00 0.07 1.50 2.42
1975 4.31 0.11 1.70 2.51
1976 4.24 0.13 1.71 2.40
1977 4.24 0.15 1.74 2.35
1978 4.22 0.17 1.75 2.30
1979 4.15 0.18 1.73 2.25
1980 4.14 0.19 1.73 2.22
1981 4.02 0.19 1.70 2.12
1982 3.86 0.19 1.66 2.01
1983 3.90 0.20 1.70 2.00
1984 4.03 0.21 1.78 2.04
1985 4.14 0.23 1.88 2.03
1986 4.27 0.24 2.01 2.02
1987 4.39 0.25 2.12 2.02
1988 4.46 0.26 2.20 2.01
1989 4.59 0.26 2.30 2.03
1990 4.82 0.31 2.45 2.06
1991 5.12 0.40 2.64 2.08
1992 5.57 0.56 2.91 2.10
1993 5.98 0.72 3.15 2.11
1994 6.30 0.84 3.34 2.12
1995 6.51 0.92 3.48 2.11
1996 6.61 0.96 3.57 2.09
1997 6.49 0.88 3.56 2.05
1998 6.57 0.89 3.65 2.03
1999 6.56 0.85 3.69 2.02
2000 6.60 0.85 3.74 2.01
2001 6.69 0.88 3.81 2.00
2002 6.79 0.91 3.88 2.00
2003 6.90 0.96 3.95 1.99
2004 6.99 0.99 4.02 1.98
2005 7.11 1.04 4.08 1.99
2006 7.24 1.08 4.15 2.00
2007 7.36 1.12 4.22 2.02
2008 7.52 1.15 4.33 2.03
2009 7.68 1.20 4.45 2.03
2010 7.91 1.24 4.63 2.04
2011 8.11 1.28 4.78 2.06
2012 8.26 1.31 4.87 2.08
2013 8.36 1.32 4.93 2.11
2014 8.34 1.30 4.91 2.12
2015 8.31 1.27 4.89 2.15
2016 8.25 1.21 4.85 2.19
2017 8.23 1.18 4.81 2.24
2018 8.13 1.15 4.71 2.27
2019 8.08 1.13 4.65 2.30
2020 7.96 1.11 4.56 2.30
2021 7.70 1.04 4.36 2.29
2022 7.54 1.00 4.20 2.35
SOURCE: SSA, Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.

Payment Amounts, by Age, December 2022

The average monthly federally administered SSI payment was $622. Payments varied by age group, ranging from an average of $732 for recipients aged under 18 to $508 for those aged 65 or older. The maximum federal benefit rate in December 2022 was $914 for an individual and $1,371 for a couple, plus any applicable state supplementation.

Chart. Average monthly federally administered S S I payment. Bar chart described in the text. Chart also shows that recipients aged 18 to 64 received an average payment of $660.
SOURCE: SSA, Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.
NOTE: Amounts exclude retroactive payments.

Federally Administered Payments, December 2022

A total of 7.5 million persons received federally administered SSI payments. The majority received federal SSI only. States have the option of supplementing the federal benefit rate and are required to do so if that rate is less than the income the recipient would have had under the former state program.

Chart. Type of S S I payment. Pie chart. 82% of S S I recipients received only a federal S S I payment, 16% received federally administered state supplementation along with their federal S S I payment, and 2% received only federally administered state supplementation.
SOURCE: SSA, Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.

Basis for Eligibility and Age of Recipients, December 2022

Fifteen percent of SSI recipients received benefits on the basis of age and the rest qualified on the basis of disability. Thirty-one percent of the recipients were aged 65 or older. In the SSI program, a disabled recipient is still classified as “disabled” after reaching age 65. In the OASDI program, DI beneficiaries are converted to the retirement program when they attain FRA.

Chart. S S I recipients, by basis for eligibility and age. Two pie charts. The first pie chart shows the percentage distribution of S S I recipients by basis for eligibility: 84% were disabled, 15% were aged, and 1% were blind. The second pie chart shows the same group distributed by age: 13% were under 18, 56% were aged 18 to 64, and 31% were 65 or older.
SOURCE: SSA, Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.

Percentage Distribution of Recipients, by Age, 1974–2022

The proportion of SSI recipients aged 65 or older declined from 61% in January 1974 to 31% in December 2022. The overall long-term growth of the SSI program occurred because of an increase in the number of disabled recipients, most of whom are under age 65.

Chart. Percentage distribution of S S I recipients, by age, December. Line chart with tabular version below.
Show as table
Table equivalent for chart. Percentage distribution of SSI recipients, by age, December
Year Under 18 18–64 65 or older
1974 1.8 37.6 60.6
1975 2.5 39.4 58.1
1976 3.0 40.5 56.6
1977 3.5 41.0 55.5
1978 3.9 41.4 54.6
1979 4.3 41.6 54.1
1980 4.6 41.8 53.6
1981 4.8 42.4 52.8
1982 5.0 42.9 52.1
1983 5.1 43.6 51.3
1984 5.3 44.2 50.6
1985 5.5 45.4 49.1
1986 5.6 47.1 47.3
1987 5.7 48.3 46.0
1988 5.7 49.3 44.9
1989 5.8 50.1 44.1
1990 6.4 50.9 42.7
1991 7.8 51.6 40.6
1992 10.0 52.3 37.7
1993 12.1 52.6 35.3
1994 13.4 53.0 33.7
1995 14.1 53.5 32.5
1996 14.4 54.0 31.6
1997 13.5 54.8 31.6
1998 13.5 55.5 31.0
1999 12.9 56.3 30.8
2000 12.8 56.7 30.5
2001 13.2 57.0 29.8
2002 13.5 57.1 29.4
2003 13.9 57.3 28.8
2004 14.2 57.5 28.3
2005 14.6 57.4 28.0
2006 14.9 57.4 27.7
2007 15.2 57.4 27.4
2008 15.3 57.6 27.0
2009 15.6 58.0 26.4
2010 15.7 58.5 25.8
2011 15.7 58.9 25.4
2012 15.9 58.9 25.2
2013 15.8 59.0 25.2
2014 15.6 58.9 25.5
2015 15.2 58.8 25.9
2016 14.7 58.7 26.6
2017 14.4 58.4 27.2
2018 14.1 58.0 27.9
2019 14.0 57.5 28.5
2020 13.9 57.2 28.8
2021 13.5 56.7 29.8
2022 13.2 55.6 31.1
SOURCE: SSA, Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.

Recipients, by Sex and Age, December 2022

Overall, 52% of the approximately 7.5 million SSI recipients were women, but that percentage varied greatly by age group. Women accounted for 64% of the 2.3 million recipients aged 65 or older, 50% of the more than 4.2 million recipients aged 18–64, and 32% of the 1.0 million recipients under age 18.

Chart. S S I recipients, by sex and age. Bar chart with tabular version below.
Show as table
Table equivalent for chart. Percentage distribution of SSI recipients by sex, by age, December 2022
Age Men Women
All ages 48 52
Under 18 68 32
18–64 50 50
65 or older 36 64
SOURCE: SSA, Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.

Other Income, December 2022

More than 58% of SSI recipients aged 65 or older received OASDI benefits, as did 27.1% of those aged 18–64 and 6.0% of those under age 18. Other types of unearned income, such as income from assets, were reported most frequently among those under age 18 (21.6%) and those aged 65 or older (10.1%). Earned income was most prevalent (4.5%) among those aged 18–64.

Chart. Percentage of S S I recipients also receiving other income, by source and age. Bar chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Percentage of SSI recipients also receiving other income, by source and age, December 2022
Age OASDI Other unearned income Earnings
All ages 33.8 10.0 2.8
Under 18 6.0 21.6 0.2
18–64 27.1 7.2 4.5
65 or older 57.5 10.1 1.1
SOURCE: SSA, Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.

Child Recipients, December 1974–2022

As of December of the program's first year, 1974, 70,900 blind and disabled children were receiving SSI. That number has generally increased since then, peaking at more than 1.3 million in 2013, before declining to 997,109 in 2022. The relatively high average payment to children (compared with payments made to blind and disabled adults) is due in part to a limited amount of other countable income. The spike in average monthly benefits in 1992 is due to retroactive payments resulting from the Sullivan v. Zebley decision. As of December 2022, blind and disabled children were receiving SSI payments averaging $732.

Chart. Number of and average monthly payment to children under age 18 receiving S S I. Two line charts with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Number of and average monthly payment to children under age 18 receiving SSI
Year Number (in thousands) Average monthly SSI payment a
1974 70.90 109.15
1975 107.03 141.09
1976 125.41 154.24
1977 147.36 170.03
1978 165.90 171.72
1979 177.31 193.26
1980 190.39 219.08
1981 194.89 240.84
1982 191.57 263.22
1983 198.32 280.96
1984 211.59 292.86
1985 227.38 301.26
1986 241.20 321.34
1987 250.90 327.27
1988 255.14 343.24
1989 264.89 357.64
1990 308.59 403.72
1991 397.16 446.05
1992 556.47 610.98
1993 722.68 460.54
1994 841.47 448.07
1995 917.05 447.57
1996 955.17 442.01
1997 879.83 433.83
1998 887.07 441.75
1999 847.06 450.13
2000 846.78 463.05
2001 881.84 476.09
2002 914.82 487.73
2003 959.38 490.63
2004 993.13 505.98
2005 1,036.50 522.80
2006 1,079.00 542.00
2007 1,121.00 555.00
2008 1,153.80 561.00
2009 1,199.79 593.00
2010 1,239.30 597.00
2011 1,277.00 601.00
2012 1,311.86 621.00
2013 1,321.68 631.00
2014 1,299.76 633.23
2015 1,267.16 643.06
2016 1,213.08 649.58
2017 1,182.59 647.48
2018 1,148.04 655.49
2019 1,132.08 669.78
2020 1,108.61 675.47
2021 1,038.15 687.17
2022 997.11 731.99
SOURCE: SSA, Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.
a. As of 1998, these figures exclude retroactive payments.

Cross-Program Beneficiaries

All Beneficiaries, December 2022

About 70.6 million people received a payment from one or more programs administered by SSA. Most (63.1 million) received OASDI benefits only, 5 million received SSI only, and 2.5 million received payments from both programs.

Beneficiaries receiving OASDI, SSI, or both
Benefit Number (thousands)
Total (unduplicated) 70,609
OASDI 65,598
OASDI only 63,067
SSI 7,542
SSI only 5,012
Both OASDI and SSI 2,531
Chart. Distribution of all beneficiaries. Pie chart. 89% of beneficiaries received only O A S D I benefits, 7% received only S S I payments, and 4% received both O A S D I and S S I payments.
SOURCES: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record and Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.
NOTES: OASDI beneficiaries who receive benefits based on more than one worker's earnings record (for example, their own earnings record and their spouse's earnings record) are counted only once. SSI includes federal SSI payments and federally administered state supplementation.
Totals do not necessarily equal the sum of rounded components.

Beneficiaries Aged 65 or Older, December 2022

Benefits were paid to 53 million people aged 65 or older. About 1.3 million received both OASDI and SSI.

Beneficiaries aged 65 or older receiving OASDI, SSI, or both
Beneficiary Number (thousands)
Total (unduplicated) 52,953
OASDI 51,946
Retired workers 46,114
Disabled workers 753
Spouses 1,894
Widow(er)s a 3,079
Disabled adult children 107
OASDI only 50,604
SSI b 2,349
Receiving SSI only 1,007
Receiving both OASDI and SSI 1,342
Chart. Distribution of beneficiaries aged 65 or older, by program. Pie chart. 96% of beneficiaries aged 65 or older received only O A S D I benefits, 2% received only S S I payments, and 3% received both O A S D I and S S I payments.
SOURCES: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record and Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.
NOTES: OASDI beneficiaries who receive benefits based on more than one worker's earnings record (for example, their own earnings record and their spouse's earnings record) are counted only once. SSI includes federal SSI payments and federally administered state supplementation.
Totals do not necessarily equal the sum of rounded components.
a. Includes persons who received dependent parent's benefits or mother's and father's benefits.
b. Includes 1,211,224 SSI beneficiaries aged 65 or older who are disabled or blind.

Disabled Beneficiaries Aged 18–64, December 2022

Payments were made to 11 million people aged 18–64 on the basis of their own disability. Sixty-two percent received disability payments from the OASDI program only, 29% received payments from the SSI program only, and 9% received payments from both programs.

Disabled beneficiaries aged 18–64 receiving OASDI, SSI, or both
Beneficiary Number (thousands)
Total (unduplicated) 11,014
OASDI disability 7,828
Workers aged 64 or younger 6,839
Disabled adult children 901
Widow(er)s 87
OASDI disability only 6,818
SSI disability 4,196
Receiving SSI disability only 3,186
Receiving both OASDI and SSI disability 1,009
Chart. Distribution of disabled beneficiaries aged 18 to 64. Pie chart described in the text.
SOURCES: SSA, Master Beneficiary Record and Supplemental Security Record, 100 percent data.
NOTES: OASDI beneficiaries who receive benefits based on more than one worker's earnings record (for example, their own earnings record and their spouse's earnings record) are counted only once. SSI includes federal SSI payments and federally administered state supplementation.
Totals do not necessarily equal the sum of rounded components.

Social Security Financing

How Social Security Is Financed

Social Security is largely a pay-as-you-go program. Most of the payroll taxes collected from today's workers are used to pay benefits to today's recipients. In 2022, the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance Trust Funds collected $1.22 trillion in revenues. Of that amount, 90.6% was from payroll tax contributions and reimbursements from the General Fund of the Treasury and 4.0% was from income taxes on Social Security benefits. Interest earned on the government bonds held by the trust funds provided the remaining 5.4% of income. Assets decreased in 2022 because expenditures for benefit payments and administrative expenses exceeded total income.

Chart. Social Security revenues and expenditures in 2022. Two pie charts. The Revenue Sources pie chart is described in the text. The Expenditure Types pie chart has three slices. Benefit payments: 99.0%. Administrative expenses: 0.5%. Railroad Retirement financial interchange: 0.4%. Total expenditures equal $1.24 trillion.
SOURCE: 2023 Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance Trust Funds, Table II.B1.
NOTES: The difference between total revenue and total expenditures is reflected by a change in total trust fund assets.
Totals do not necessarily equal the sum of rounded components.
a. Includes General Fund reimbursements, which accounted for less than 0.1% of Trust Fund income.

Social Security's Demographic Challenge

The 2023 Trustees Report projects that the number of retired workers will grow rapidly, as members of the post–World War II baby boom continue to retire in increasing numbers. The number of retired workers is projected to double in about 50 years. People are also living longer, and the birth rate is low. As a result, the Trustees project that the ratio of 2.8 workers paying Social Security taxes to each person collecting benefits in 2022 will fall to 2.3 to 1 in 2035. In 2010, tax and other noninterest income did not fully cover program cost, and the 2023 Trustees Report projects that this pattern will continue for at least 75 years if no changes are made to the program. However, the Trustees also project that redemption of trust fund assets will be sufficient to allow for full payment of scheduled benefits until 2033.

Chart. Ratio of covered workers to Social Security beneficiaries. Line chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Ratio of covered workers to Social Security beneficiaries
Year Workers per beneficiary
1955 8.6
1956 8.1
1957 6.8
1958 5.9
1959 5.4
1960 5.1
1961 4.6
1962 4.3
1963 4.1
1964 4.0
1965 4.0
1966 3.9
1967 3.9
1968 3.8
1969 3.8
1970 3.7
1971 3.6
1972 3.5
1973 3.5
1974 3.4
1975 3.2
1976 3.2
1977 3.2
1978 3.2
1979 3.2
1980 3.2
1981 3.2
1982 3.1
1983 3.1
1984 3.2
1985 3.3
1986 3.3
1987 3.3
1988 3.4
1989 3.4
1990 3.4
1991 3.3
1992 3.3
1993 3.2
1994 3.3
1995 3.3
1996 3.3
1997 3.3
1998 3.4
1999 3.4
2000 3.4
2001 3.4
2002 3.3
2003 3.3
2004 3.3
2005 3.3
2006 3.3
2007 3.3
2008 3.2
2009 3.0
2010 2.9
2011 2.9
2012 2.9
2013 2.8
2014 2.8
2015 2.8
2016 2.8
2017 2.8
2018 2.8
2019 2.8
2020 2.7
2021 2.7
2022 2.8
2023 2.7
2024 2.7
2025 2.6
2026 2.6
2027 2.6
2028 2.5
2029 2.5
2030 2.5
2031 2.4
2032 2.4
2033 2.4
2034 2.4
2035 2.3
2036 2.3
2037 2.3
2038 2.3
2039 2.3
2040 2.3
2041 2.3
2042 2.3
2043 2.3
2044 2.2
2045 2.2
2046 2.2
2047 2.2
2048 2.2
2049 2.2
2050 2.2
2051 2.2
2052 2.2
2053 2.2
2054 2.2
2055 2.2
2056 2.2
2057 2.2
2058 2.2
2059 2.2
2060 2.2
2061 2.1
2062 2.1
2063 2.1
2064 2.1
2065 2.1
2066 2.1
2067 2.1
2068 2.1
2069 2.1
2070 2.1
2071 2.1
2072 2.1
2073 2.1
2074 2.1
2075 2.1
2076 2.0
2077 2.0
2078 2.0
2079 2.0
2080 2.0
2081 2.1
2082 2.1
2083 2.1
2084 2.1
2085 2.1
2086 2.1
2087 2.1
2088 2.1
2089 2.1
2090 2.1
2091 2.1
2092 2.1
2093 2.1
2094 2.1
2095 2.1
2096 2.1
2097 2.1
SOURCE: 2023 Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance Trust Funds, Table IV.B3 (intermediate assumptions).

The Long-Run Financial Outlook

Social Security is not sustainable over the long term at current benefit and tax rates. In 2010, the program paid more in benefits and expenses than it collected in taxes and other noninterest income, and the 2023 Trustees Report projects this pattern to continue for the next 75 years. The Trustees estimate that the combined OASI and DI trust fund reserves will be depleted by 2034. At that point, payroll taxes and other income will flow into the fund but will be sufficient to pay only about 80% of program costs. As reported in the 2023 Trustees Report, the projected shortfall over the next 75 years is 3.61% of taxable payroll.

Chart. Social Security income minus costs as a percentage of taxable payroll. Line chart with tabular version below.
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Table equivalent for chart. Social Security income minus costs as a percentage of taxable payroll
Year Percent
2023 -1.24
2024 -1.98
2025 -2.07
2026 -2.15
2027 -2.29
2028 -2.42
2029 -2.56
2030 -2.69
2031 -2.79
2032 -2.91
2033 -3.02
2034 -3.12
2035 -3.21
2036 -3.28
2037 -3.35
2038 -3.41
2039 -3.45
2040 -3.48
2041 -3.51
2042 -3.52
2043 -3.53
2044 -3.54
2045 -3.55
2046 -3.57
2047 -3.59
2048 -3.61
2049 -3.64
2050 -3.67
2051 -3.69
2052 -3.73
2053 -3.78
2054 -3.83
2055 -3.89
2056 -3.96
2057 -4.02
2058 -4.10
2059 -4.17
2060 -4.24
2061 -4.31
2062 -4.37
2063 -4.43
2064 -4.49
2065 -4.54
2066 -4.60
2067 -4.65
2068 -4.70
2069 -4.76
2070 -4.81
2071 -4.86
2072 -4.90
2073 -4.95
2074 -4.99
2075 -5.02
2076 -5.04
2077 -5.06
2078 -5.06
2079 -5.04
2080 -5.02
2081 -4.99
2082 -4.95
2083 -4.90
2084 -4.85
2085 -4.79
2086 -4.73
2087 -4.66
2088 -4.60
2089 -4.54
2090 -4.48
2091 -4.43
2092 -4.39
2093 -4.37
2094 -4.35
2095 -4.34
2096 -4.34
2097 -4.35
SOURCE: 2023 Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance Trust Funds, Table IV.B1 (intermediate assumptions).

Abbreviations

AIME
average indexed monthly earnings
DI
Disability Insurance
FICA
Federal Insurance Contributions Act
FRA
full retirement age
HI
Hospital Insurance
OASDI
Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance
OASI
Old-Age and Survivors Insurance
PIA
primary insurance amount
SECA
Self-Employment Contributions Act
SSA
Social Security Administration
SSI
Supplemental Security Income