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New COLA Predictions Are In – Here’s What Retirees Should Know

June 22, 2026 · Personal Finance
Illustration of a balance scale where a grocery bag outweighs a stack of money, representing inflation outpacing income.
A balance scale weighing groceries against cash illustrates the widening gap in retirees’ purchasing power.

Navigating the Purchasing Power Gap

The core purpose of the cost-of-living adjustment is to preserve your purchasing power. It is not a raise or a bonus; it is a defensive mechanism designed to prevent inflation from eroding your standard of living. However, many retirees find that their personal rate of inflation runs much higher than the official national average.

This discrepancy happens because retirees spend their money differently than the general population. While younger workers might allocate a large percentage of their income to transportation, apparel, and electronics, older adults spend a disproportionate amount of their budget on healthcare, prescription drugs, housing, and groceries. When the prices for these specific categories surge, a standard COLA often feels inadequate.

Bridging this purchasing power gap requires you to re-evaluate your withdrawal strategy. If your Social Security COLA fails to cover the rising cost of your specific expenses, you must pull more from your investment portfolio to maintain your lifestyle.

Relying on a rigid “4 percent rule” withdrawal strategy can be dangerous during high-inflation years. Instead, you need a flexible approach that allows you to trim discretionary spending while ensuring your essential needs remain fully funded.

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5 comments on “New COLA Predictions Are In – Here’s What Retirees Should Know”

  1. Cheryl Ann Biggs says:
    July 4, 2026 at 5:12 pm

    I get a raise, then Medicare takes a swipe out of it for my medical insurance, which sliced some of the benefits. So…why is Medicare charging me more for less insurance?

    Reply
  2. Nilly says:
    July 4, 2026 at 4:44 pm

    Nope Medicare will go up 4.2% so you loose

    Reply
  3. Michael Amico says:
    July 2, 2026 at 7:43 pm

    That’s great but they went up on my Medicare premium and I lost $350/month on my take home pay. How come?

    Reply
  4. Ralph says:
    July 2, 2026 at 12:53 am

    The cost of Medicare always eats up any raise and then some.

    Reply
  5. Pete says:
    June 29, 2026 at 12:19 am

    3.8% would be a $131/mo increase for me!! Nice!

    Reply
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