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Social Security Administration Is Officially Ending Paper Checks for Benefits

- Money; Illustration AI-generated Using Claude
Money; Illustration AI-generated Using Claude

The check is no longer in the mail. On Tuesday, the Social Security Administration announced that it is completing its phase-out of paper checks.

The transition from paper to digital payments has been a long time coming. An executive order issued in March 2025 mandated that all federal government payments be distributed electronically via direct deposit, debit or credit card payments, digital wallets or real-time transfers. It set a target date of Sept. 30, 2025, for paper checks to be largely eliminated.

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In August, a Social Security spokesperson told Money that more than 99% of beneficiaries were already receiving their payments electronically. In the ensuing months, the agency has been working to transition the fewer than 1% of beneficiaries still receiving paper checks to electronic payments.

“Social Security plans to complete the full transition to electronic payments for all beneficiaries this year,” the agency said in this week's announcement, which was posted on its Social Security Matters blog.

It’s more efficient to process digital payments than to send checks via the U.S. Postal Service. It costs more than $3 to print and mail each individual check; plus, paper checks are 16 times more likely to be lost, stolen or delayed, according to government data.

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What to do if you still get paper Social Security checks

Social Security is instructing people still receiving benefits via snail mail to switch to electronic payments as soon as possible. If you still receive your benefits via snail mail, here’s what to do now:

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