Social Security is overpaying billions to people and then demanding the money back (2024)

This is a KFF Health News story.

Justina Worrell, 47, works part time as a kitchen helper in an Ohio nursing home. She has cerebral palsy, an intellectual disability and a cardiac condition that required she get an artificial heart valve at age 20.

A year ago, she was earning $862 a month and receiving about $1,065 in monthly Social Security disability benefits when a letter arrived from the federal government. The Social Security Administration had been overpaying her, the letter said, and wanted money back.

Within 30 days, it said, she should mail the government a check or money order.

For $60,175.90.

MORE: Social Security, Medicare face financial risk

"Social Security should be to help people, not to destroy them," said Addie Arnold, Worrell's aunt and caregiver.

The Social Security Administration is trying to reclaim billions of dollars from many of the nation's poorest and most vulnerable -- payments it sent them but now says they never should have received.

During the 2022 fiscal year, the agency clawed back $4.7 billion of overpayments, while another $21.6 billion remained outstanding, according to a report by SSA's inspector general.

One consequence is a costly collection effort for the government and a potentially devastating ordeal for the beneficiary.

"We have an overpayment crisis on our hands," said Rebecca Vallas, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation think tank.

"Overpayments push already struggling beneficiaries even deeper into poverty and hardship, which is directly counterproductive to the goals" of safety-net programs.

Social Security is overpaying billions to people and then demanding the money back (1)

The Social Security Administration declined an interview request from KFF Health News and Cox Media Group and would field questions only submitted by email.

The agency declined to say how many people have been asked to repay overpayments.

"We do not report on the number of debtors," spokesperson Nicole Tiggemann said in a statement.

The agency rejected a May 2022 Freedom of Information Act request for documentation of every overpayment notice sent over several years, and a March 2023 appeal is pending.

Jack Smalligan of the Urban Institute, who has done research on Social Security, estimated that millions of people have received notices saying the agency overpaid them.

MORE: Why Biden, Republicans fought over Social Security at State of the Union

Most are on disability, and many cannot afford to repay the government, Smalligan said.

Overpayments can result from Social Security making a mistake or from beneficiaries failing to comply with requirements, intentionally or otherwise. But much of the fault lies within the system -- for example:

  • Rules are complex and hard to follow.
  • Limits on what beneficiaries can save or own have not been adjusted for inflation in decades.
  • The Social Security Administration does not have adequate staffing to keep up with its workload, much of which is done by hand.
  • The system has built-in lags in checking information such as beneficiaries' income and relies heavily on data submitted by beneficiaries themselves.

That's the picture that emerges from agency employees, advocates for the disabled, policy research, SSA publications, reports by the inspector general, records of individual cases, and interviews with more than a dozen people in five states who received repayment notices.

The Social Security Administration is required to be a good steward of the money entrusted to it. That means keeping overpayments to a minimum -- and recovering them when they happen, the inspector general has written.

When the agency determines it has overpaid, SSA can ultimately reclaim money from beneficiaries by, for instance, reducing or stopping their monthly benefit payments, garnishing wages, and intercepting federal tax refunds.

The agency tracks its overpayments through quarterly "payment integrity scorecards." In the most recent scorecard for one Social Security program, the agency said $265 million of overpayments in the 2022 fiscal year were "within the agency's control." In other words, the agency blamed itself.

"We were aware of information but failed to take action, or we took incorrect action when the recipient or third-party provided requested information," the scorecard said.

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A much larger source of overpayments in that program, the agency said, was that beneficiaries did not report information, such as changes in their wages or assets.

By the time the agency catches a mistake, years can pass. In the meantime, the beneficiary is likely to have spent the money, and the amount involved can grow to overwhelming proportions.

"We understand getting notice of an overpayment may be unsettling or unclear and we work with people to navigate the overpayment process," Tiggemann, the agency spokesperson, said by email.

The agency's payment accuracy is high, Tiggemann said, but given the volume of payments it issues -- almost $1.2 trillion in the 2021 fiscal year -- "even small error rates add up to substantial improper payment amounts."

Tiggemann noted that the SSA is developing a program to tap payroll data from outside sources. The agency plans to use that information "when appropriate" to automatically adjust the amounts it pays beneficiaries, she said.

Congress authorized that project almost eight years ago.

Tangled safety nets

When people hear "Social Security," they may think of retirement benefits -- the monthly payments the government issues to millions of retired workers and surviving family members under the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance program.

But the Social Security Administration does much more than issue those checks, and its clawbacks for overpayment commonly involve payments under other programs with complicated eligibility requirements.

MORE: Debt ceiling timeline: When are Medicaid, Social Security and other payments in jeopardy

With certain benefits, how much money -- if any -- beneficiaries are due each month can change as their circ*mstances change.

Most of the overpayments involve the Supplemental Security Income program, which provides money to people with little or no income or other resources who are disabled, blind, or at least 65.

In the 2021 fiscal year, more than 7% of that program's outlays were overpayments, according to the agency's most recent annual financial report.

Some overpayments involve the Disability Insurance program, which assists disabled workers and their dependents.

Lori Cochran, a beneficiary disabled by multiple sclerosis, said she got tripped up by a life insurance policy she took over from her mother.

After she reviewed her finances with a Social Security representative, she recounted, she received a letter saying she owed $27,000.

"I started having, like, heart palpitations," she recalled.

Social Security is overpaying billions to people and then demanding the money back (3)

Cochran said she didn't know the insurance policy had a cash value of $4,000.

The agency told her that, for every month she held the policy, she wasn't entitled to any of her $914 monthly benefit, she said. The agency said it would recoup the $27,000 by deducting $91.40 from each of her future checks. At that rate, she would be paying it back "way into my elderly age," she said.

Cochran has asked SSA to reconsider. In the meantime, she cashed out the life insurance policy -- only to learn that, instead, she could have signed a paper saying she had no intention of cashing it out.

"So now I'm left with no life insurance," she said. "When I die, my daughter will have no money to bury me."

A 'Kafkaesque minefield'

If beneficiaries believe that an overpayment wasn't their fault, that the claim is unfair, or that paying the money back would cause hardship, they can ask the SSA to waive repayment.

They can also negotiate to repay what they owe gradually.

MORE: 'I would have nothing': Low-income older people fear debt default that stops Social Security

Cheryl Bates-Harris of the National Disability Rights Network recommended that people who receive overpayment notices appeal, because the information in the notices may be inaccurate.

But trying to resolve an overpayment involves plunging into a "Kafkaesque minefield," said Darcy Milburn, director of Social Security and health care policy at the Arc, which advocates for people with disabilities.

Another beneficiary named Lori described her journey through the minefield on the condition that her last name be withheld. She provided a copy of an administrative law judge's ruling in her case.

In 2017, SSA informed her that, since 2000, she had been overpaid $126,612, according to the judge's ruling.

"I almost threw up when I opened that letter," she said. "Myself and my husband were like, we were like frantic."

According to the judge's ruling, the government based its calculation on her receipt of workers' compensation benefits as well as disability benefits. She argued that she had told the SSA about the workers' comp. Lori worked for the U.S. Postal Service until she injured her back.

As her struggle unfolded, the government reduced her monthly benefit checks and then stopped them. She and her husband sold their car and their house and moved from Florida to Georgia, where the cost of living was lower.

Social Security is overpaying billions to people and then demanding the money back (4)

She said she ran up credit card debt and called lawyer after lawyer but was told no attorney would help because there was no money to be made from a Social Security case. Then she found one through legal aid.

After six years of battling SSA, including multiple appeals, Lori prevailed. An administrative judge ruled in her favor and wiped away the debt.

Lori had spent her benefit money in the belief she was entitled to it, the judge wrote, and "requiring repayment would be against equity and good conscience."

A family in Covington, Georgia, had a similar experience.

In 2018, Matt Cooper was shot in the face while working as a police officer there. Since then, he and his wife, Kristen, have depended on Social Security payments to help support their two young children.

"Every decision that we made for our family was based on the benefits that we were supposed to receive," Kristen Cooper said.

But the Social Security Administration recently demanded the family pay back $30,000 and reduced the children's benefits. Cooper said the agency failed to correctly include her husband's workers' compensation in its calculations.

"Situations like this come up and it just brings back a level of anger and just the need to protect my family," she said. "The system has definitely let us down."

Too late

Alex Hubbard, 30, has autism and said he works in a mailroom to keep busy.

"I like to be busy because I don't want to be bored at home," he said.

MORE: Biden's 2024 budget doesn't include plan to shore up Social Security's finances

In 2019, Hubbard received an overpayment notice for $11,111.43.

"I'm supposed to report my wages, but I just don't know how, how it works," said the Seattle resident.

The agency has cut off his benefits, Hubbard said, but it would have been better if it had stopped them before he owed all that money.

"They should have let me know, like, years back that I owed back that much," Hubbard said.

Now, the agency is trying to collect the money from his mother, who is unable to manage his benefits since having a stroke, Hubbard said.

Dealing with the Social Security Administration can be exasperating, beneficiaries said.

Letters from the agency don't provide clear explanations, and, if people on the receiving end of overpayment notices can get through to a human, agency employees give inconsistent answers, beneficiaries said.

SSA employees interviewed for this article, speaking as union leaders, said they can relate.

Beneficiaries "struggle getting through to an agency that has all but become non-responsive to the public at this point due to understaffing," said Jessica LaPointe, a claims specialist in SSA's Madison, Wisconsin, field office and president of a union council representing Social Security employees.

Tiggemann, the agency spokesperson, cited the challenge of "staffing losses and resource constraints" in her written statement.

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In a March 2023 budget message, SSA's acting commissioner, Kilolo Kijakazi, said SSA was "rebuilding" its workforce after ending the 2022 fiscal year "at our lowest staffing level in over 25 years."

New workers need a long time to get up to speed, employees said. Complex rules cause trouble for employees and beneficiaries alike.

Members of the public "often struggle to really understand what they're supposed to report," LaPointe said.

Rules for the beneficiaries

Disability benefits are meant for people who can't do a lot of work.

For disabled people who aren't blind, the government generally draws a line at earning $1,470 or more per month.

It's not just bank balances or paycheck amounts and the like that can affect a person's benefits. In the SSI program, if a family member gives them meals or a place to stay, that can count as "in-kind support."

Part of the trouble with SSI, critics say, is that limits on the assets that beneficiaries are allowed to hold without forfeiting benefits haven't been adjusted since 1989. The asset limits stand at $2,000 for individuals and $3,000 for couples.

Had the asset limits been indexed for inflation since 1972, when the program was created, they would be almost five times as much as they are today, according to a July 2023 report by researchers at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Maintaining eligibility for SSI benefits leaves people with little money to fall back on -- let alone to repay a large debt to the government.

MORE: Biden, in Florida, blasts what he calls GOP 'dream' to cut Social Security

A bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced a bill on Sept. 12 to raise the limits.

The SSDI and SSI programs include rules meant to encourage people to work. However, "if beneficiaries attempt work, they are likely to be confronted with an overpayment, and it is likely to be large," Smalligan and Chantel Boyens of the Urban Institute said in a March 2023 report commissioned by the Social Security Advisory Board.

'In a very bad place'

Justina Worrell's aunt and caregiver Addie Arnold, 69, who took her in when she was orphaned as a child, said neither of them has $60,175.90 to repay the government.

The August 2022 letter demanding repayment of that amount was not the first or the last word they have received from the Social Security Administration about possible payment errors. The matter involves two streams of benefits -- one from the account of Worrell's deceased father, and another related to her disability, Arnold said.

"I've been confused ever since this started," she said.

A February 2023 letter from the SSA claiming to explain how "we paid her [Worrell] $7,723.40 too much in benefits" includes difficult-to-decipher data going back to 1996.

The SSA has dropped its claim on some of the more than $60,000 it sought a year ago, but most remains outstanding, Arnold said.

MORE: As voters fret the economy, Dems narrow in on new message: Save Social Security, Medicare from GOP

Arnold believes part of the problem is that Worrell's employer asked her to work additional hours at the nursing home, where she runs a dishwasher and carries trays.

"She is so afraid of losing her job that she will do whatever they ask her to do. That is part of her mental state," Arnold wrote in a letter appealing to the Social Security Administration.

"I truly do hope and pray that she is allowed to stay on SSI," Arnold wrote, "because she has to continue to live and without it she will be in a very bad place."

Social Security is overpaying billions to people and then demanding the money back (2024)

FAQs

Social Security is overpaying billions to people and then demanding the money back? ›

A Channel 9 investigation found that families across the country are getting bills from the federal government. According to the Social Security Administration (SSA), more than $20 billion was given out to Americans who should not have received that money; now the agency wants it back.

Is Social Security taking money back from people? ›

As of March 25, 2024, the agency will collect ten percent (or $10, whichever is greater) of the total monthly Social Security benefit to recover an overpayment, rather than collecting 100 percent as was previous procedure. There will be limited exceptions to this change, such as when an overpayment resulted from fraud.

Is Social Security overpaying billions to Americans? ›

For the past several years, the agency routinely distributed between $6 billion and $7 billion in new overpayments each year. A new financial report released by the Social Security Administration last week shows that the scope of the agency's overpayment problem has continued to grow.

How can I get out of paying back an overpayment of Social Security? ›

If you agree that you have been overpaid, but you feel you should not have to pay it back because you did not cause the overpayment and you cannot afford to repay it, you should file Form SSA-632, Request for Waiver of Overpayment Recovery.

Why would Social Security ask for money back? ›

WHAT CAN CAUSE AN OVERPAYMENT? Your income is more than you estimated. Your living situation changes. Your marital status changes.

Does the government still owe money to Social Security? ›

As of December 2022 (estimated), the intragovernmental debt was $6.18 trillion of the $31.4 trillion national debt. Of this $6.18 trillion, $2.7 trillion is an obligation to the Social Security Administration.

Has Congress ever taken money from Social Security? ›

Q1. Which political party took Social Security from the independent trust fund and put it into the general fund so that Congress could spend it? A1: There has never been any change in the way the Social Security program is financed or the way that Social Security payroll taxes are used by the federal government.

How do I get a refund for overpaid Social Security? ›

Your employer should adjust the excess for you. If the employer doesn't adjust the overcollection, you can use Form 843, Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement to claim a refund. Attach copies of your Forms W-2, Wage and Tax Statement for the year to Form 843.

How do I get the $16728 Social Security bonus? ›

Have you heard about the Social Security $16,728 yearly bonus? There's really no “bonus” that retirees can collect. The Social Security Administration (SSA) uses a specific formula based on your lifetime earnings to determine your benefit amount.

Can you discharge Social Security overpayment? ›

Essentially, a Social Security overpayment is a debt you must pay back. But like many debts, Social Security overpayments are typically dischargeable in bankruptcy when fraud isn't involved.

What is the overpayment crisis for Social Security? ›

KFF Health News and Cox Media Group discovered that more than 2 million people a year have been hit with overpayment demands. Most overpayments are linked to the Supplemental Security Income program, which provides money to people with little or no income, who are disabled, blind, or at least age 65.

How far back can Social Security go back for overpayment? ›

The Social Security Administration (SSA) recently removed a bar on recovery of old overpayments ten years or older.

How to win a Social Security overpayment appeal? ›

If you got a letter in the mail that says you were overpaid and need to pay us back, you can request a waiver. Ask us to waive repayment if you can't afford it and feel the error wasn't your fault, or if you believe the overpayment is unfair for another reason. We may ask to see details about your income and expenses.

Does Social Security take back money? ›

Please pay us back if your benefit amount was more than it should have been. If you got a letter in the mail that says you got more money than you should have, please pay us back within 30 days. Benefits are overpaid when we can't accurately calculate your benefit amount because our information is wrong or incomplete.

Can Social Security take money from you? ›

The Department of the Treasury (Treasury) can also withhold Social Security benefits to collect delinquent non-tax debts owed to other federal agencies under the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-134). Treasury controls this activity and will contact you if you owe a non-tax debt.

Can the government take money from your Social Security check? ›

There are two important limits: The first $9,000 or $750/month of benefits are safe. No matter how much money you get, the government will not take more than 15% of your benefit.

Where did all the Social Security money go? ›

We use your taxes to pay people who are getting benefits right now. Any unused money goes to the Social Security trust funds, not a personal account with your name on it. Many people think of Social Security as just a retirement program.

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