Social Security Payment of Up to $943 to Go Out Today

social security payment of up to $943 to go out today

A stock image of a Social Security card and U.S. Dollar bills. SSI recipients are usually always paid on the first of the month.

Some Social Security benefit recipients will be receiving their monthly allotment today.

The Social Security Administration (SSA) provides monthly benefits to individuals over 65, those with disabilities, and surviving family members of deceased claimants. Adults and children with disabilities, as well as individuals age 65 or older, are eligible to receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits. The maximum monthly SSI payment for 2024 is $943 for an individual and $1,415 for a couple.

On Monday, July 1, SSI beneficiaries will be paid their monthly benefit by the SSA. SSI recipients are always paid on the first of any given month, unless it falls on a Friday or holiday. June payments were made on the last day of May this year for this reason.

When retirement checks are paid is dependent on a beneficiaries birthday and how long they have been claiming for. Benefits are usually paid on Wednesdays throughout the month, with those born earlier in any given month paid earlier. For example, if your birthday is on April 5, you will always be paid your retirement benefits on the second Wednesday, whereas if you were born on the 30th, your amount would be paid on the fourth Wednesday.

Retirement beneficiaries who have been receiving benefits before May 1997 will instead have their payments distributed on the third of every month.

SSI payments are made separately to retirement checks, meaning that if you claim both, you will be paid each amount on two separate days. Disabled workers and their dependents accounted for 11 percent of total benefits paid in 2023, the SSA reports.

If you don't receive your benefit amount when expected, the SSA recommends waiting three working days before contacting them to enquire about a missing payment.

There has recently been some good news for SSI recipients after the SSA announced it would get rid of obsolete or seldom performed occupations from a list of jobs that could be used to make decisions regarding benefit applications for the Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and SSI programs.

More than 100 jobs have been dropped from the Dictionary of Occupational Titles, which is used to determine whether a benefit applicant could find another job based on their abilities, which could result in a rejection of benefits on the basis of being determined "not disabled."

"While the agency's disability decision process remains sound, it continually seeks improvements to ensure its disability programs remain current and to ease the burden on customers," the SSA said in the release. The government agency added that it "anticipates that, as a result, it will only consider the most relevant occupations when determining if someone applying for disability benefits could perform other types of work."

Start your unlimited Newsweek trial

OTHER NEWS

3 hrs ago

Tourism

3 hrs ago

China to PH: 'Stabilize' relations

3 hrs ago

Nancy Binay walks out from Alan Cayetano-led hearing on new Senate building

3 hrs ago

A closer look at how Paul George wound up with the Sixers

3 hrs ago

New Electric Mountain Bike Player Amflow Enters Market, unveiling its Revolutionary First Bike powered by DJI Avinox at Eurobike 2024

3 hrs ago

US stocks back at records while European bourses retreat

3 hrs ago

Pet food recall: Viva Raw cat and dog products could carry listeria risk

3 hrs ago

Museum saves famous tow truck from scrapyard

3 hrs ago

PH-China meeting tackles concerns over Pogos

3 hrs ago

‘Nabuang ka na ‘day’: Heated debate, walkout mar Senate building inquiry

4 hrs ago

Pascual: DTI to monitor impact of NCR wage hike

4 hrs ago

Listen to Filipino bishops on divorce— Vatican official

4 hrs ago

Alice Guo’s brother is Chinese national Guo Xiang Dian — Gatchalian

4 hrs ago

Caloocan tames Davao as Negros keeps Imus locked out of MPBL win column

4 hrs ago

Philippines says it agrees with China to 'de-escalate' South China Sea tensions

4 hrs ago

Third ‘Alice Guo’ applied for clearance in Quezon City – NBI

4 hrs ago

Cardinals O-line ranked low despite lack of holes by PFF

4 hrs ago

PVL to use different format in return of Reinforced Conference

4 hrs ago

Chad rangers battle to protect park from poachers, local farmers

4 hrs ago

House Freedom Caucus chair Bob Good's campaign is raising money for recount, cost TBD

4 hrs ago

Binay: New Senate building issue being used to fuel Makati-Taguig feud

4 hrs ago

Italy plans 20 billion euro tank order from Germany's Rheinmetall, reports Handelsblatt

4 hrs ago

China to PH: Stop infringement, stabilize ties 'from further deterioration'

4 hrs ago

How We'd Spec It: 2024 Maserati GranCabrio Trofeo and Folgore

5 hrs ago

Jaylen Brown shares update about championship ring he lost at parade

5 hrs ago

Three pillars of central banking through the years

5 hrs ago

PSEI dips anew as factories slow down

5 hrs ago

Japan declares victory in effort to end government use of floppy disks

5 hrs ago

Heavy rains expected over Metro Manila, 7 Luzon provinces

5 hrs ago

Gilas Boys suffer 45-point beatdown from Puerto Rico

5 hrs ago

Blu Girls thrash Hong Kong to stay unbeaten in Canada Cup

5 hrs ago

'Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F' review: Eddie Murphy brings Big Dad Energy

5 hrs ago

Fiba OQT: Latvia crushes Georgia ahead of Gilas game

5 hrs ago

GM's US sales saw slight uptick after EVs sales leaped 40% from 2023

5 hrs ago

BTS' Jin to carry torch for South Korea in 2024 Paris Olympics

5 hrs ago

Toto Wolff makes big Lewis Hamilton prediction after ‘bad spell’ continues in Austria

5 hrs ago

PVL Reinforced promises high-octane volley action

5 hrs ago

Cha Cruz-Behag returns to PVL as Petro Gazz assistant coach

5 hrs ago

Power interruptions in parts of Bulacan, QC, Sampaloc, Tondo on July 6-7

5 hrs ago

Red Sox rookie's 3-run HR leads to 8-3 win over Marlins