The post Does the World’s First Trillionaire Pay Less Into Social Security Than You? A New Fact-Check Weighs In appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A viral fact-check made the rounds this month after Senator Bernie Sanders posted that Elon Musk, pays the same amount into Social Security each year as a worker earning $184,500. PolitiFact looked at the math and confirmed the underlying mechanics: once your wages cross the Social Security wage base, the payroll tax stops. It does not matter whether the next dollar you earn is your 200,000th or your 200 billionth.
If you are a salaried worker in your 50s or 60s wondering how this affects your retirement math, you are in good company. Forum threads from people staring at their last few paychecks of the year, watching the Social Security line item suddenly disappear from their stub once they cross the cap, show up every December. The question is always the same: am I getting a deal, or getting shortchanged?
One number drives almost everything here. In 2026, Social Security payroll tax applies only to the first $184,500 of wages. Employees pay 6.2% and employers pay another 6.2%, which caps the worker’s annual contribution at $11,439. Self-employed people cover both halves, so their maximum is $22,878.
That is the entire reason the Sanders claim holds up. A surgeon pulling $184,500 in W-2 wages and a billionaire pulling $184,500 in W-2 wages contribute the identical $11,439. Every dollar above the cap is invisible to Social Security. Stock gains, dividends, and capital gains never feed the system at all, which is why someone like Musk, whose wealth sits almost entirely in shares, may actually contribute less than a well-paid dentist.
For most workers, this looks lopsided in one direction. A typical full-time employee earned $1,235 a week in the first quarter of 2026, which works out to roughly $64,000 a year. Every dollar of that is taxed for Social Security. The effective rate is the full 6.2%. For a worker earning $1 million in wages, the effective rate falls closer to 1%. For someone earning $10 million, it rounds to a rounding error.
The cap also caps future benefits. Because contributions stop at $184,500, so do future benefits. Social Security’s benefit formula only counts earnings up to that same cap each year. A person who earned the maximum taxable wage for 35 years tops out at the program’s maximum benefit, which lands a little above $4,000 a month at full retirement age in 2026. A neurosurgeon making $800,000 a year gets the same monthly check as the executive making $185,000.
That is why people who hit the cap should think of Social Security as a base layer of insurance that sits underneath their primary retirement plan. The system replaces a much smaller share of pre-retirement income for high earners by design. A median wage worker may see Social Security replace around 40% of their working pay. A maximum earner sees closer to 25%.
If your wages run above the cap, the practical takeaways are straightforward.
Medicare works differently, which trips people up. There is no wage cap on the 1.45% Medicare tax, and an extra 0.9% kicks in on wages above $200,000. So while a trillionaire and a $184,500 earner do contribute identical Social Security dollars, their Medicare contributions diverge sharply.
The fact-check is accurate, but the policy debate it fuels is separate from your personal decision. Whether the cap stays, rises, or disappears, the choices in front of you, when to claim, how much to save outside the system, and how to manage taxes on benefits, are still yours to make. Small differences in earnings history and timing can shift the answer more than headlines suggest.
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The post Does the World’s First Trillionaire Pay Less Into Social Security Than You? A New Fact-Check Weighs In appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

