The US government passes a surprising tracking rule for millions of Social Security recipients. Will your travel be monitored?

A quiet regulatory update from the Social Security Administration (SSA) may raise new concerns about the government’s increasing use of surveillance tools to monitor ordinary Americans.

In early January, SSA updated the Foreign Travel Evidence – Foreign Travel Data Application to increase scrutiny of foreign travel by Americans receiving benefits. This change allows the agency to use travel data collected by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which oversees Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.

The update affects millions of Social Security beneficiaries, as well as people who receive support from the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program (1).

In other words, Americans who receive retirement benefits or support based on needs, life circumstances or disabilities may be affected by this tighter oversight. And it comes at a time when government data handling practices are under increased scrutiny.

If you’re worried about the government’s ability to monitor individual activity, this update deserves a closer look.

The recent changes impact many beneficiaries under SSA’s purview. As of December 2025, SSA paid benefits to approximately 75 million people, of whom approximately 11 million were under the age of 65 and were collecting disability benefits, and nearly 5 million were collecting SSI alone (2).

Under long-standing rules, SSI and Social Security recipients must self-report foreign trips lasting 30 days or more. If you are a citizen, you may still be able to collect Social Security while living abroad, but SSI is strictly limited to residents of the United States and certain US territories (3).

The revised SSA rules update this reporting requirement to rely less on self-reporting and more on data collected by DHS. The agency argues that this move is about compliance and part of an effort to “curb inappropriate payments” (1).

However, the change may reflect a wider shift towards automated monitoring of benefit recipients, with limited transparency about how travel data is collected, stored and shared between agencies.

This comes at a time when government surveillance and data handling are increasingly scrutinized.

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