Solutions to Social Security solvency are no longer a matter of the future. The Social Security Trust Fund is currently projected to be depleted in the fourth quarter of 2032, one quarter earlier than expected last year. At that point, the roughly 70 million Americans who rely on monthly checks would face a cut of about 22%, or about $500 a month. Lawmakers are now debating not whether the math works, but who should pay for it, whether through higher taxes, cutting benefits, or a combination of both.
Social Security Trust Fund depletion and reform options considered
Karen Glenn, the Social Security Administration’s chief accountant, laid out the only real option during a recent conference call about the program’s finances. He said:
“This is a simple math problem, not a simple political problem. We need to either increase projected revenues, reduce projected benefits, or some combination of the two.”
Eliminating or increasing payroll tax caps
The most widely discussed Social Security solvency solution currently targets a cap on payroll taxes. Income over $184,500 is not subject to Social Security taxes, a rule that dates back to the 1930s. A variety of proposals seek to change this, ranging from a complete phaseout to a “donut hole” structure in which income between $184,500 and $400,000 would remain tax-free, but anything above that would reenter the tax net. SSA estimates that these approaches could close between 22% and 67% of the funding gap.
Former Social Security Commissioner Martin O’Malley advocated for raising the cap on NewsNation on June 16th.
“Only 6 percent of us benefit from this cap, and an even smaller percentage, three or four, benefit from the removal of the cap on incomes above $250,000. Mr. Blake, most Americans think it’s unfair that wealthy people don’t pay the same tax rate as school custodians and teachers.”
O’Malley also directly linked the faster-than-expected depletion of the Social Security trust fund to income inequality. He added:
“The surplus deliberately built up since 1982 is being depleted faster than we thought at the time because of income inequality, because no one making more than $182,000 will pay a single penny more in Social Security.”
Payroll tax rate increase
Raising payroll taxes to support Social Security is also at the center of the debate over solvency. SSA estimates that an increase of 4.6 percentage points, bringing the total interest rate from 12.4% to about 17%, would close the gap completely. However, this option comes with real financial risks.
Jason Fichtner, a senior fellow at the Bipartisan Policy Center and a former SSA official, warned:
“To fund these programs, payroll taxes are approaching 20%, which is a huge burden on payrolls and can have a real negative impact on worker employment and labor productivity.”
Raising the retirement age and reducing benefits for high-income earners
Raising the retirement age is also a constant topic in reform discussions. A 2024 Congressional Budget Office analysis found that pushing back the full retirement age from 67 to 69 would reduce annual benefits per person by an average of 13%. Cutting Social Security benefits for high-income earners suggests a different path. The American Action Forum proposed a change that would reduce monthly checks for workers earning more than about $90,000, but leave lower-income workers with no changes at all.
Kathleen Romig, senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, summarized why the political path to solving Social Security solvency remains difficult. Romig said:
“This program is so beloved that it’s very difficult to contemplate the idea of cutting these benefits. We need to seriously think about how we can raise enough money to be able to pay these benefits, because that’s what people want.”
No single fix can fill the entire gap. A combination of increased revenue and targeted reductions in Social Security benefits, or a combination of increased payroll taxes and cap changes, are the most likely practical solutions. As of this writing, the window of time in which you can act before automatic cuts begin continues to shrink.

