THINGS THAT CANNOT BE APPEALED

Most unfavorable decisions made by Social Security may be appealed.  A new decision maker will consider the appeal and give a new, hopefully more favorable decision.  You usually may submit new or additional evidence to support your claim during the appeal.

However, there are some things that simply cannot be appealed.  I will mention 2 of them here:

1.  The claimant has too much income or resources to qualify for SSI payments.  The regulations set exactly what the household income and resource limits are for SSI.  If you exceed these amounts, you are disqualified to receive SSI payments and there is no appeal.  Exception:  If Social Security has incorrect information, the information may be corrected.

2.  The claimant has not worked enough to earn the minimum number of work credits required to be covered by Social Security disability.  This is also cut and dried and cannot be appealed.  SSDI requires a certain number of quarters of coverage (work credits).  Without these there is no SSDI coverage.  Exception:  If you have wages/earnings that have not been properly reported, these can be reported/verified and it may change the actual work credits that you have earned.



Comments

  1. Erroneous information can always be corrected. Sometimes, correcting wrong information in your file may result in a better outcome. But if Social Security has the correct information in the examples above, there is no appeal.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

GETTING MONEY FROM SSDI

POST HEARING EVIDENCE

PARTIALLY FAVORABLE DECISIONS ON DISABILITY