Social Security, SSI, SSDI: Stimulus check details finally announced. Here’s what to know

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The stimulus check rules can be a little different for people who receive SSI and SSDI. 


Angela Lang/CNET

The IRS still hasn’t released a date for when it will be sending out third stimulus checks to those who receive Supplemental Security Income, Social Security Disability Insurance or other federal income benefits for veterans, retired railroad workers and others. However, we do know that nearly 30 million Americans can anticipate their stimulus payments now that the Social Security Administration has sent the IRS missing payment files that were holding up delivery. This past week, the Treasury sent out 37 million new stimulus checks for up to $1,400 per person — but most of the payments didn’t seem to include these groups of eligible people (and their dependents).

“The IRS has not announced when Social Security and SSI recipients will receive their EIP if they did not file a recent tax return,” the SSA posted on its website Friday. The government site also asks not to contact it about stimulus payments: “The IRS, not SSA, processes all EIPs.” However, the IRS doesn’t want you to contact its agency with problems, either.

While we don’t have a deliver date, we now know many more details about how the Social Security (including SSI and SSDI) payments will work, including payments made through Direct Express cards. (Calculate how much of the $1,400 your household could get and track your payment here.) The checks are arriving during tax season, which could also complicate matters, especially if you gained a new dependent in 2020. If you stopped or started receiving SSI or SSDI in 2019 or 2020, or are missing money from the first two stimulus checks, you could also face another obstacle. We’ll explain. This story has been updated with new details.

Key things to know

  • The government says it will conduct an outreach program letting taxpayers know if they’re eligible for any funds and offering help if needed. 
  • Any missing payment from a third check may be paid out as part of tax season 2021 (in 2022), a year from now. You’ll likely have to file a tax return to claim it, if the IRS were to follow the same pattern for missing stimulus check money as now (more info on this below).
  • There’s no fourth stimulus check yet, but some are advocating for more payments.


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Stimulus check 3: How much money you’ll get



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When will I know my third stimulus check expected arrival date?

Federal beneficiaries who file a 2019 or 2020 tax return or used the Non-Filers tool in 2020 may have already received a stimulus payment, or could get one as part of a future batch.

For everyone else, the wait continues. The IRS said March 22 that a payment date for those who receive Social Security and other federal benefits will be announced as soon as the information “becomes available.” It’s likely this could be soon now that the SSA has sent over the missing files.

The IRS and Treasury will use the information it has on file to automatically send you a check (even if you didn’t file a return). People who have already filed a 2020 tax return this year to claim missing stimulus money may find that the IRS will likely use this information instead of your 2019 details if it has processed your latest return (here’s how to see).

Some people may need to file a 2020 tax return, even if they don’t usually file, so the IRS has all the information needed to send payments to cover your eligible dependents

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The rules surrounding the third stimulus check can get confusing, fast.


Sarah Tew/CNET

How will my third stimulus check arrive? Direct Express details we know

If you didn’t submit a 2019 or 2020 tax return or used the Non-Filers tool in 2020 and you receive your monthly Social Security benefits by Direct Express Card, it’s likely you’ll receive your third payment on your Direct Express Card, according to the SSA and Direct Express (PDF). It appears that the same card will be used.

Note that you’ll receive one free withdrawal in addition to your usual free monthly withdrawal for monthly benefits.

Direct Express is a departure from the first two stimulus payments. Most SSI and SSDI recipients received their first checks through a non-Direct Express bank account or as a paper check, if you didn’t have your bank account information on file with the IRS. The IRS said that SSI and SSDI recipients should have gotten their stimulus check money the same way they received their first stimulus checks, including Direct Express for some. Here’s how to claim missing stimulus money from the first rounds.

Is it too late to sign up for a Direct Express account to get my stimulus money? What if I recently closed my account?

While you can sign up for a new Direct Express account at any time to receive monthly federal benefits electronically, if you don’t currently have an account, you’ll receive your third stimulus check a different way, likely in the mail at this point, since direct deposits stopped March 24.

If you closed your Direct Express account or there’s an error sending money to an inactive account, the payment will be returned to the IRS, which will reissue the stimulus money another way — likely in the mail to your last known address. If you moved, here’s how to inform the IRS and USPS of your new address so you can get your payment.

Here’s how to contact Direct Express to enroll for a new account for monthly benefits: 1-800-333-1795, Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. ET. Note that Direct Express representatives may not be able to answer stimulus check questions. Here’s more information about Direct Express cards and stimulus checks (PDF).

Will I get the full $1,400 check? Could I get a higher amount?

In President Joe Biden’s American Rescue Plan, people who receive SSI and SSDI will once again automatically qualify to receive a third stimulus check, for up to $1,400, as they did for the first and second round of payments approved in 2020. 

In the first two rounds, those individuals were eligible so long as they had a Social Security number and weren’t claimed as a dependent on someone else’s tax return — and so long as their household income didn’t exceed the threshold set ($75,000 single, $112,500 head of household, $150,000 married). 

The March 11 bill that authorized the third check expands stimulus payment eligibility to dependents of all ages, including young adults age 17 to 24 and older adult dependents. It also increases the amount set aside for those dependents to $1,400 each. Another change: This time around, the checks will be more “targeted” than they were in the first two rounds, meaning that single taxpayers who earn $75,000 or less per year will be eligible for the full amount, while those who earn more than $80,000 per year won’t get any money. That means some families could get more money, while others will get less or none at all.

People receiving Railroad Retirement and Veterans Affairs benefits also automatically qualify for a payment, as they did in the first and second round of stimulus checks, the IRS said. 

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If you’re missing stimulus money for yourself or your dependents, you’ll need to claim it on your tax return.


Angela Lang/CNET

How can I claim money for all my dependents?

The third stimulus check changes the rules and makes dependents of all ages eligible for up to $1,400 each toward the household’s total payment. That includes older adult relatives and college-age children. However, some beneficiaries with dependents will need to file a 2020 tax return to receive the $1,400 per dependent, so that the IRS knows how many dependents you claim.

“People in this group should file a 2020 tax return to be considered for an additional payment for their dependent as quickly as possible,” the IRS said in a March 22 press release.

Here are all the ways you could get more money in a third check and what to know if you had a baby in 2020. Here are tax breaks for anyone caring for children and older adults. And here’s who the IRS counts as an adult to receive their own stimulus check.

For the first stimulus check approved under the CARES Act in March 2020, qualified people with dependents age 16 or younger were eligible for up to $500 per child dependent, but not everyone actually received that extra money. For the second stimulus check, as long as your children were 16 years old or younger, they contributed $600 toward the final total of your household’s second stimulus check. 

What if someone manages my federal benefits account? How will I get my money?

If someone helps manage your Social Security benefits, also known as a representative payee, the Social Security Administration says the person managing your money should discuss it with you, the beneficiary. So if you’d like to use the money, the person managing your account should provide you with the stimulus payment. 

“Your Individual Representative Payee should have received your EIP to the same direct deposit account or Direct Express card as your monthly Social Security or SSI payment. For an Organizational Representative Payee, the payee likely received the EIP electronically or by paper check in the mail,” the SSA says on its site.

The SSA says representative payees are not required to account for the stimulus payment when they complete their annual accounting form, as it’s not considered a Social Security benefit.

I don’t live in the US. Is there anything extra I need to know or do?

If you’re a Social Security beneficiary with a foreign address whose monthly benefit is deposited in a foreign bank account, you should receive your third stimulus payment as a check in the mail. (The IRS doesn’t usually deposit money into foreign banks.) 

If you live abroad but receive your monthly benefits through a US bank, you should have received your first two payments by direct deposit to that account. If you still haven’t gotten your money, it will have to be claimed as part of a tax return. Find out everything you need to know about stimulus checks, citizenship and living abroad here.

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It isn’t too late to claim missing stimulus money, but you have to file a tax return to do so. 


Sarah Tew/CNET

I didn’t get my full stimulus payment from the first two payments, and I never file taxes. What can I do now?

According to the IRS, people who receive Social Security retirement, SSDI, SSI and Railroad Retirement benefits, as well as Veterans Affairs beneficiaries, were automatically eligible for the first two stimulus payments. If you receive these federal benefits as your only form of income, you weren’t required to file a federal income tax return in 2018 or 2019. Under the CARES Act, you should have received a stimulus check automatically (no need to file a simple tax return, as the IRS had originally said.)

If that money didn’t arrive, it’s possible you might have had a payment garnished for child support or funds diverted to pay a specific kind of creditor, but the rules changed with a second check. However, an IRS error could also be one potential culprit or the IRS needed more information about your eligibility. 

To receive your money now, you’ll need to claim the additional amount as part of tax season 2020, using the Recovery Rebate Credit. Even if you don’t usually file taxes, you’ll have to file to get those funds. The deadline for filing your 2020 taxes was extended to May 17, 2021.

In some cases — if you received a letter from the IRS confirming that your payment was sent, but you never actually got the money, for instance — you may need to contact the IRS to request a payment trace.

The IRS says you can create and then check an IRS account to see more information about your eligibility around the first two stimulus payments.

What if I still don’t have my missing stimulus money for my dependents?

If you used the IRS’ Non-Filers tool from May 5 through Aug. 15, 2020, the IRS should have automatically issued a catch-up payment for your dependents in October 2020. If you received your original stimulus money by direct deposit, you should have gotten the catch-up payment the same way. Others would have received it in the mail. 

If you filed for your missing dependent money by Nov. 21, 2020, the payment should have arrived by the end of 2020 in the same way you received your first payment (likely direct deposit or by mail.) If you missed the deadline, your check should be included on your 2020 tax return in 2021, if you file for a Recovery Rebate Credit.

To see the status of your or your dependent’s payment for the first or second payment, check your IRS account.

Here’s everything else we know about third stimulus checks, including what to do if there’s a problem with your payment.

source: cnet.com