Rising Gross, Falling Net: How the 2.8% COLA Disappears
The January 2026 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) of 2.8% lifts the average retired-worker benefit from roughly $1,900 to $1,953. But the deposit hitting your bank account often tells a different story. The gap between “gross” and “net” is where silent budget killers live, and 2026 brings the sharpest lineup in five years.
- Medicare Part B premium jumps $17.90 to $202.90/month—the fastest dollar increase since 2022.
- IRMAA brackets freeze; even modest inflation-bumped AGI can push singles above $109k or couples above $218k, triggering surcharges up to $395.60/month extra for Part B plus Part D.
Stealth Tax Bracket Inflation: More of Your Benefit Becomes Taxable
Congress has not indexed the Social Security tax thresholds since 1984. As nominal 401(k) distributions, RMDs, and part-time wages inch higher, more retirees cross the $25k single/$32k joint “combined income” tripwire. Once crossed, up to 85% of every COLA dollar goes to Uncle Sam before you ever see it.
Example: A retired couple with $42k in pension and $6k in dividends will see their AGI rise $1,500 from the 2026 COLA. That tiny bump pushes $1,275 of fresh benefits into the 85% taxable zone—costing an extra $386 in federal tax at the 22% bracket.
Working After 66? Earnings Test Still Bites Early in 2026
Full retirement age (FRA) is 66 and 6 months for anyone born in 1958. If you claim at 65 and keep consulting, the $24,480 annual earnings test withholds $1 in benefits for every $2 above the limit. A $60k side gig erases $17,760 in 2026 benefits—more than the entire COLA.
Good news: Every withheld dollar is credited back at FRA, raising your permanent monthly amount. But cash-flow shock is real, and the 50% withholding rate can last months while SSA reconciles books.
Overpayment Claw-Backs: Up to 100% of a Check Can Vanish
In 2024 the agency issued $6.5 billion in new overpayment notices; recovery tempo accelerated after the 2025 omnibus codified 100% withholding authority. Retirees who failed to report a prior-year wage, pension, or divorce settlement are now seeing full-check garnishment until debts clear.
Key takeaway: if your 2026 deposit drops by 50-100% overnight, audit your my Social Security inbox for Form SSA-1564 before you call Treasury—the withheld amount is likely a scheduled recovery.
How to Model Net, Not Gross, Cash Flow
- Download your 2025 IRS transcript—watch MAGI lines 2a, 3a, and 5b.
- Input expected 2026 income into the official IRMAA calculator to preview premium tiers.
- Run two tax projections: one with 50% of SS taxable, one with 85%; plan quarterly withholding accordingly.
- If still working, set withholding on SS to 22% to cover both federal tax and potential earnings-test claw-back.
The 2026 Playbook for Retirees
Treat the 2.8% COLA as a ceiling, not a floor. Build a cushion for Medicare spikes, IRMAA creep, and the rising probability of overpayment enforcement. Converting a slice of pre-tax IRA dollars to Roth while in a temporarily low bracket can lower future combined income and insulate more of your benefit from the 85% tax trap.
Above all, log into ssa.gov every quarter—SSA’s dashboard now updates earnings, Medicare premiums, and withholdings in near real time. Spot a change early and you can appeal an IRMAA tier or challenge an overpayment before your bank deposit shrinks.
Stay ahead of every dollar shift—bookmark onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most authoritative analysis on Social Security and every market-moving headline.