Social Security rule for retirees explained: Many retirees might think they know all the rules about claiming Social Security, but a quiet change in 2025 is still making waves, and could mean extra money for millions of public-sector workers and their families in 2026, as per a report.Social Security Rule Change Could Boost Your Benefits – What the Social Security Fairness Act Changed for Public WorkersThe Social Security Fairness Act, signed on January 5, 2025, eliminated two long-standing reductions: the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset, as per a 24/7 Wall St report. These rules had been cutting benefits for people with pensions from jobs that didn’t pay into Social Security, common in government, education, and public safety roles.
Spousal Claims Still Being Processed – What You Need to KnowNow, those penalties are gone. As of early 2026, the Social Security Administration has already paid $17 billion in retroactive benefits to 3.1 million recipients, with many retirees receiving surprise lump-sum deposits. Some spousal claims are still being processed, and Senators Collins, Cassidy, Cornyn, and Fetterman have urged SSA to make sure everyone gets the full adjustment, as per the 24/7 Wall St report.
Understanding the New Taxable Earnings Cap and Credit ThresholdOther 2026 updates affect everyone. The taxable earnings cap rose to $184,500, Social Security credits now require $1,890 in earnings, and full retirement age is 67 for those born in 1960 or later. Claiming at 62 still reduces monthly payments by roughly 30%, as per the 24/7 Wall St report.ET logoLive Events

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Why Reviewing Your SSA Account Could Mean Extra MoneyIf you have a public-sector pension, or are connected to one, logging into your My Social Security account and reviewing your benefits could uncover money you didn’t know you had. It’s worth checking before assuming nothing changed.
FAQsWhat is the Social Security Fairness Act?
It’s a 2025 law that removed penalties for public-sector workers who received pensions from jobs that didn’t pay into Social Security.

Who benefits from this change?
Government, education, and public safety workers, and their spouses, could see higher Social Security payments.