If you watch the news on TV, you might think you’re seeing nothing but bad news. Network news organizations focus on negative stories because they drive ratings.
However, there is actually a lot of good news if you look for it. As a case in point, retirees on Social Security just got some good news from Uncle Sam.
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Before I go any further, the good news mentioned above does not come from the Social Security Administration (SSA). However, it does have implications for Social Security beneficiaries.
The good news I’m referring to was announced in early January by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Each month, the BLS releases inflation data for the previous month. And the December numbers should be encouraging for retirees.
According to the BLS, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for December 2025 was 2.7%. The Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W), the inflation metric that SSA uses to calculate the annual Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA), was 2.6%.
Why are these numbers good news for retirees? The Social Security COLA for 2026 is 2.8%. At least through the end of 2025, the price of goods and services increased at a lower rate than Social Security benefits.
This year’s Social Security COLA was significantly lower than the average historical increase of 3.7%. However, as long as retirees’ benefits are at least as high as prices, the purchasing power of their Social Security checks will not deteriorate.
With all of this in mind, the December inflation report from the BLS was good news for retirees on Social Security. Unfortunately, though, it wasn’t good news.
For one thing, the SSA calculated the benefit increase retirees would receive in 2026 based on inflation data (using the CPI-W metric) for the third quarter of 2025. COLAs are always after the fact. In other words, if you’re retired, you’ve already paid the higher prices that were intended to offset this year’s COLA. Inflation in December 2025 is slightly lower than the June 2026 COLA does not actually make the benefit increase more attractive.
Another factor dampens the impact of the December inflation data. The actual inflation retirees experience is often greater than the CPI or CPI-W numbers reflect. One main reason is that rapidly rising health care costs account for a large portion of retirees’ overall spending.