When people say sets have O(1) membership-checking, they are talking about the average case. In the worst case (when all hashed values collide) membership-checking is O(n). See the Python wiki on time complexity.
The Wikipedia article says the best case time complexity for a hash table that does not resize is O(1 + k/n). This result does not directly apply to Python sets since Python sets use a hash table that resizes.
A little further on the Wikipedia article says that for the average case, and assuming a simple uniform hashing function, the time complexity is O(1/(1-k/n)), where k/n can be bounded by a constant c<1.
Big-O refers only to asymptotic behavior as n → ∞.
Since k/n can be bounded by a constant, c<1, independent of n,
O(1/(1-k/n)) is no bigger than O(1/(1-c)) which is equivalent to O(constant) = O(1).
So assuming uniform simple hashing, on average, membership-checking for Python sets is O(1).