If it feels like each annual increase buys less at the grocery store and the pharmacy, that concern isn’t just pessimism. Social Security cost-of-living adjustments are designed to track inflation, but the inflation measure used doesn’t always match what older households actually spend the most on. Add in rising health costs and automatic deductions, and the net increase can feel smaller than the headline number. That’s why many retirees ask whether their buying power is eroding even in years with a COLA. Here’s what’s really happening, and how to pressure-test your own budget so you’re not surprised mid-year.
Why Buying Power Can Slip Even When COLA Rises
Social Security’s 2026 cost-of-living adjustment is 2.8%, following a 2.5% COLA in 2025. By law, that adjustment is based on changes in the CPI-W (an index reflecting spending by urban wage earners and clerical workers), comparing third-quarter averages year over year.
That design can create a mismatch because retirees often spend a larger share on health care and housing-related costs than the workers represented in CPI-W. Even when the COLA is “right” for CPI-W, your personal inflation rate can be higher if your big categories rise faster than average. In other words, a COLA can increase checks while still shrinking real-world flexibility.
The Index Used for COLAs Doesn’t Mirror Retiree Spending
CPI-W is a national average built from a working-age spending basket, so it isn’t tailored to older households. The Bureau of Labor Statistics also produces a research index for Americans age 62 and older (R-CPI-E), which exists largely because spending patterns shift with age. Because it’s a research series, it isn’t used for official COLAs, and BLS notes limitations in constructing elderly-focused measures.
Still, the very existence of these indexes helps explain why some retirees feel squeezed even when inflation headlines cool. If your budget is heavy on medical services and prescriptions, you may feel the gap most.
Medicare Part B Deductions Can Eat the Raise
Many beneficiaries have Medicare Part B premiums deducted directly from their Social Security checks, so the “raise” is really the net after that deduction. For 2026, CMS set the standard Part B premium at $202.90 per month, up from $185.00 in 2025, with the annual deductible rising to $283.
When that premium increases, the check you actually receive may rise by less than the COLA percentage suggests. A consumer can still be ahead overall, but the emotional reality is that the increase feels “spent” before it hits the bank. This is one of the biggest reasons buying power can feel weaker than the headline COLA.
The “Hold Harmless” Rule Helps, but Not for Everyone
There’s a “hold harmless” provision that generally prevents some people’s net Social Security payment from going down solely because Part B premiums rose. However, it doesn’t apply to everyone, including some higher-income beneficiaries who pay income-related surcharges and some people new to Medicare.
In years when Part B premiums rise sharply and the COLA is small, this rule matters more, and it can create uneven impacts across beneficiaries. Even when it protects a check from declining, it doesn’t guarantee the increase keeps up with real expenses like rent, groceries, and copays. It’s protection from going backward, not a promise of staying even.
What “Losing Ground” Looks Like Over Time
Short periods can be noisy, so long-term tracking is where the story becomes clearer. Some organizations estimate that Social Security checks lost about 20% of their purchasing value from 2010 to 2024. The reports also show larger long-run losses in some years when inflation was high and retiree-heavy categories rose quickly.
You don’t have to agree with every methodology to use the insight: if your largest categories rise faster than the CPI-W, your household feels a squeeze. That squeeze shows up as cutting “optional” spending first, then delaying care or home maintenance if the gap persists.
A Simple Way to Measure It in Your Own Budget
Instead of debating national averages, build a personal inflation snapshot based on what you actually buy. List your top five spending categories and compare what you paid last year to what you pay now, focusing on housing, health care, food, transportation, and insurance. If those categories rose faster than your benefit increase, your buying power dropped even if your check is higher.
Then identify one lever per category, like switching pharmacies, renegotiating insurance, or locking in a lower-cost phone plan, so the fix isn’t “spend less on everything.” This approach turns a big national question into a practical plan you can update each quarter.
The Real Question to Ask Before You Panic
Social Security benefits can lag behind your living costs, but that doesn’t mean you’re powerless. The key is catching the gap early, before it forces last-minute withdrawals or credit card use, and then choosing targeted changes that protect the categories you care about most. Track the net deposit after deductions, because that’s the number your household actually lives on. If the gap is growing, consider a mid-year budget reset and a benefits review, so you’re not relying on next year’s COLA to fix this year.
What’s the one expense category that most often makes your budget feel tighter right after a COLA? Let’s talk in the comments.
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