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Old 11-20-2014, 02:44 PM #1
mrbreezeet1 mrbreezeet1 is offline
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mrbreezeet1 mrbreezeet1 is offline
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I thought I read that it didn't matter how much you made in the trial work period, that you still got to keep your check(ssdi) and what ever you made working.
But I asked SS one time, and she said only up to a certain amount you could earn, but then I quoted the article I had read, and she said I was right.
I am looking for it(The article)
here is where it says it here.
http://www.disabilitysecrets.com/page1-13.html

SSDI recipients are entitled to test their ability to work and continue to receive full benefits regardless of whether they make more than the SGA amount, for a nine-month trial work period. For 2014, the SSA considers any month where a person has a monthly income of more than $770 a trial work month. If you are self-employed, any month where you work more than 80 hours (or earn more than $770) is a trial work month.

Is this www.disabilitysecrets.com usually accurate.

But then I think you said one time, If I was working the trial work period,
It would most likely trigger a Social Security Review, and they would send the long form.

And do you know if it is true that you can earn over the SGA (Substantial Gainful Activity) and still get to keep the SSDI and what ever I earn?

How could I prove that to SS if they try to tell me otherwise?
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Old 11-20-2014, 04:35 PM #2
LIT LOVE LIT LOVE is offline
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LIT LOVE LIT LOVE is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mrbreezeet1 View Post
I thought I read that it didn't matter how much you made in the trial work period, that you still got to keep your check(ssdi) and what ever you made working.
But I asked SS one time, and she said only up to a certain amount you could earn, but then I quoted the article I had read, and she said I was right.
I am looking for it(The article)
here is where it says it here.
http://www.disabilitysecrets.com/page1-13.html

SSDI recipients are entitled to test their ability to work and continue to receive full benefits regardless of whether they make more than the SGA amount, for a nine-month trial work period. For 2014, the SSA considers any month where a person has a monthly income of more than $770 a trial work month. If you are self-employed, any month where you work more than 80 hours (or earn more than $770) is a trial work month.

Is this www.disabilitysecrets.com usually accurate.

But then I think you said one time, If I was working the trial work period,
It would most likely trigger a Social Security Review, and they would send the long form.

And do you know if it is true that you can earn over the SGA (Substantial Gainful Activity) and still get to keep the SSDI and what ever I earn?

How could I prove that to SS if they try to tell me otherwise?
disabilitysecrets is the website of NOLO publishers which writes the most comprehensive guide about SSDI and SSI benefits. Each article will state who it is written by---often an attorney. I've NEVER found incorrect info on their website and consider them trustworthy.

When in doubt you can always refer to the ssa.gov website.

READ THIS BROCHURE!
http://www.ssa.gov/pubs/EN-05-10095.pdf

http://www.ssa.gov/dibplan/dwork.htm
http://www.ssa.gov/dibplan/dwork1.htm
http://www.ssa.gov/dibplan/dwork2.htm
http://www.ssa.gov/dibplan/dwork3.htm


Yes, you can make more than the $1070 per month and collect it AND your SSDI benefit for up to 9 months. That 9 months is NOT guaranteed though. SS can still perform a CDR and determine you no longer qualify for SSDI. You MUST report any work activity AND continue to have a disabling impairment in order to qualify for a Trial Work Period.

They're trying to encourage the disabled to work despite their limitations. If you're healthy, than you'll have a period where you still "double dip" but it could be shorter than 9 months in all honesty. Enrolling in a Ticket To Work Program helps you "•Be protected from receiving a medical continuing disability review while using the Ticket and making the expected progress with work or educational goals." http://www.ssa.gov/work/overview.html#a0=1

Working will absolutely trigger the long form.

"How could I prove that to SS if they try to tell me otherwise?" Prove what to SS?

You need to also consider that you might return to work and discover you are no longer physically capable of the job. Then you'd have a failed work attempt and just continue receiving SSDI benefits (although you might need to provide more medical documentation from an expert about your PN.)
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