Unless your disability unquestionably meets the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) qualifying disabling conditions, you could face a long road to getting approved for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits.
SSA denies 63 percent of first-time disability applications. However, in spite of these daunting statistics, you can appeal, especially if you have paid into the Social Security system through a lifetime of earned income, have worked a total of five years within the last 10 years, and can prove that your medical condition has kept you from working a year or longer. It’s just that, in many cases, it takes time.
Why is a Disability Hearing So Important?
If your disability appeal has reached the hearing level, you have already gone through two denials from SSA. At this point in the process, your hearing is perhaps your best opportunity to getting approved. That is because this is when you can actually meet your Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) in person or through a specially requested video conference.
The ALJ has never seen your case before this point, so you get a fresh review. You can also bring witnesses to the hearing, such as your personal doctor or the specialist who knows your medical history and can verify that you do, in fact, have a condition that meets SSA’s definition of “disability.”
Estimating the Waiting Time for Your Hearing
The Office of Disability Adjudication and Review (ODAR) will assign your claim to a hearing office that is usually within 75 miles from where you live. There are 143 regional hearing offices across the country. A full list of them is posted on the SSA Web site that shows how each office ranks according to its processing time. Times vary from about 270 days to 635 days with an average waiting time of 444 days. SSA is currently working on improving this average time to between 250 to 275 days.
How to Request a Disability Hearing
If you are at this level of the disability appeals process, you know that the SSDI application process requires a lot of paperwork. Some of it may even seem duplicative. However, you can’t take any shortcuts.
You can go online at the SSA Web site to request a hearing with an Administrative Law Judge, or print out the Request for Hearing form HA-501, available on the SSA site, and mail it to your local Social Security office. ODAR will also send you several forms for updating information on your medical condition. You will also need to fill out another work history document.
ODAR will notify you about 20 days before the date of your hearing. Considering the time it takes to get scheduled, it is very important to keep this date.
Getting Help with Your Hearing
You have time before meeting the ALJ to prepare your case, which should be the very best it can be for this level of the appeals process.
If you have been handling your disability application on your own, you should know that this could be your last opportunity to prove to SSA that you qualify for Social Security disability benefits. At this point, you may want to reconsider your application strategy and get the help of an SSDI advocacy group or disability attorney to represent you. You do have that right.


