Social Security’s retirement trust fund is projected to run out of money by 2033, with the disability trust fund running out a year later, according to the program’s June 2025 trustees report (1).
But the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act — which reduces revenue collected from taxing Social Security benefits — will accelerate the program’s insolvency to 2032 (2).
Whatever may be the case, time is running out to make changes.
“That compressed timescale means there’s no easy fix,” according to an op-ed by Bloomberg’s editorial board (3). “Tweaks that phased in gently while protecting current beneficiaries could’ve balanced the books by now if they’d been done many years ago. Starting from here, they won’t suffice to avoid the programs’ imminent insolvency.”
Decades of delayed action have only exacerbated the shortfall. Bloomberg’s editorial board argues that Washington must “break its promise” to Americans by making politically painful Social Security reforms, such as raising the retirement age.
While the word “insolvency” sounds catastrophic, Social Security won’t disappear — but without urgent action, Americans could see their benefits shrink in less than a decade.
As of April 2025, more than one-fifth of Americans — or 73.9 million people — benefit from Social Security, including 52.6 million retired workers and 7.2 million disabled workers. These benefits are funded through a 12.4% payroll tax, which is split between the employer and employee (4).
Many older Americans rely on Social Security in retirement; in some cases, it may be their sole source of income. In a Gallup report, 58% of retired Americans said Social Security is a “major source” of their retirement income (5).
For those who have yet to retire, Allianz’s 2025 Annual Retirement Study found that 62% of Americans aren’t saving as much for retirement as they’d like, while 64% worry more about running out of money than death. Inflation is a major cause of that worry, but 43% also worry that Social Security won’t provide as much financial support as they’ll need (6).