How to Apply for SSDI with Vertigo/Balance Disorders
TL;DR: Vertigo and balance disorders can qualify under SSA Listing 2.07 (Disturbance of labyrinthine-vestibular function). You need documentation of disturbed function of balance, including caloric or other vestibular testing, and hearing loss demonstrated by audiometric testing. For Meniere's disease and other vestibular disorders, document episode frequency, duration, fall history, and how unpredictability prevents work.
Vertigo and balance disorders are challenging because symptoms are episodic and difficult to capture during a medical exam. The SSA needs vestibular testing, fall documentation, and a clear connection between your balance problems and inability to sustain work.
What the SSA Evaluates
The SSA uses a five-step sequential evaluation process for every SSDI claim. At Step 3, they check whether your condition meets or equals a Blue Book listing. If it does not, they assess your Residual Functional Capacity (RFC) at Steps 4 and 5 to determine what work you can still perform. Your application documentation should address both the listing criteria and your functional limitations.
Documentation Strategy
Strong claims share these elements:
- Consistent medical treatment over time (not a single visit)
- Specialist records (not just primary care)
- Objective test results supporting your diagnosis
- Specific, measurable functional limitations on all forms
- Medication history showing treatment attempts and side effects
- Physician support letter or RFC assessment from your treating doctor
For detailed guidance on completing your application forms, see our guides on the Disability Report (SSA-3368), Function Report (SSA-3373), and Work History Report (SSA-3369).
Common Application Mistakes
- Listing only one condition when you have multiple diagnoses
- Vague descriptions like "I can't work" instead of specific limitations
- Describing your best days instead of typical days
- Not reporting medication side effects
- Missing medical providers on your SSA-827 forms
- Treatment gaps without explanation
See our 12 common SSDI mistakes guide for detailed prevention strategies.
How ClaimPath Helps
ClaimPath's AI Intake translates your plain-English descriptions into SSA-compliant language. Our Form Auto-Population fills out SSA-16-BK, SSA-787, SSA-3369, and SSA-827 based on your answers. Our Application Strength Score rates your claim before submission so you can fix weak spots. And our Physician Letter Template gives your doctor a framework customized to your conditions.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How to Apply for SSDI with Vertigo/Balance Disorders?
TL;DR: Vertigo and balance disorders can qualify under SSA Listing 2.07 (Disturbance of labyrinthine-vestibular function). You need documentation of disturbed function of balance, including caloric or other vestibular testing, and hearing loss demonstrated by audiometric testing. For Meniere's disease and other vestibular disorders, document episode frequency, duration, fall history, and how unpredictability prevents work.
What the SSA Evaluates?
The SSA uses a five-step sequential evaluation process for every SSDI claim. At Step 3, they check whether your condition meets or equals a Blue Book listing. If it does not, they assess your Residual Functional Capacity (RFC) at Steps 4 and 5 to determine what work you can still perform.
What should I know about common application mistakes?
See our 12 common SSDI mistakes guide for detailed prevention strategies.
How ClaimPath Helps?
ClaimPath's AI Intake translates your plain-English descriptions into SSA-compliant language. Our Form Auto-Population fills out SSA-16-BK, SSA-787, SSA-3369, and SSA-827 based on your answers. Our Application Strength Score rates your claim before submission so you can fix weak spots.