SSA.tools

https://ssa.tools/

Social Security Earnings Cap: How Much Counts Toward Benefits?

Key Facts

  • 2026 earnings cap: $184,500 — the maximum income subject to Social Security tax
  • Earnings above the cap — not taxed for Social Security and don't count toward benefits
  • Adjusted annually — the cap increases each year based on national wage growth
  • Applies to both tax and benefits — same limit for what you pay in and what counts toward your benefit

What Is the Social Security Earnings Cap?

There is an annual limit on the amount of personal earnings subject to payroll (Social Security) tax. Above that amount, payroll taxes are no longer applied to your earnings. This same limit determines how much of your earnings count toward your benefit calculation.

In 2026, this limit is $184,500. Earnings above that amount are not subject to the 6.2% Social Security payroll tax and do not affect your PIA or AIME.

Example

If you earn $200,000 in 2026, only $184,500 is subject to Social Security tax. You pay 6.2% on $184,500, and the remaining $198,155 is not taxed for Social Security (though it is still subject to Medicare tax, which has no cap).

How Is the Cap Determined?

The cap is updated every year to keep pace with wage growth. The formula for a given year X takes the National Average Wage Index (AWI) for year (X - 2), divides it by $22,935.42 (the AWI in 1992), and multiplies by $60,600 (the cap in 1994).

The cap for years 1937–1974 and 1979–1981 was set by statute. For all other years, it's calculated automatically as specified by the Social Security Act.

Earnings Cap by Year

The following table shows the earnings cap for every year since 1937:

1937: $3,000
1938: $3,000
1939: $3,000
1940: $3,000
1941: $3,000
1942: $3,000
1943: $3,000
1944: $3,000
1945: $3,000
1946: $3,000
1947: $3,000
1948: $3,000
1949: $3,000
1950: $3,000
1951: $3,600
1952: $3,600
1953: $3,600
1954: $3,600
1955: $4,200
1956: $4,200
1957: $4,200
1958: $4,200
1959: $4,800
1960: $4,800
1961: $4,800
1962: $4,800
1963: $4,800
1964: $4,800
1965: $4,800
1966: $6,600
1967: $6,600
1968: $7,800
1969: $7,800
1970: $7,800
1971: $7,800
1972: $9,000
1973: $10,800
1974: $13,200
1975: $14,100
1976: $15,300
1977: $16,500
1978: $17,700
1979: $22,900
1980: $25,900
1981: $29,700
1982: $32,400
1983: $35,700
1984: $37,800
1985: $39,600
1986: $42,000
1987: $43,800
1988: $45,000
1989: $48,000
1990: $51,300
1991: $53,400
1992: $55,500
1993: $57,600
1994: $60,600
1995: $61,200
1996: $62,700
1997: $65,400
1998: $68,400
1999: $72,600
2000: $76,200
2001: $80,400
2002: $84,900
2003: $87,000
2004: $87,900
2005: $90,000
2006: $94,200
2007: $97,500
2008: $102,000
2009: $106,800
2010: $106,800
2011: $106,800
2012: $110,100
2013: $113,700
2014: $117,000
2015: $118,500
2016: $118,500
2017: $127,200
2018: $128,400
2019: $132,900
2020: $137,700
2021: $142,800
2022: $147,000
2023: $160,200
2024: $168,600
2025: $176,100
2026: $184,500

Related Guides

  • AIME Guide — Learn how capped earnings are averaged to calculate your monthly indexed earnings
  • PIA Guide — See how your AIME is converted to your Primary Insurance Amount using the bendpoint formula
  • Maximum Benefit — Discover what it takes to reach the maximum Social Security benefit by earning at the cap for 35 years
  • Work Credits — Understand how earnings also count toward the 40 credits needed to qualify for benefits

Use the SSA.tools calculator to see exactly how your earnings—subject to each year's cap—affect your benefit amount.

Additional Resources