
As millions of Americans prepare to receive their June 2026 Social Security payments, many retirees are checking payment schedules and eligibility requirements to ensure their benefits arrive on time.
However, despite Social Security serving as a financial lifeline for more than 70 million Americans, not everyone qualifies to receive monthly retirement benefits.
Under current federal law, two major groups remain ineligible for Social Security retirement payments in June 2026 and beyond. In many cases, individuals in these categories may never receive monthly retirement checks from the Social Security Administration, regardless of their age.
Understanding these rules is becoming increasingly important as more Americans approach retirement and depend on Social Security as a primary source of income.
Here’s a full breakdown of who is excluded, why they are ineligible, and what the current law says.
Group 1: Workers Who Never Earned Enough Social Security Credits
The largest group of ineligible Americans consists of workers who never accumulated enough Social Security work credits during their careers.
Social Security eligibility is based largely on payroll tax contributions made while working.
Most Americans must earn at least 40 work credits to qualify for retirement benefits.
In practical terms, that generally means about 10 years of employment in jobs covered by Social Security taxes.
How Work Credits Are Earned
Workers earn credits through:
- Wages reported by employers
- Self-employment income reported to the IRS
- Payroll taxes paid into the Social Security system
Without enough qualifying credits, the Social Security Administration generally does not allow a worker to collect retirement benefits.
Who Is Most Likely to Be Affected?
Several groups commonly fall short of the 40-credit requirement.
These include:
- Workers paid entirely in cash without reported earnings
- Individuals who spent long periods outside the workforce
- Certain self-employed workers who failed to report income
- Immigrants who arrived in the United States later in life
- Workers with limited employment histories
June 2026 Eligibility Requirement
| Requirement | Current Rule |
|---|---|
| Minimum credits needed | 40 credits |
| Approximate work history | About 10 years |
| Credits earned through | Covered employment and payroll taxes |
| Program administrator | Social Security Administration |
Without meeting these requirements, individuals generally remain ineligible for retirement benefits regardless of age.
Group 2: Workers Whose Jobs Were Not Covered by Social Security
The second major group includes workers employed in positions that historically operated outside the Social Security system.
For decades, certain government employees participated in separate pension systems instead of Social Security.
As a result, some workers never paid Social Security payroll taxes during large portions of their careers.
Examples of Non-Covered Employment
Historically, this could include:
- Certain teachers
- Police officers
- Firefighters
- Municipal workers
- State government employees
- Older federal employees under the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS)
Because Social Security taxes were not deducted from earnings in some of these positions, workers may not have accumulated enough credits to qualify for Social Security retirement benefits.
Did the Social Security Fairness Act Change This?
In 2025, Congress approved the Social Security Fairness Act, which repealed two controversial rules:
| Repealed Provision | Previous Impact |
|---|---|
| Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) | Reduced benefits for some public workers |
| Government Pension Offset (GPO) | Reduced certain spousal and survivor benefits |
The law increased benefits for millions of retirees who had earned Social Security benefits alongside public pensions.
However, the legislation did not automatically make all government workers eligible for Social Security.
Workers who never earned enough Social Security credits may still receive no retirement benefit from the program.
Other Situations That May Affect Payments
Even people who qualify for Social Security can sometimes experience payment interruptions or restrictions.
Examples include:
- Certain immigration-related restrictions
- Long-term incarceration
- Administrative disputes involving earnings records
- Failure to report required information
- Living in countries where payments face restrictions
These situations differ from permanent ineligibility, but they can affect benefit payments.
Why These Rules Matter in June 2026
As June payments begin rolling out, many Americans assume reaching retirement age automatically qualifies them for Social Security.
That is not always the case.
Eligibility remains tied primarily to:
- Work history
- Payroll tax contributions
- Covered employment
- Credit accumulation
Without meeting those requirements, retirement age alone does not guarantee monthly benefits.
Social Security Continues Supporting Millions
Despite eligibility restrictions, Social Security remains one of the nation’s largest and most important financial safety-net programs.
More than 70 million Americans currently receive:
- Retirement benefits
- Disability benefits
- Survivor benefits
- Supplemental Security Income
For many households, those monthly payments help cover:
- Housing costs
- Groceries
- Healthcare expenses
- Utilities
- Prescription medications
Bottom Line
Under current federal law, two major groups remain ineligible for Social Security retirement benefits in June 2026:
- Workers who never earned the required 40 Social Security credits.
- Workers whose careers were spent largely in jobs not covered by Social Security taxes.
Although recent reforms expanded benefits for millions of retirees, eligibility for Social Security still depends primarily on payroll tax contributions and qualifying work history. For Americans approaching retirement, understanding these rules is essential to avoiding surprises when it comes time to claim benefits.