The Penny Pincher Guides · 2026 Edition

How to get disability & how to file.

A plain-English, fully sourced walkthrough of how Social Security decides who gets disability — and the moves that actually shift the odds in your favor.

22 sections · ~30 min read Updated for 2026 Sources cited inline

Quick heads-up before you start

This is a privately-made, plain-English explanation of how Social Security Disability works in 2026, written for normal humans rather than program administrators.

This guide is educational only — it's not legal, financial, tax, or medical advice. Penny Pincher is a private company and is not affiliated with the U.S. government or the Social Security Administration. The fastest way to find out where you actually stand is one free 5-minute call with a licensed advocate: (512) 361-5754. Or take the free 2-minute eligibility check and we'll match you with one. Either way, no obligation. (Full sourcing and government-filing options are at the end of the guide.)

Section 1The 90-second version

If you're short on time, the entire guide on a postcard.

Two programs. SSDI (Social Security Disability Insurance) is for people who paid Social Security taxes long enough to be "insured." SSI (Supplemental Security Income) is need-based and pays a smaller, fixed amount regardless of work history. Many people qualify for one. Some qualify for both at once.

To be considered "disabled":

Key 2026 numbers

$4,018
Maximum SSDI monthly benefit at full retirement age, 2026
SSA Fact Sheet 2026
$1,620
2026 monthly SGA limit (non-blind)
SSA COLA 2026
5+ mo
Mandatory waiting period before SSDI checks start
42 U.S.C. § 423

About two out of three initial SSDI claims are denied. Most denials aren't because the person isn't disabled — they're because of missing medical evidence, paperwork errors, or filing under the wrong program. Getting it right the first time is worth one phone call: (512) 361-5754, or start the free eligibility check.

Section 2SSDI vs SSI — what's the difference?

First thing that confuses everyone. They sound similar. They aren't the same program.

SSDISSI
Full nameSocial Security Disability InsuranceSupplemental Security Income
Funded byPayroll taxes (FICA) you paid inGeneral U.S. Treasury revenue
Based onWork history (work credits)Financial need
Asset limitNone$2,000 single / $3,000 couple
2026 max benefit$4,018/mo (at FRA)$967/mo individual, $1,450 couple
Average benefit~$1,580/mo~$715/mo
Health insuranceMedicare after 24 moMedicaid (usually automatic)
Waiting period5 full monthsNone

You can receive both at once ("concurrent benefits") when your SSDI check is small enough that SSI tops you up. About 1 in 8 disability beneficiaries receives concurrent benefits.

The medical definition of disability is identical for both programs. The difference is on the financial/work-history side. A 2-minute check figures out which one fits you.

Section 3The official definition of "disabled"

This is the legal standard. Memorize it. Every approval and every denial comes back to this exact wording.

"Inability to engage in any substantial gainful activity by reason of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment which can be expected to result in death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 12 months." — 42 U.S.C. § 423(d)(1)(A)

Three things to notice:

For adults, there's no separate "partial disability" or "short-term disability" benefit. You're either disabled by this definition, or you're not. (For short-term needs, look at private short-term disability insurance, state programs in CA/HI/NJ/NY/RI, or paid leave through your employer.)

Section 4Work credits — did you pay in enough for SSDI?

SSDI is insurance you bought through every paycheck. Like any insurance, it only pays out if your premiums are current.

How work credits work

Each year you can earn up to 4 work credits. In 2026, one credit = $1,810 in covered earnings. Earn $7,240 in a year (any combination of months), and you've maxed out four credits. Credits never expire; they accumulate over your lifetime.

How many credits do you need?

Depends on your age when you became disabled. The general rule is 40 credits, 20 of them in the last 10 years. Younger workers need fewer.

Age you became disabledCredits neededRecent-work test
Before age 246Earned in 3 yrs before disability
24 through 30Credits = ½ × (years between 21 and disability)Half must be recent
31 through 422020 in last 10 yrs
442220 in last 10 yrs
462420 in last 10 yrs
482620 in last 10 yrs
502820 in last 10 yrs
523020 in last 10 yrs
543220 in last 10 yrs
563420 in last 10 yrs
583620 in last 10 yrs
603820 in last 10 yrs
62 and older4020 in last 10 yrs

The "Date Last Insured" trap

If you stop working, your insured status doesn't expire immediately — but it does expire eventually. Most workers have a Date Last Insured (DLI) roughly 5 years after their last quarter of substantial covered work. To win SSDI, you must prove you became disabled on or before your DLI. Wait too long after leaving work, and you can lose your insured status even if your medical condition is severe.

If you've been out of work for years and only now applying, your DLI may be in jeopardy. Call (512) 361-5754 for a free check before you waste time on the wrong program — or use the 2-minute eligibility tool.

See if you qualify — free 5-minute call

You may have already paid for benefits worth up to $4,018/month.

You paid into Social Security every paycheck. If a medical condition has kept you out of work for 12 months or more, that money was supposed to come back to you. A free 5-minute call with a licensed advocate tells you, in plain English, whether you have a real case — and what to do next if you do.

Free · No obligation · Mon–Fri 8a–8p ET · Avg. wait under 2 min · Penny Pincher is a private advertising service, not affiliated with any government agency.

Section 5The 5-step sequential evaluation, decoded

Every disability claim moves through these 5 questions, in this exact order. Fail any one, the claim is denied right there. Understand this and you understand 80% of disability law. (20 C.F.R. § 404.1520)

1

Are you working at SGA level?

Earning more than the SGA limit ($1,620/mo non-blind, $2,700/mo blind in 2026) means you're presumed not disabled — claim denied at Step 1, regardless of medical condition. Under SGA, move to Step 2.

2

Is your impairment "severe"?

The condition must significantly limit your ability to do basic work activities (walking, sitting, lifting, remembering, concentrating). It must have lasted or be expected to last 12+ months. If yes, move to Step 3.

3

Does it meet or equal a Listing in the Blue Book?

The "Listing of Impairments" (the Blue Book) lists about 100 conditions specific enough that meeting the criteria is automatic approval. Meet a listing, you're approved here. If not, move to Step 4.

4

Can you do any of your past work?

Looking at your "Past Relevant Work" — generally, jobs held in the last 5 years that lasted long enough for you to learn them. If your Residual Functional Capacity (RFC) lets you do any of that past work, claim denied. If not, move to Step 5.

5

Can you do any other work in the national economy?

Apply the "medical-vocational guidelines" (the "Grid Rules"), looking at your age, education, RFC, and transferable skills. The older you are, the harder this hurdle is to clear against you. Most claims are won or lost here.

Why age matters at Step 5: the Grid Rules assume an older worker has a harder time learning a new job. At age 50, the rules tighten in your favor; at 55, more so; at 60, dramatically. Timing your application or appeal correctly around an "age category" can change the outcome — talk to an advocate before you file. (512) 361-5754.

Section 6SGA — the 2026 income limits

"Substantial Gainful Activity" is the line between "you can work" and "you can't." Most important number in disability law.

2026 SGA monthly limits

Category2026 monthly amount2025 (for comparison)
Non-blind disabled worker$1,620$1,620
Statutorily blind worker$2,700$2,700
Trial Work Period (TWP) "service month"$1,160$1,160

What counts as "earnings" toward SGA

What can be subtracted

Certain costs can be subtracted to find your "countable earnings." More flexible than people realize.

Documenting these properly can move someone above SGA into SGA-compliant territory. Frequent issue at hearing level — and a place where representation pays for itself.

Section 7The Blue Book — the Listing of Impairments

If your condition matches a Blue Book listing exactly, you're approved at Step 3. No vocational analysis needed.

The "Blue Book" (formally Disability Evaluation Under Social Security) lists about 100 medical conditions across 14 body systems with specific clinical criteria.

The 14 body systems

SystemExamples of listed conditions
1.00 MusculoskeletalBack disorders, joint dysfunction, amputations
2.00 Special senses & speechVision/hearing loss, vertigo, loss of speech
3.00 RespiratoryCOPD, cystic fibrosis, lung transplant
4.00 CardiovascularChronic heart failure, ischemic heart disease
5.00 DigestiveLiver disease, IBD, short bowel syndrome
6.00 GenitourinaryChronic kidney disease, kidney transplant
7.00 HematologicalSickle cell, hemolytic anemias, leukemia
8.00 SkinSevere burns, ichthyosis, bullous diseases
9.00 EndocrineDiabetes (with complications), thyroid, pituitary
10.00 Multiple body systemsDown syndrome, non-mosaic
11.00 NeurologicalEpilepsy, ALS, MS, Parkinson's, TBI, stroke
12.00 Mental disordersDepression, anxiety, schizophrenia, autism, PTSD
13.00 Cancer (Neoplastic)Most metastatic and many primary cancers
14.00 Immune systemHIV, lupus, RA, scleroderma

"Meeting" vs "Equaling" a listing

If you suspect you meet a listing, ask your treating doctor whether your records contain the specific clinical findings the listing requires (lab values, imaging, functional measurements). Often, a one-sentence addition to a chart note — confirming the specific FEV1 value, the specific ejection fraction — is the difference between meeting and not meeting. Run the 2-minute check and an advocate will walk through the specifics with you.

Section 82026 benefit amounts — what you'll actually receive

SSDI

Your SSDI benefit equals your Primary Insurance Amount (PIA), calculated from your highest 35 years of earnings. Most people receive far less than the maximum because their average earnings are below the Social Security wage base.

$1,580
Average SSDI benefit, all disabled workers, late 2025
SSA Monthly Statistical Snapshot
$4,018
Maximum SSDI benefit at full retirement age, 2026
SSA Fact Sheet 2026
2.5%
2026 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA)
SSA, October 2025

SSDI also includes auxiliary benefits for eligible family members — typically a spouse caring for your child under 16, and unmarried children under 18 (or under 19 if still in high school). Family benefits are subject to a "family maximum," usually 150–180% of the worker's PIA.

The 5-month waiting period

SSDI benefits don't begin until you've been disabled for 5 full calendar months. Your first check covers the 6th month after your established onset date. ALS claimants are exempt from this waiting period under federal law.

SSI

SSI pays a fixed federal benefit rate, reduced by countable income. The 2026 federal benefit rates:

Recipient2026 monthly federal benefit
Eligible individual$967
Eligible couple (both qualify)$1,450
Essential person$484

Many states add a small state supplement on top of the federal SSI amount. Amounts vary widely.

Section 9Compassionate Allowances — fast-track approval

For about 280 specific medical conditions so severe that disability is presumed, claims are approved in days or weeks, not months.

The Compassionate Allowances (CAL) program automatically flags applications mentioning listed conditions and routes them to expedited review. Average approval time for CAL claims is under 30 days; many are decided in less than two weeks.

Examples of CAL conditions

If you have a CAL condition, mention it specifically by name on your application and attach a clear diagnosis. The flagging system is automated, but it works better when the diagnosis is stated plainly in the medical records you upload. Call (512) 361-5754 if you have any of these — speed matters.

Section 10How to file for disability — step by step

Three ways. None of them cost anything to file.

1

With help — fastest path to approval

A licensed advocate reviews your situation, identifies the strongest filing strategy, develops the medical record, and tracks every deadline. Fees are capped by federal law and only paid if you win (more in Section 16). Free 5-minute consultation: (512) 361-5754 or start the 2-minute check.

2

By phone, on your own

You can call the Social Security Administration directly to schedule a phone interview. Government numbers and links are listed in Section 22 at the end of this guide.

3

In person at a Social Security field office

Appointments strongly recommended. Government locator and phone numbers are in Section 22.

What happens after you submit

The Social Security field office checks the non-medical eligibility (work credits, SSI income/assets, citizenship). Then your file is sent to your state's Disability Determination Services (DDS), which makes the medical decision. DDS may request more records, send you to a Consultative Examination (CE), or decide on what's already in your file.

Apply early — don't "wait until you can't anymore"

One of the most expensive mistakes is delaying because you're "not sure you qualify yet." Two reasons:

Section 11The 7 documents to have ready

Get these in one folder before you start. Saves weeks.

1

Your Social Security number

And SSNs of your spouse and any minor children if applying for family benefits.

2

Birth certificate or proof of U.S. citizenship/lawful status

Original or certified copy.

3

Medical records and contact info for every treating provider

Names, addresses, phone numbers, patient ID numbers, and approximate dates of treatment for every doctor, hospital, clinic, therapist, and specialist who has treated your conditions in the last 5+ years.

4

List of all medications

Drug name, dose, prescribing doctor, and reason. Generic and brand both.

5

Work history

Job titles, dates, duties, hours, physical and mental demands for the past 5 years (the "Past Relevant Work" lookback).

6

Tax records / W-2s

Most recent W-2 for SSDI; self-employed need recent Schedule SE / Schedule C.

7

Bank account info for direct deposit

Direct deposit is required for most beneficiaries.

Section 12How long does it take?

Honest answer, with the caveat that processing times have been getting longer, not shorter.

Average processing times (fiscal year 2024–2025 data)

StageAverage wait
Initial decision~7 to 8 months
Reconsideration~6 to 7 months
Hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)~9 to 13 months from request
Appeals Council review~12 months
Federal court review12+ months
Compassionate AllowanceTypically under 30 days

National averages, vary substantially by state and hearing office. Sources in Section 22.

Total time from initial application through hearing decision often runs 2 to 3 years. One reason getting it right the first time is so valuable.

"Dire need" expedites

Some categories may move your case to the front of the line:

Section 13Approval rates — the honest numbers

Most people are unprepared for how often the answer is "no" the first time. Realistic expectations are half the battle.

Per published statistics for fiscal years 2010–2023, the typical pattern of final allowance rates is roughly:

~36%
Approved at the initial application stage
SSA Annual Statistical Report, 2023
~12%
Approved at reconsideration (the first appeal)
SSA Annual Statistical Report, 2023
~50%
Approved at ALJ hearing (of cases that reach hearing)
SSA ALJ Disposition Data, FY 2023

Only about 1 in 3 initial applications are approved. That climbs through the appeals levels for those who persist.

The Government Accountability Office has noted that a substantial share of denials at the initial level are reversed on appeal — meaning the original decision was wrong, often because the medical evidence wasn't fully developed the first time around. (See GAO-18-37 and OIG reports cited in Section 22.)

Section 14If you're denied — the 4-level appeal

A denial is not the end. Most claimants who win do so on appeal. You have 60 days from the date on the denial notice to start the next level — miss that window, you may have to start over.

1

Reconsideration

A different DDS examiner reviews the same file plus any new evidence. File within 60 days. Approval rates here are low (~10–15%), but it's a required step in most states before you can request a hearing.

2

Hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)

Where most successful appeals are won. Hearings are now usually held by phone or video; in person on request. You can present new medical evidence, testify, and have a vocational and/or medical expert questioned by your representative.

3

Appeals Council review

Reviews ALJ decisions. Can grant review, deny review, or remand the case back to the ALJ. Most requests result in either a denial or a remand for new hearing.

4

Federal District Court

You can sue in U.S. District Court within 60 days of the Appeals Council's decision. Federal court review is paper-based and limited to whether the prior decision was supported by "substantial evidence" and consistent with law.

The 60-day clock is unforgiving. Late appeals require "good cause" and are often rejected. If you got a denial letter, mark the deadline today and call (512) 361-5754 for a free appeal review — the hearing level is where representation matters most.

Section 15Why having a legal representative matters

Substantive, sourced. The data on what happens at the hearing level is unusually consistent across studies.

You are not required to have a representative at any stage. Many people apply on their own and are approved without help. But the data on hearings is striking.

What multiple federal studies have found

The Government Accountability Office's report GAO-18-37 ("Social Security Disability: Additional Measures and Evaluation Needed to Enhance Accuracy and Consistency of Hearings Decisions," December 2017) examined approximately 153,000 ALJ hearing decisions and consistently found that claimants represented at hearing were approved at higher rates than unrepresented claimants. The analysis controlled for impairment type, claimant age, and other factors, and the representation effect remained statistically significant.

Earlier work — including the SSA Office of the Inspector General report A-12-11-11142, "Disability Claimants Represented by Appointed Representatives" (March 2014) — found that represented claimants at the hearing level were allowed at a substantially higher rate than unrepresented claimants. The OIG examined a sample of claims and reported the differential held across hearing offices.

Two additional studies frequently cited:

What a representative actually does

Two important caveats

(1) Hiring a representative does not guarantee approval. The strength of your medical evidence is the single biggest factor; representation cannot create disability where the medical record does not support it.

(2) Representatives can be either attorneys or SSA-approved non-attorney representatives who have passed an exam and are bonded. Both are paid the same way (Section 16). Both must follow the same rules of conduct.

Same idea — bigger stakes

Denied for disability? Don't quit at the first "no."

Roughly two out of three first-time SSDI claims are denied at the initial level. Most aren't denied because of the medical condition — they're denied because of paperwork. You have 60 days from your denial letter to appeal. Approval rates jump dramatically at the hearing level with proper representation. One free 5-minute call tells you whether you have a real case.

Free consultation · No obligation · Fees only paid if you win, capped by federal law (see Section 16).

Section 16Representative fees — capped by federal law

Probably the most consumer-friendly fee structure of any legal field. Enforced directly by the federal government.

Under 42 U.S.C. § 406, any fee charged to a claimant in a Social Security disability claim must be approved. The most common arrangement is a contingency fee, which means:

What the cap means in practice

If your back pay is $20,000, 25% would be $5,000 — under the cap, so the representative receives $5,000. If your back pay is $60,000, 25% would be $15,000, but the cap kicks in at $9,200, so the representative receives $9,200 and you keep the additional $5,800. Federal court representation has a separate fee structure under 42 U.S.C. § 406(b) and the Equal Access to Justice Act.

Out-of-pocket case costs

Some representatives charge for hard costs like medical-record copying fees ($10–$200 typical) regardless of outcome. Ask up front. A good representative will tell you exactly what you might owe in case costs in writing before you sign anything.

Section 17Back pay & retroactive benefits

Because cases drag on, the back-pay check is often substantial. Understanding how it's calculated helps you plan.

SSDI

SSI

A worked example

Worked example · Carla, SSDI back-pay calculation

Carla stopped working in March 2023 because of progressive multiple sclerosis. She filed for SSDI in February 2024. After 18 months of waiting and one denial, an ALJ approved her claim in August 2025, finding her disabled as of March 2023.

Established onset dateMarch 2023
+ 5-month waiting periodAug 2023
First eligible monthSept 2023
Approval dateAug 2025
Back-pay months (Sept '23 – Aug '25)24 months
Carla's PIA / monthly benefit$1,800
Total back pay$43,200

If Carla used a representative on contingency, the fee would be 25% × $43,200 = $10,800 — over the $9,200 cap, so Carla pays $9,200 and keeps $34,000 of the back pay. Her monthly benefit going forward is hers in full.

Section 18Working while on disability

Yes, you can. The system actively wants you to try. The rules are designed to protect you while you experiment.

Trial Work Period (TWP)

Extended Period of Eligibility (EPE)

Expedited Reinstatement

If your benefits ended because of work, then your condition worsens within 5 years, you can request expedited reinstatement instead of starting a new application. Provisional benefits begin while the decision is made.

SSI rules differ

SSI uses the "1-for-2 rule" — for every $2 of earnings (after exclusions), your SSI is reduced by $1. The first $65 of monthly earnings (plus a $20 general exclusion) doesn't count at all.

Section 19Medicare, Medicaid & other help that comes with approval

Medicare with SSDI

You qualify for Medicare after 24 months of SSDI cash benefits, regardless of age. (ALS recipients get Medicare immediately; ESRD has its own rule.) Coverage includes:

Medicaid with SSI

In most states, SSI approval automatically enrolls you in Medicaid. (A few "209(b) states" have separate Medicaid rules — Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Virginia.)

Other automatic / categorical benefits

Section 20Common mistakes that sink claims

In rough order of how often we see them.

Section 21FAQ — the questions people are afraid to ask

Will applying for disability hurt my credit, my job, or my immigration status?

No. SSDI and SSI applications do not appear on credit reports, are not reported to employers, and SSDI is not a public-charge benefit. SSI receipt may be considered for some immigration determinations, depending on category — consult an immigration attorney for specifics.

Is SSDI taxable?

Sometimes. If your only income is SSDI, generally no. If you have other significant income, up to 85% of SSDI may be taxable at federal rates. SSI is never federally taxable. State rules vary. This is general information, not tax advice.

I'm 60 and laid off — should I file for early retirement or disability?

Disability, if you qualify medically. Early retirement at 62 reduces your monthly check by roughly 30% for life. SSDI at any age before full retirement age pays your full Primary Insurance Amount and converts automatically to retirement benefits at FRA with no reduction. You can also file for both at once and let the system pick.

Can children get disability benefits?

Yes — through SSI, using a "marked and severe functional limitations" standard. Approved children receive monthly SSI plus Medicaid in most states. SSDI children's benefits are different — those are paid to a child of a worker who is on SSDI, retired, or deceased.

What if I'm receiving workers' comp or VA disability — can I still get SSDI?

Yes, generally. VA disability does not reduce SSDI. Workers' compensation and certain public disability benefits can trigger an offset so combined benefits don't exceed 80% of your prior earnings, but you can still receive both. Veterans rated 100% P&T qualify for expedited processing.

Is mental illness "real" to disability evaluators?

Yes. Section 12.00 of the Blue Book lists mental disorders extensively — depressive, bipolar, anxiety, OCD, PTSD, schizophrenia, autism, intellectual disorders, and more. Mental conditions are evaluated using the same legal standard as physical conditions, including the "Paragraph B" criteria assessing functional limitations across understanding, social interaction, concentration, and adaptation.

What's a Continuing Disability Review (CDR)?

Periodically, disability cases are reviewed to confirm ongoing eligibility. Frequency depends on the "Medical Improvement Expected" classification: every 6–18 months (MIE), every 3 years (MIP), or every 5–7 years (MINE). Most reviews are done by mailed questionnaire. The legal standard at CDR is whether there's been "medical improvement" — a more claimant-friendly standard than the original application.

Can I move to another state and keep my benefits?

Yes for SSDI — it's federal and identical in all 50 states. SSI's federal portion is uniform; state supplements vary, so your total SSI may change. Report your new address within 10 days of moving.

What if my representative messes up?

Approved representatives are bound by 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1740 and 416.1540 and can be sanctioned, suspended, or disqualified. You can switch representatives at any time. Attorneys are also subject to their state bar.

Where can I get free help applying or appealing?

Local Legal Aid: search "[your state] legal aid disability." Protection & Advocacy agencies: every state has one. Law school disability clinics. Or call (512) 361-5754 for a free 5-minute eligibility consultation. Government contact info is in Section 22.

Section 22About this guide, government contacts & sources

Filing for free, directly with the government

You can apply for Social Security Disability for free, directly with the Social Security Administration. You never have to pay anyone to file an initial application.

About this guide

This guide is published by Penny Pincher, a private advertising service. It's not from the government. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the Social Security Administration or any other federal, state, or local government agency. This guide is educational only — not legal, financial, tax, or medical advice. Eligibility for SSDI and SSI is determined solely by SSA based on each individual's circumstances.

Penny Pincher's free 5-minute eligibility consultation, and any subsequent representation, is provided by independent licensed advocates and attorneys. There is no obligation to retain representation, and you remain free to apply and appeal on your own at any time.

Sources

Primary sources

  1. Social Security Administration, 2026 Social Security Changes — Cost-of-Living Adjustment Fact Sheet: ssa.gov/cola
  2. Social Security Administration, Substantial Gainful Activity: ssa.gov/oact/cola/sga.html
  3. Social Security Administration, Disability Evaluation Under Social Security ("Blue Book"): ssa.gov/disability/professionals/bluebook
  4. Social Security Administration, Compassionate Allowances Conditions List: ssa.gov/compassionateallowances/conditions.htm
  5. Social Security Administration, Annual Statistical Report on the Social Security Disability Insurance Program, 2023: ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/di_asr
  6. Social Security Administration, Annual Statistical Supplement, 2024: ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/supplement
  7. Social Security Administration, Monthly Statistical Snapshot: ssa.gov/policy/docs/quickfacts/stat_snapshot
  8. Social Security Administration, How You Earn Credits (Pub. No. 05-10072): ssa.gov/pubs/EN-05-10072.pdf
  9. Social Security Administration, Working While Disabled — How We Can Help (Pub. No. 05-10095): ssa.gov/pubs/EN-05-10095.pdf
  10. Federal regulations cited: 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520 (5-step evaluation); 20 C.F.R. § 404.1576 (IRWE); 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1740, 416.1540 (representative conduct); 42 U.S.C. § 423 (definition of disability); 42 U.S.C. § 406 (representative fees).
  11. 89 Fed. Reg. 76170 (Sept. 18, 2024) — Maximum Dollar Limit in the Fee Agreement Process raised to $9,200 effective Nov. 30, 2024.

Studies on representation and approval rates

  1. U.S. Government Accountability Office, Social Security Disability: Additional Measures and Evaluation Needed to Enhance Accuracy and Consistency of Hearings Decisions, GAO-18-37, December 2017: gao.gov/products/gao-18-37
  2. SSA Office of the Inspector General, Disability Claimants Represented by Appointed Representatives, Report A-12-11-11142, March 2014: oig.ssa.gov/audits-and-investigations/audit-reports/A-12-11-11142
  3. U.S. Government Accountability Office, Social Security Disability: SSA Should Strengthen Its Efforts to Detect and Prevent Erroneous Payments to Representative Payees, GAO-09-933T, July 2009: gao.gov/products/gao-09-933t
  4. Congressional Research Service, Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI): Eligibility, Benefits, and Funding, R44948 (most recent update): crsreports.congress.gov

Programs and figures change. Verify with ssa.gov before relying on any number for a filing decision.

Good luck out there. The system is bureaucratic, slow, and frustrating, but it is also navigable — millions of Americans navigate it successfully every year. The most important thing you can do is start. The two fastest ways:

If this guide helped, share it with one person you know who's been told they "don't qualify" without ever actually checking.

Free 5-minute eligibility check Talk to a licensed advocate. No obligation, fees only if you win. (512) 361-5754