Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Social Security Administration to Require In-Person Identity Checks for Recipients
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 19 minutes ago on
March 19, 2025

The Social Security Administration announces new identity verification requirements, sparking debate over accessibility and fraud prevention. (AP/Stephanie Scarbrough)

Share

WASHINGTON — In an effort to limit fraudulent claims, the Social Security Administration will impose tighter identity-proofing measures — which will require millions of recipients and applicants to visit agency field offices rather than interact with the agency over the phone.

Beginning March 31st, people will no longer be able to verify their identity to the SSA over the phone and those who cannot properly verify their identity over the agency’s “my Social Security” online service, will be required to visit an agency field office in person to complete the verification process, agency leadership told reporters Tuesday.

The change will apply to new Social Security applicants and existing recipients who want to change their direct deposit information.

Impact on Vulnerable Populations

Retiree advocates warn that the change will negatively impact older Americans in rural areas, including those with disabilities, mobility limitations, those who live far from SSA offices and have limited internet access.

The plan also comes as the agency plans to shutter dozens of Social Security offices throughout the country and has already laid out plans to lay off thousands of workers.

In addition to the identity verification change, the agency announced that it plans to expedite processing of recipients’ direct deposit change requests – both in person and online – to one business day. Previously, online direct deposit changes were held for 30 days.

Addressing Fraud Concerns

“The Social Security Administration is losing over $100 million a year in direct deposit fraud,” Leland Dudek, the agency’s acting commissioner, said on a Tuesday evening call with reporters — his first call with the media. “Social Security can better protect Americans while expediting service.”

He said a problem with eliminating fraudulent claims is that “the information that we use through knowledge-based authentication is already in the public domain.”

“This is a common sense measure,” Dudek added.

More than 72.5 million people, including retirees and children, receive retirement and disability benefits through the Social Security Administration.

Political Reactions and Concerns

Connecticut Rep. John Larson, the top Democrat on the House Ways and Means Social Security Subcommittee, said in a statement that “by requiring seniors and disabled Americans to enroll online or in person at the same field offices they are trying to close, rather than over the phone, Trump and Musk are trying to create chaos and inefficiencies at SSA so they can privatize the system.”

The DOGE website says that leases for 47 Social Security field offices across the country, including in Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Kentucky and North Carolina, have been or will be ended. However, Dudek downplayed the impact of its offices shuttering, saying many were small remote hearing sites that served few members of the public.

Many Americans have been concerned that SSA office closures and massive layoffs of federal workers — part of an effort by President Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to shrink the size of the federal government — will make getting benefits even more difficult.

Musk has pushed debunked theories about Social Security and described the federal benefit programs as rife with fraud, and called it a “Ponzi scheme” suggesting the program will be a primary target in his crusade to reduce government spending.

Voters have flooded town halls across the country to question Republican lawmakers about the Trump administration’s cuts, including its plans for the old-age benefits program.

In addition a group of labor unions last week sued and asked a federal court for an emergency order to stop DOGE from accessing the sensitive Social Security data of millions of Americans.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

New CA Fire Maps Will Change How Some Valley Homes Are Built

DON'T MISS

Social Security Administration to Require In-Person Identity Checks for Recipients

DON'T MISS

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Jarrett Steven Huddleston

DON'T MISS

Legal Showdown as Justice Department Clashes with Judge Over Deportation Flight Details

DON'T MISS

Where Are Convicted Bitwise CEOs Serving Their Prison Terms?

DON'T MISS

Ohtani Hits Solo HR in Return to Japan as Dodgers Sweep Cubs

DON'T MISS

Violent Attacks on Tesla Dealerships Spike as Musk Joins Trump Administration

DON'T MISS

Judge Says Khalil’s Deportation Case Can Be Heard in New Jersey

DON'T MISS

Zelenskyy Disputes Putin’s Vow Not to Hit Ukraine’s Energy Infrastructure

DON'T MISS

Canada Bolsters Arctic Defenses as Trump Sets His Sights North

UP NEXT

Social Security Administration to Require In-Person Identity Checks for Recipients

UP NEXT

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Jarrett Steven Huddleston

UP NEXT

Legal Showdown as Justice Department Clashes with Judge Over Deportation Flight Details

UP NEXT

Where Are Convicted Bitwise CEOs Serving Their Prison Terms?

UP NEXT

Ohtani Hits Solo HR in Return to Japan as Dodgers Sweep Cubs

UP NEXT

Violent Attacks on Tesla Dealerships Spike as Musk Joins Trump Administration

UP NEXT

Judge Says Khalil’s Deportation Case Can Be Heard in New Jersey

UP NEXT

Zelenskyy Disputes Putin’s Vow Not to Hit Ukraine’s Energy Infrastructure

UP NEXT

Canada Bolsters Arctic Defenses as Trump Sets His Sights North

UP NEXT

A UN Worker Is Killed in a Strike in Gaza as Israel Warns of New Evacuation Orders

Legal Showdown as Justice Department Clashes with Judge Over Deportation Flight Details

37 minutes ago

Where Are Convicted Bitwise CEOs Serving Their Prison Terms?

43 minutes ago

Ohtani Hits Solo HR in Return to Japan as Dodgers Sweep Cubs

45 minutes ago

Violent Attacks on Tesla Dealerships Spike as Musk Joins Trump Administration

54 minutes ago

Judge Says Khalil’s Deportation Case Can Be Heard in New Jersey

2 hours ago

Zelenskyy Disputes Putin’s Vow Not to Hit Ukraine’s Energy Infrastructure

2 hours ago

Canada Bolsters Arctic Defenses as Trump Sets His Sights North

2 hours ago

A UN Worker Is Killed in a Strike in Gaza as Israel Warns of New Evacuation Orders

2 hours ago

Vang Appears En Route to Outright Special Fresno Council Election Win

13 hours ago

Previously Classified Files Related to JFK Assassination Released

17 hours ago

New CA Fire Maps Will Change How Some Valley Homes Are Built

When fires ravaged Chico and Paradise in 2018, most of the homes built there came before modern state mitigation standards, said Frank Bigel...

2 minutes ago

2 minutes ago

New CA Fire Maps Will Change How Some Valley Homes Are Built

19 minutes ago

Social Security Administration to Require In-Person Identity Checks for Recipients

Jarrett Steven Huddleston is Valley Crime Stoppers' Most Wanted Person of the Day for March 19, 2025. (Valley Crimes Stoppers)
28 minutes ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Jarrett Steven Huddleston

37 minutes ago

Legal Showdown as Justice Department Clashes with Judge Over Deportation Flight Details

43 minutes ago

Where Are Convicted Bitwise CEOs Serving Their Prison Terms?

45 minutes ago

Ohtani Hits Solo HR in Return to Japan as Dodgers Sweep Cubs

54 minutes ago

Violent Attacks on Tesla Dealerships Spike as Musk Joins Trump Administration

Mahmoud Khalil speaks during a press conference about students who were arrested and suspended for protesting at Columbia University, near the campus in New York, April 22, 2024. A New York federal judge on Wednesday transferred the case of a Columbia University graduate detained by the Trump administration this month to New Jersey, where his lawyers will continue their efforts to seek his release. (Bing Guan/The New York Times)
2 hours ago

Judge Says Khalil’s Deportation Case Can Be Heard in New Jersey

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend