Anonymous wrote:Got me thinking about this when I saw several articles today about a proposal to cap social security benefits at $100k per couple.
https://reason.com/2026/04/09/what-if-social-security-was-capped-at-100000-annually/
The article proposes capping Social Security benefits at $100,000 per household ($50,000 per individual) to help address the program's looming insolvency in the early 2030s. This change would save about $190 billion over ten years, close nearly half the long-term shortfall, and affect only the top 0.05% of retirees—who typically have massive private savings. It argues the cap aligns with Social Security's original goal of preventing poverty in old age, rather than subsidizing lavish retirements for the wealthy, and could serve as a modest step toward broader means-tested reform.
If you have a high income and corresponding high savings, do you worry much about social security? Do you factor it into your retirement plan? How do you feel about the potential increase of the wage base (currently $184,500) and about the idea of capping your future benefits at $100k (top earners can get up to $120k as a couple these days)?