What Is a Social Security COLA and How Can It Affect Your Retirement Plan in 2025?

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Each year, tens of millions of retirees collecting Social Security benefits anxiously await the upcoming COLA, or cost-of-living-adjustment (COLA). The COLA is a pivotal part of the Social Security program that reflects the next year’s increase in Social Security benefits. For instance, if the COLA is 5%, most retirees will see a 5% bump to benefits the next year.

The COLA is intended to maintain the purchasing power of benefits against inflation, which has been notably higher in recent years. Let’s dive deeper into how the COLA is calculated, what it will be in 2025, and how it can impact your retirement plan.

The following year’s COLA isn’t determined until October of the current year. Because the COLA is effectively meant to hedge inflation, the Social Security Administration (SSA) uses inflation data to determine the COLA.

While the market focuses on the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) to gauge inflation, the SSA looks at the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). Both the CPI-U and CPI-W are published monthly. Specifically, the SSA uses CPI-W data in the third quarter of the year, which is the months of July, August, and September. The CPI-W in each month is compared to the prior year’s number. The SSA then takes an average of the percentage differences for each of the three months to arrive at the following year’s COLA.

In October, the SSA announced the 2025 COLA would be 2.5%, which happens to be the smallest COLA in four years, although this also means that consumer prices are rising at a slower pace, which should lead to a cheaper cost of living over time. In November, retirees’ average monthly benefits check was roughly $1,925, or $23,100 annually. A 2.5% bump would increase the average benefits check to nearly $1,975 or $23,700 annually.

Having a better idea about your future finances can help you budget better and make better financial decisions. Some retirees rely on Social Security to provide most of their income, while others use it to supplement their retirement plans or other income.

Regardless, the nonpartisan Senior Citizens League (SCL) does an annual study that consistently shows Social Security benefits are not keeping pace with inflation. In this year’s study, the SCL found that Social Security recipients have lost about 20% of their purchasing power since 2010. So, if retirees can find ways to grow their savings safely and efficiently they may want to consider it.

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