That’s why it’s important to pay attention to the record keeping side of your Social Security account. If not, you could end up seeing a delay, reduction, or suspension of your payments.
Here’s how that can happen and what to do if it does.
Four reasons your Social Security payment could get delayed
The Social Security Administration (SSA) requires you to report any changes in your address, marital status, and employment, as well as the death of a spouse.
1. The SSA Can’t Locate You
Known as a whereabouts unknown suspension, this happens when the SSA can’t locate you to confirm benefits eligibility. Typically SSA calls the last phone number on record several times at different hours and will contact interested persons or sources that the SSA believes may have contact with you.Returned checks can trigger the investigation and thus the suspension.
What happens: After trying to locate you, benefits are stopped on the first month SSA can suspend benefits based on the system’s recurring payment tape cutoff.
To get your benefits back you have to provide your correct address and/or living arrangement and meet all the eligibility requirements.
If it’s an address correction: The suspension will be lifted immediately and payments shouldn’t be impacted.
2. You Forgot to Update Your Banking Information
This one is on you. If you normally receive deposits from the SSA to a specific bank and that bank changes, you should notify the agency as soon as possible.If the wrong bank account is on file, your benefit payment will be delayed. This could also cause problems when you try to cash the check at the bank.
3. You Are Making Too Much Money
As soon as you turn 62 you can begin collecting Social Security benefits and continue to work, provided you don’t make more than $23,400 for 2025.If you do, you will receive reduced benefits or the benefits will be suspended. Once you reach your full retirement age, you will receive your full benefits no matter what you earn.
- If you are under your full retirement age: SSA will deduct $1 from your benefits for every $2 you earn above $23,400.
- In the year you reach full retirement age: SSA will deduct $1 from your benefits for every $3 you earn above $23,400. The deduction only applies to earnings before the month you reach full retirement age.
- From the month you reach your full retirement age: There is no limit on how much you can earn.
4. Your Living Arrangements Have Changed
If you receive Supplemental Security Income benefits, which provide monthly payments to people with disabilities and older adults who have little or no income or resources, and you don’t alert Social Security when your living arrangement changes, it could cause a reduction or a suspension in your benefits.When determining eligibility for SSI, the SSA considers if you live in your own home, apartment or mobile home or in someone else’s household, a group or board and care facility, or a hospital or nursing home.
- You live in another person’s home and pay less than your fair share of your housing costs.
- You live in your own home but someone else pays for all or part of your rent, mortgage, or other things like electricity and heating fuel.
- You are in a hospital or nursing home for the whole month and Medicaid pays for over one-half of the cost of your care.
- You are in a public or private medical treatment facility and Medicaid is paying for more than half of the cost of your care.
Your Social Security payment is delayed—now what?
If your Social Security payment is delayed, contact your local Social Security office or call the national number at 1-800-772-1213 to find out what’s going on. SSA recommends people wait three mailing days before contacting the office.Anytime there is a change in your status, don’t forget to alert Social Security. It may take a few minutes but it will avoid a lot of headaches if your payment ends up being delayed.