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Social Security payroll tax limit increases for 2025. Here’s how that may affect you

  • The Social Security Administration on Oct. 10 announced a higher threshold for earnings subject to Social Security payroll taxes.
  • For 2025, the “taxable maximum” will be $176,100, up about 4.4% from $168,600 in 2024.
  • The Social Security tax rate is 12.4%, with workers paying 6.2% and employers paying the other 6.2%. The government also collects 2.9% in Medicare taxes, which doesn’t have a cap on earnings.
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How the Social Security tax calculation works

The Social Security payroll tax rate is 12.4%, with workers paying 6.2% through paycheck deductions. Employers pay the other 6.2%.

For 2025, workers will pay 6.2% on earnings up to $176,100, for a maximum of $10,918.20, according to the Social Security Administration. Once workers reach that max, they don’t pay into the program for the rest of the year.

The 2025 adjustment has a bigger impact on self-employed workers because “they’re paying both sides of it,” meaning they owe the full 12.4%, according to Lovison, who is also a certified public accountant.

The government also collects 2.9% in Medicare payroll taxes, with workers and employers each paying 1.45%. But there is no cap on taxable earnings for Medicare.

Self-employed workers are also responsible for both sides of the Medicare tax, for a combined 15.3% between Social Security and Medicare. However, they can deduct 50% of self-employment taxes on their individual return, even if they don’t itemize.

Concerns over Social Security solvency 

The latest Social Security adjustments come amid growing concerns about the program’s solvency. The trust funds used to pay benefits are expected to run out in 2035, the trustees’ report showed in May.

In the meantime, some advocates have pushed to increase the Social Security wage base to provide more funding.

The Social Security Administration’s 2024 trustees’ report details more than 150 options to close the funding gap, including ways to cut benefits and boost revenue.

“Clearly, the biggest financial gain comes from eliminating the taxable maximum,” Alicia Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College wrote about the report in August.

However, future changes are unclear with control over Congress and the White House uncertain.

Source: Investing - personal finance - cnbc.com

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