Month: May 2026

11. What To Look Out For If SSDI Is At Risk: Wrapping Everything Up

  No across-the-board SSDI cut has happened in 2026. The biggest practical threats right now are. The key areas to pay attention to: Medicare deductions CDR terminations Overpayment clawbacks Work-income mistakes Future Congressional reforms Most Immediate Risk for Current Recipients

By Posted in Social Security Facts

10. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: Administrative Delays and Documentation Failures

  Missed mail, online notices, failure to respond to CDR forms, or missed consultative exams can cause suspension or termination. In 2026, SSA continues pushing digital notices and operational changes, making responsiveness more important. However, it is the recipient’s responsibility

By Posted in Social Security Facts

9. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: State Benefit Offsets / Workers’ Compensation Interactions

  Some SSDI recipients also receive workers’ comp or public disability benefits. COLA increases or administrative recalculations can trigger offsets that reduce one payment source. How does a recalculation work? If the law changes this can be one catalyst. There

By Posted in Social Security Facts

8. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: Inflation Outpacing COLA

  The 2026 COLA is 2.8%, but if rent, utilities, food, and medical costs rise faster than that in your area, your real purchasing power falls even though nominal benefits rose. Living costs are nothing new when it comes to

By Posted in Social Security Facts

7. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: Trust Fund Solvency Pressure

  Recent projections continue to warn that Social Security trust fund reserves face depletion in the early 2030s without reform. While SSDI has its own financing structure, broader Social Security reform discussions can include disability program changes or slower growth

By Posted in Social Security Facts

6. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: Federal Budget Deficit Pressure

Ongoing federal deficit debates in 2026 continue to put all mandatory spending programs under scrutiny. While SSDI has not been cut this year, proposals such as stricter eligibility rules, anti-fraud expansions, or slower COLAs remain recurring risks. As 2026 unfolds,

By Posted in Social Security Facts

5. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: Trial Work Period Missteps

The 2026 Trial Work Period amount rose to $1,210/month. If beneficiaries unknowingly trigger Trial Work months repeatedly, there may be a later move into extended eligibility and possible termination if earnings remain high. It is important to keep track of

By Posted in Social Security Facts

4. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: Work Activity Triggering Benefit Loss

In 2026, Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) limits increased to $1,690/month for most disabled workers and $2,830/month for blind workers. While the higher threshold helps some people, exceeding limits after work incentives can still end SSDI cash benefits. The big problem

By Posted in Social Security Facts

3. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: Overpayment Recovery Actions

In 2026, in an effort to to serve efficiently, the Social Security Administration has renewed focus on recovering overpayments. If SSA says you were overpaid even due to agency error it may reduce monthly SSDI checks through withholding unless waived

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2. Ten Potential Threats to SSDI: Aggressive Continuing Disability Reviews (CDRs)

SSA announced in March 2026 it is bringing medical Continuing Disability Reviews in-house nationally. CDRs determine whether recipients are still medically eligible. More frequent or more efficient reviews can lead to benefit cessations if SSA decides medical improvement occurred. Medical

By Posted in Social Security Facts