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The Sneaky Ways Inflation is Eroding Your Retirement Savings

August 24, 2025 · Personal Finance

Photo-realistic, senior-friendly scene that visually introduces the section titled 'Social Security's COLA: A Lifeline That Might Not Keep You Afloat'.

Social Security’s COLA: A Lifeline That Might Not Keep You Afloat

For millions of retirees, Social Security is the bedrock of their financial stability. One of its most important features is the annual Cost-of-Living Adjustment, or COLA. The goal of the COLA is to help your benefits keep pace with inflation, ensuring your purchasing power doesn’t decline over time. Each year, the Social Security Administration (SSA) announces the COLA, which is then applied to benefits for the following year.

While the COLA is an essential protection, it’s not a perfect solution. There is a sneaky catch in how it works that can leave many seniors feeling like they are still falling behind.

The issue lies in how the COLA is calculated. The adjustment is based on a specific measure of inflation called the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). As the name suggests, this index tracks the spending habits of working people, not retirees. And that’s the problem. The spending patterns of a 40-year-old office worker are very different from those of a 75-year-old retiree.

Retirees typically spend a much larger percentage of their income on two key categories: healthcare and housing. As we’ve already discussed, healthcare costs often rise much faster than overall inflation. If the COLA is based on an index that gives less weight to healthcare, the annual adjustment may not be large enough to cover the actual increase in a retiree’s most significant expenses.

Furthermore, a large COLA can sometimes trigger another issue. As your official Social Security benefit amount increases, it can cause a corresponding increase in your Medicare Part B premium. In some years, a big chunk of the COLA raise is immediately consumed by the higher Medicare premium, leaving you with little to no actual increase in your take-home amount. This can be frustrating and make it feel like you are running in place.

So, while the Social Security COLA is an invaluable lifeline, it’s important to understand its limitations. Relying on it as your sole defense against inflation is a risky strategy. It provides a partial shield, but it may not fully protect your purchasing power from the rising tide of costs you face in your daily life.

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1 comment on “The Sneaky Ways Inflation is Eroding Your Retirement Savings”

  1. William G Martin says:
    October 28, 2025 at 10:55 am

    Nothing “sneaky” about it! Basically……..Our Fed Govt took their one eye off the inflation indicators and spent and printed money, to over pay trillions of dollars, to a lot of of people, flooding the market with lots of cash! The watch dog failed to see the indicators on the horizon and allowed for INFLATION to get out of control! Professional Politicians and Federal Bureaucrats failed to control inflation, instead they fueled it and like the bamboozle of 1970’s, it will take most of 20 years to get it corrected and back to the standard of living we enjoyed in the early 2000 years. It is and will be for some time the failure of the Federal Government to protect it’s citizens from financial catastrophe!

    Reply
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