The Biggest Social Security Myth: “The System Is Running Out of Money”
Confused by Social Security?
Many people file early because they’re afraid Social Security will disappear. Here’s the truth: Social Security is not going bankrupt. Even in a worst-case scenario, benefits continue.
1. The Trust Fund May Deplete — But Payroll Taxes Continue
Payroll taxes still generate enough to pay around 75–80% of benefits. There is no scenario where checks stop.
2. Congress Has Dozens of Fix Options
Historically, benefit cuts, tax increases, and retirement age shifts have been used to extend solvency. Most fixes barely affect current retirees.
Concerned about the future of Social Security?
Let’s build a strategy based on math—not fear.
3. Filing Early Usually Backfires Financially
Filing early due to fear locks you into a lower benefit, reduces survivor income, and increases taxes later. Fear is not a strategy.
About Author
Ray R. Harris
Ray R. Harris, RSSA®, partners with tax and legal professionals to provide specialized Social Security claiming analysis for high-net-worth clients aged 58–70. A former executive with an MBA and background in Finance, Ray mitigates liability for his partners by ensuring their clients optimize spousal benefits, tax efficiency, and lifetime income.
Related Articles
Mid-Year Inflation Check: Is Your COLA Keeping Up?
We are six months into 2026. Is your COLA keeping up with real prices? Retirees spend more on healthcare, which rises faster than standard inflation. The Purchasing Power Gap If your expenses rose 5% but COLA was 2.5%, you took a pay cut. Is inflation eating your income? Let’s stress-test your retirement plan against rising…
Social Security for Men: Why Your Filing Date Is a “Husband’s Duty”
Happy Father’s Day week. Men, if you are the higher earner, your Social Security check isn’t really for you. It’s for your wife. The Grim Statistics Men have shorter life expectancies. When you die, your wife receives the higher of the two checks. The Best Gift You Can Give Delaying to 70 buys a life…
Can I Claim My Ex’s Benefit If They Are Still Working?
You are 66. Your ex is 66 and still working. Can you claim? Yes. The “Working Ex” Loophole Because you are divorced 2+ years, the SSA treats you differently than a married spouse. You can file for divorced-spouse benefits NOW. His earnings do not penalize YOUR check. Confused by the divorce rules? We clarify exactly…