Social Security Fund to Deplete by 2032: Experts Urge Immediate Action to Avoid Benefit Cuts
June 9, 2026
The Social Security retirement trust fund is now projected to run dry in late 2032, with benefits expected to be cut to about 78% of scheduled payments once funds are depleted.
These declines stem from lower fertility, reduced projected immigration, and the impact of tax and policy changes that shrink future payroll tax revenue and benefit taxation.
Even after depletion, the programs would continue paying some benefits at reduced levels, underscoring that the shortfall is not an outright collapse.
The report highlights ongoing pressure on the two major federal programs and the political difficulty of delivering timely policy fixes.
The situation is framed as the outcome of policy choices, described as a price paid for hardline immigration measures and tax cuts for the wealthy.
The crisis is presented as slow-moving, with a warning that delaying reform makes options more costly and politically painful.
Public figures and advocacy groups are calling for action: Social Security Commissioner Bisignano pledges to protect the programs, and leaders like AARP’s CEO urge Congress to act to preserve earned benefits.
Experts from Social Security Works and AARP stress prompt congressional action to shore up finances and avoid across-the-board benefit cuts.
Advocates emphasize that benefits should not be cut and that Americans have paid into Social Security, urging Congress to act accordingly.
Washington Post reporting is cited to support the projected timeline and impact, while critics question voter self-interest and administration supporters.
Trustees advise any fixes be phased in gradually to give workers and beneficiaries time to adjust.
Trustees stress the urgency of reform, noting that political hurdles have historically delayed action, even as the fund’s shortfalls reflect a funding gap needing policy changes.
Summary based on 17 sources
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Sources

AP News • Jun 9, 2026
Go-broke date for Social Security's retirement trust fund moves up | AP News
ABC7 Los Angeles • Jun 9, 2026
Social Security's retirement trust fund faces funding shortfall one year earlier than expected
