If you’re a beneficiary of either Supplemental Security Income (SSI) or Social Security Retirement Benefits (or both), November 2025 brings a rare scheduling quirk: two SSI payments and the usual Social Security calendar based on your birth-date.
In this article, you’ll find the full payment schedule, the details on why this happens, and everything you need to plan ahead. Key words to watch: payment date, SSI, Social Security schedule, double check month, benefit planning.
Why Two SSI Payments in November?
Normally, SSI payments are issued on the first of each month. But when that date falls on a weekend or federal holiday, the payment is moved to the preceding business day.
This year, November 1 falls on a Saturday, so the SSI payment for November is issued on Friday, October 31. That means in the calendar month of October, eligible recipients get two deposits: the regular October check (Oct 1) and the early-November check (Oct 31).
Consequently, there is no separate SSI deposit in November, and the next SSI deposit comes on December 1.
For that reason, many beneficiaries will see what looks like two payments in October (one of them is really the November payment) and none in November for SSI. Meanwhile, Social Security’s schedule remains based on birth-date (and other rules).
Full Payment Schedule for November 2025
| Program | Recipient Type | Payment Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| SSI | Regular recipients | Oct 1, 2025 | For October benefit month |
| SSI | Early November benefit | Oct 31, 2025 | Because Nov 1 is Saturday – this effectively is the November check |
| SSI | Next deposit | Dec 1, 2025 | No separate November deposit in November month |
| Social Security | Started benefits before May 1997 (or SSI + SS) | Nov 3, 2025 | First payment among SS recipients in this category |
| Social Security | Birth date 1-10 of month | Nov 12, 2025 | Payments on second Wednesday |
| Social Security | Birth date 11-20 of month | Nov 19, 2025 | Payments on third Wednesday |
| Social Security | Birth date 21-31 of month | Nov 26, 2025 | Payments on fourth Wednesday |
Key Highlights
- If you receive SSI only, expect two deposits in October and no deposit in November.
- If you receive Social Security only, check your birth-date group for your payment date.
- If you receive both SSI and Social Security, you may get the early SSI on Oct 31 and your Social Security payment in early/second/third/ fourth week of November depending on your birthdate or special category.
- Electronic delivery (direct deposit or debit card) is required; paper checks are phased out for most beneficiaries.
What This Means for Your Budget
Because of the scheduling quirk, many SSI recipients will see two payments in October (one for October and one for November) and then none in November, making it seem like you’ve skipped a month—though you haven’t. It simply shifts the payment earlier.
That means in your monthly budget you’ll want to plan accordingly: treat the Oct 31 payment as covering November, and don’t count on a separate deposit later in November.
For Social Security recipients, the payment schedule remains predictable but may feel delayed compared to the first of the month, especially if your birth-date falls in the 21-31 range (you get paid on Nov 26). Planning expenses accordingly is crucial.
Also worth noting: because of the 2.8 % cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) coming in January 2026, average benefit amounts will rise slightly, so early budgeting is smart.
Why the SSA Uses These Schedules
The Social Security Administration (SSA) uses different payment schedules to spread out workload and manage processing, rather than having all payments go out at once.
By using birth-date groups and special rules for SSI (first of month rule) the agency avoids bottlenecks. The weekend/holiday rule triggers the early payment when the first falls on a non-business day.
If you’re a beneficiary of Social Security and/or SSI, November 2025 brings a bit of a scheduling twist: two deposits tied to SSI (one in October covering November) and the regular Social Security payments based on birth-date throughout the month.
The key takeaway: you’re not missing a payment, but you may see it come earlier than expected if you receive SSI. Staying informed of the schedule helps you avoid surprises and plan your finances smoothly.
FAQs
Why did I get two SSI payments in October but none in November?
Because Nov 1 fell on a Saturday, the SSI payment for November was moved up to Oct 31. That gave you two deposits in October and none in November, but you still receive the full benefit.
When will my Social Security check arrive in November?
It depends on your birth-date group: 1-10 gets paid Nov 12; 11-20 on Nov 19; 21-31 on Nov 26. If you started benefits before May 1997 (or receive SSI + SS) you may get paid Nov 3.
Does this schedule change mean I’ll get more money?
No — you receive the same benefit amount overall. The change is in timing, not in the benefit amount.




