FICA and the Social Security Act are governed by separate laws

Which is why what you pay in FICA taxes does not determine the lifetime benefits you receive.

FICA — The Tax Law

Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) was enacted as part of the Internal Revenue Code

  • Passed in 1935 alongside Social Security, but it is a tax statute
  • It lives in the tax code and is enforced by the IRS
  • It simply authorizes the government to collect the payroll tax
  • Governs the how much and who pays questions

Social Security Act — The Benefits Law

The Social Security Act was signed by FDR on August 14, 1935

  • A completely separate piece of legislation
  • Establishes the benefit program itself
  • Governs who qualifieshow benefits are calculated, and how they’re paid out
  • Administered by the Social Security Administration (SSA), not the IRS

Why This Distinction Matters

This separation has a very significant legal consequence — the Supreme Court settled this early on:

In Flemming v. Nestor (1960), the Supreme Court ruled that workers have no contractual or property right to Social Security benefits just because they paid FICA taxes. Congress can legally:

  • Change benefit formulas
  • Raise the retirement age
  • Reduce or restructure benefits
  • Even theoretically eliminate the program

Your FICA taxes do not create a legal entitlement the way a private pension or savings account would.

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