Get ready if you’re still holding onto the familiar sight of a paper check in your mailbox every month. As of October 1, 2025, the Social Security Administration (SSA) has officially ended its long-standing paper check system in favor of an all-digital future. As of this month, close to 70 million Americans who get Social Security benefits will need to get used to using direct deposit or the government-issued prepaid Direct Express Card.
This isn’t exactly a curveball. The SSA first flagged the change in July, informing us that paper payments were on the chopping block. Less than 1% of beneficiaries received checks by mail, but this is the last call for those who didn’t sign up for direct deposit. Your October Social Security payment might be delayed if you didn’t enroll on time!
This change follows a government shutdown on October 1, 2025, caused by a funding dispute in Congress. Despite the current political situation, the SSA has assured that benefit payments will continue to be made on time. So, your retirement/survivor/disability check will still be sent (digitally) even if Washington is on standby.
The SSA insists it’s about speed, cost, and security. According to the U.S. Treasury Department, issuing a paper check costs around 50 cents, while an electronic transfer costs less than 15 cents. Multiply that difference by millions of payments, and you’re looking at huge government savings. Then there’s safety. Paper checks are 16 times more likely to be lost or stolen than electronic payments, exposing beneficiaries to unnecessary risk. Electronic Funds Transfers (EFTs), whether through bank accounts or the Direct Express Card, are harder to mess with.
The fact that EFTs process faster makes it easy to see why the SSA is nudging everyone toward the digital route. Still, those who’ve been resistant to tech or distrustful of banks may feel squeezed. However, the SSA argues this is a win-win.
SOCIAL SECURITY CHECKS GO DIGITAL THIS WEEK
Starting Oct. 1, the government will end paper checks after 85 years, switching to direct deposit or prepaid debit cards to reduce theft and fraud#SocialSecurity #Payments pic.twitter.com/h6lHklI11x— Matt Case (@MatthewRyanCase) September 29, 2025
If payment schedules remain unchanged, what shifts the delivery method? If your birthday is between October 1st and October 10th, you should get your deposit on October 8. Deposits will be given on October 15 for those born between October 11 and October 20 and on October 22 for those born between October 21 and October 31. Special rules still apply for those who began collecting benefits before May 1997. That group (including retirees, spouses, or survivor beneficiaries) will see payments land on October 5.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients have it even more complicated: this month, payments will arrive on October 1 and again on October 31. The difference is that all of these are now direct deposits or loaded onto Direct Express debit cards.
There are no trips to the bank teller, no envelopes to tear open, and no chance of a Social Security check getting lost. The government shutdown is the backdrop. The SSA guaranteed that payments will continue without delays, even as agencies throughout Washington cut services. You can still apply for benefits or replace a lost payment, but you may face problems if you ask for specific paperwork or record corrections. Offices are still open but offer fewer services. Your bank account (or card) will become the new front line for your benefits, your mailbox will be cleaner, and your Social Security payments will be secure!
NEXT UP: Is Your Social Security Check Not Enough to Survive? Here’s How to Get More Benefits!











