1. Social Security Disability Insurance General
Guidelines
To qualify for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), you must have worked and paid into
the program (mandatory payroll taxes) for five of the last 10 years.
You must also have been disabled before reaching full-retirement age (65-67), and you must
meet Social Security's definition of disability. The Social Security Administration (SSA) uses a
process called sequential evaluation to determine who receives benefits.
Here is an explanation of Social Security's five-step process to determine if an individual
qualifies for SSDI benefits:
1. Determine if an individual is "working (engaging in substantial gainful activity)" according to
the SSA definition. Earning more than $1,010 a month as an employee is enough to be
disqualified from receiving Social Security disability benefits.
2. Conclude the disability must be severe enough to significantly limit one's ability to perform
basic work activities needed to do most jobs. For example:
Walking, standing, sitting, lifting, pushing, pulling, reaching, carrying or handling
Seeing, hearing and speaking
Understanding/carrying out and remembering simple instructions
Responding appropriately to supervision, co-workers and usual work situations
Dealing with changes in a routine work setting
3. Ask if the disability meets or equals a medical listing.
4. Explore the ability of an individual to perform work he has done in the past despite his
disability. If the SSA finds that a person can do his past work, benefits are denied. If the person
cannot, then the process proceeds to the fifth and final step.
5. Review age, education, work experience and physical/mental condition to determine what
other work, if any, the person can perform. To determine disability, the SSA enlists medical-
vocational rules, which vary according to age.
Want to find out if you qualify? Request a no-cost, no obligation disability evaluation to
determine your eligibility for Social Security disability.