KEY POINTS
  • While debt ceiling talks have put Social Security payments in the news, one topic that's been put on the back burner is a deadline Congress faces to shore up the program.
  • Social Security's trust funds for retirement and disability benefits are projected to be able to pay only 78% of promised benefits by 2034.
  • To fix that, Congress could consider several major adjustments. Here's what they could mean.
A Social Security Administration office in San Francisco.

The debt ceiling debate has sparked conversation about whether Social Security payments will still go out on time.

However, Congress also faces another deadline with regard to the nation's largest social insurance program.