The Social Security Tax Break Most People Never Notice
Each spring, high earners reach the Social Security tax cap and stop contributing for the year; most Americans keep paying all year long.
We often associate months with specific holidays and rituals. In March, we look forward to St. Patrick’s Day, with its parades, corned beef, and a pint of Guinness. And of course, there is March Madness, the annual college basketball tournament. But something else happens each year around the same time, quietly and mostly unnoticed: many millionaires stop paying Social Security taxes for the year.
The reason is simple. Social Security taxes only apply to the first $184,500 of wages in 2026. Once someone earns that amount, the Social Security payroll tax shuts off for the rest of the year. For a typical worker, Social Security taxes apply to every paycheck throughout the year. For someone earning $1 million a year, those taxes end sometime in early March.
How the math works
Workers pay 6.2% of their wages into Social Security, with employers paying another 6.2%. The tax applies only to wages up to the annual cap of $184,500.
Anyone who earns more than that amount pays less than 6.2% of their income toward Social Security. A worker earning $60,000 pays the full rate on every dollar they earn. Someone earning $184,500 pays about $11,439 in Social Security taxes. But someone earning $1 million pays that same amount, which works out to roughly 1.1% of their income.
Today, about 94% of workers earn at or below the wage cap, meaning they pay the full Social Security tax rate for the entire year.
Right now, only about 83–86% of total wages in the U.S. are subject to Social Security taxes. The rest, income earned at the very top of the wage distribution, sits above the cap and is not taxed for the program.
Why this matters
The Social Security Trust Fund is projected to be depleted around 2034. At that point, payroll taxes would still fund the program, but only enough to cover roughly 75–80% of scheduled benefits.
Unless Congress acts, benefits would automatically fall by about 20–25%.
The main drivers weakening the trust fund are demographic changes: Americans are living longer, the large baby boomer generation is retiring, and there are fewer workers supporting each retiree.
But rising income inequality is also playing a role. As more income concentrates at the top of the wage distribution, a growing share of earnings sits above the payroll tax cap. Economists estimate that this shift may account for roughly one-quarter of Social Security’s long-term funding gap.
Understanding the role of income inequality also matters because recent policy choices are likely to further widen the gap. Tax policies included in the Republicans’ big bill last year disproportionately benefit high-income households and are likely to push even more income to the top of the distribution. Over time, that means more high-end wages above the Social Security payroll tax cap and less wage income contributing to the program.
Policy options
One strategy to strengthen Social Security’s finances is to raise or eliminate the wage cap so that more high-income wages are subject to the payroll tax.
Some economists estimate that eliminating the cap while limiting additional benefits for very high earners could close most of Social Security’s long-term funding gap.
This approach is consistent with how Social Security already works. The program’s benefit formula is progressive, meaning higher earners receive proportionally smaller benefits relative to their income. Under many proposals, wages above the current cap would still be taxed, but benefits would continue to be calculated using the existing cap.
The cap itself increases each year based on national wage growth, using a measure called the Average Wage Index.
It is also important to remember that Social Security taxes wages, not total income. Many households earning above the cap receive a significant portion of their income from capital gains, dividends, or other investments, which are not subject to the Social Security payroll tax.
What is happening now?
There are proposals in Congress to strengthen Social Security’s finances, including plans to raise or eliminate the wage cap so that more high-income wages are subject to the payroll tax. Other proposals would address the program’s financing gap by reducing future benefits.
At the moment, however, no major reform proposal has enough political support to move forward. Social Security’s long-term funding gap remains widely acknowledged, but policymakers have largely postponed the difficult decisions required to address it.
The bottom line
For most Americans, Social Security taxes apply to every paycheck of the year. For many millionaires, those taxes stop sometime in early March.
The traditions of St. Patrick’s Day will continue. March Madness will keep filling brackets every spring. But “Millionaire Freedom Day” is not a tradition; it is the result of policy choices made decades ago.
Whether those choices still make sense in today’s economy is a question Congress will eventually have to answer.
Endnotes
Social Security Administration. “Contribution and Benefit Base.” The Social Security payroll tax applies only to wages up to the annual contribution base, which is $184,500 for 2026.
https://www.ssa.gov/oact/cola/cbb.htmlSocial Security Administration Office of the Chief Actuary. Roughly 94% of workers earn below the taxable wage cap, meaning they pay Social Security taxes on all their wages.
https://www.ssa.gov/oact/cola/awidevelop.htmlSocial Security Administration Trustees Report. The Social Security Trust Fund is projected to be depleted around 2034, after which payroll taxes would cover roughly 77% of scheduled benefits.
https://www.ssa.gov/oact/tr/Social Security Administration Office of the Chief Actuary. The taxable share of covered wages has fallen from roughly 90% in the early 1980s to about 83–86% today as high-end wages have grown faster than average wages.
https://www.ssa.gov/oact/presentations/Congressional Budget Office. Distributional analysis of recent tax policy shows larger gains accruing to higher-income households, contributing to greater concentration of income at the top of the distribution.
https://www.cbo.gov/publication/61367Social Security Administration Office of the Chief Actuary. Policy options that raise or eliminate the payroll tax cap could close a significant share of Social Security’s long-term funding gap depending on how benefits are structured.
https://www.ssa.gov/oact/solvency/


