After Approval of Your Disability Claim

How can I report a missing disability payment?

In the past, disability benefits were often issued via check each month. In early 2013 though, the Social Security Administration (SSA) began requiring all beneficiaries to receive payments through Electronic Funds Transfer. This decreases the likelihood of a check going missing or being stolen. It does not entirely eliminate the possibility of a missed payment.

There are a number of reasons payments can be missed, though the most common are:

What are some of the reasons your monthly SSD payments might decrease?

To qualify for Social Security Disability (SSD) benefits, you must provide the Social Security Administration (SSA) with many details, including information on your finances. Any change in your employment situation or your overall financial circumstances can therefore affect your eligibility for SSD or the amount of your monthly benefit payments.

Financial Circumstances and SSD Benefits

Once I am approved, will I continue to receive disability benefits forever?

You have just been approved for Social Security Disability benefits and you finally let out a long sigh of relief. You have probably been through the ordeal of a Social Security Disability appeal and couldn’t be happier that the process is finally over. The question on your mind now is probably whether or not you will continue to receive those Social Security Disability payments indefinitely, or if they will stop at some point in the future. The answer isn’t the same for all Social Security Disability recipients.

What is a Disability Expedited Reinstatement?

When an individual once qualified for Social Security Disability benefits and then is disqualified, such as an individual who decided to return to work and had benefits that ended due to their earning but was then unable to maintain employment due to their disability, the thought of re-applying for Social Security Disability benefits all over again can be very overwhelming. No one wants to endure a long and drawn out application and appeal process a second time around, especially when they know just how grueling it can be since they have been through the experience once before.

Find Out If I Qualify for Benefits!