Getting both SSI and Social Security: what to expect

By WhenIsMyCheck Editorial Team • Last updated:

Quick answer: If you receive both SSI and Social Security, SSI is typically paid on the 1st and Social Security on the 3rd (with earlier shifts for weekends/holidays).
  • SSI is scheduled for the 1st.
  • Social Security is scheduled for the 3rd.
  • Weekend/holiday dates shift to the prior business day.
  • Your birthday group usually does not apply in this case.

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Not affiliated with SSA. This article is informational and not financial advice.

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People often hear “second Wednesday” or “paid on the 3rd” and assume the date is fixed. In practice, the schedule follows a simple rule-set and then adjusts when the scheduled day is not a normal business day. Understanding those rules helps you double-check what you see in your bank account and reduces unnecessary worry.

Below is a practical explanation written for everyday use. If you need the official calendar for a verified year, always cross-check with SSA publications.

1. Two payments in the same month

What it means: The SSA payment calendar is designed to spread payments throughout the month. Most Social Security recipients receive payments on a Wednesday that depends on the day of the month they were born.

Why it matters: If the scheduled date lands on a weekend or a federal holiday (including an “observed” holiday), payments typically move to the nearest prior business day. That can make a January payment appear in late December, which surprises people even though it’s normal.

How to use this site: Use the calculator to pick the benefit setup that matches you (SSI only, Social Security only, both, or paid on the 3rd). Then enter only your birthday day (1–31) if needed. The tool calculates your schedule client‑side in your browser.

2. Why dates can be in the prior month

What it means: The SSA payment calendar is designed to spread payments throughout the month. Most Social Security recipients receive payments on a Wednesday that depends on the day of the month they were born.

Why it matters: If the scheduled date lands on a weekend or a federal holiday (including an “observed” holiday), payments typically move to the nearest prior business day. That can make a January payment appear in late December, which surprises people even though it’s normal.

How to use this site: Use the calculator to pick the benefit setup that matches you (SSI only, Social Security only, both, or paid on the 3rd). Then enter only your birthday day (1–31) if needed. The tool calculates your schedule client‑side in your browser.

3. Budgeting tips (non-advice)

What it means: The SSA payment calendar is designed to spread payments throughout the month. Most Social Security recipients receive payments on a Wednesday that depends on the day of the month they were born.

Why it matters: If the scheduled date lands on a weekend or a federal holiday (including an “observed” holiday), payments typically move to the nearest prior business day. That can make a January payment appear in late December, which surprises people even though it’s normal.

How to use this site: Use the calculator to pick the benefit setup that matches you (SSI only, Social Security only, both, or paid on the 3rd). Then enter only your birthday day (1–31) if needed. The tool calculates your schedule client‑side in your browser.

4. When to contact SSA

What it means: The SSA payment calendar is designed to spread payments throughout the month. Most Social Security recipients receive payments on a Wednesday that depends on the day of the month they were born.

Why it matters: If the scheduled date lands on a weekend or a federal holiday (including an “observed” holiday), payments typically move to the nearest prior business day. That can make a January payment appear in late December, which surprises people even though it’s normal.

How to use this site: Use the calculator to pick the benefit setup that matches you (SSI only, Social Security only, both, or paid on the 3rd). Then enter only your birthday day (1–31) if needed. The tool calculates your schedule client‑side in your browser.

Quick checklist

  1. Do you receive SSI, Social Security, or both?
  2. If Social Security only: what day (1–31) were you born?
  3. Is the scheduled date a weekend or federal holiday?
  4. If yes: expect the payment to move earlier to the prior business day.
Tip: If you don’t receive your payment on the expected date, allow three additional mailing days before contacting Social Security (per SSA guidance).