June 1 is a Monday. That matters more than it sounds for 7.4 million Americans whose rent, groceries, and prescriptions run on a predictable clock — the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) deposit that lands on the first of every month.
This time, no adjustment is needed. No early payout buried inside May’s bank statement. The Social Security Administration (SSA) will release June’s SSI payment on the standard date, and for couples in which both partners qualify, that figure now sits at $1,491 per month under the federal benefit rates set for 2026.
Let’s check 2026 top benefits for SSI
The bump is not dramatic, but it’s real. The SSA’s 2.8 percent cost-of-living adjustment took effect in January 2026, with increased payments to SSI recipients beginning on December 31, 2025. For couples, that translated to a $41-per-month raise — up from $1,450 in 2025. For individuals, the ceiling moved from $967 to $994.
The COLA was calculated based on the increase in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers from the third quarter of 2024 through the third quarter of 2025. That’s the same formula that has governed Social Security adjustments since Congress enacted it in 1972.
The difference between the top and the average SSI
The SSA disregards the first $65 per month of earnings, but each dollar above that level reduces SSI benefits by 50 cents. Those reductions pulled the average SSI monthly benefit down to $737 in January 2026.
That $257 gap between the individual maximum and the real-world average tells the story of who actually gets SSI. Because most beneficiaries have no other source of income, more than half receive the full monthly benefit. But seniors who also draw Social Security retirement — even a modest amount — will see their SSI reduced dollar-for-dollar after a $20 monthly disregard.
Benefits are generally lower for adults 65 or older because Social Security retirement income, after that first $20, counts against the payment. Benefits for children tend to run higher precisely because most have no income of their own.
Who is in the 7.4 million SSI recipients?
In January 2026, the SSA’s own statistics show 7.4 million people collecting SSI. The vast majority — 84 percent — qualified due to a severe disability, including blindness. More than 1 million of those recipients are children.
SSI is not Social Security in the conventional sense. It draws from general federal revenues, not payroll contributions, and eligibility rests on financial need rather than work history. Recipients who live in someone else’s home without paying their fair share of food and shelter costs can see their payment reduced by up to $351.33 per month.
The asset threshold has remained flat: $2,000 for individuals, $3,000 for couples, with certain exceptions. A primary residence and one vehicle typically don’t count toward that ceiling — but the limit itself hasn’t moved since 1989, a point disability advocates have pressed repeatedly in Congress without success.
The August complication worth knowing now
June arrives clean. August does not. The September 2026 payment will be released at the end of August because Labor Day pushes the normal date off the calendar. Recipients will see two SSI deposits in August — one on August 3 and one on August 31. The second one covers September, not an extra payment.
That distinction has real consequences for the resource limit calculation. The SSA does not count an early SSI payment as double income for the month it arrives. If the September deposit lands in late August, the agency records it as September’s benefit, full stop.
