Do You Pay Taxes on SSDI Benefits?
TL;DR: When SSDI is taxable, income thresholds, and how to reduce your tax bill. Whether your SSDI is taxable depends on your total income. If SSDI is your only income, you probably owe no federal tax. If you have other income, up to 85% of your SSDI may be taxable. ClaimPath helps you get approved for $79 flat.
Is SSDI Taxable?
SSDI benefits may be taxable at the federal level depending on your total income. SSA uses a formula based on "combined income" (adjusted gross income + nontaxable interest + half your SSDI benefits):
| Filing Status | Combined Income | Taxable Portion of SSDI |
|---|---|---|
| Single | Under $25,000 | None |
| Single | $25,000-$34,000 | Up to 50% |
| Single | Over $34,000 | Up to 85% |
| Married filing jointly | Under $32,000 | None |
| Married filing jointly | $32,000-$44,000 | Up to 50% |
| Married filing jointly | Over $44,000 | Up to 85% |
SSI and Taxes
SSI benefits are never taxable at the federal level. SSI is a needs-based program and is excluded from gross income entirely.
Backpay and Taxes
SSDI backpay is reported as income in the year received, which can spike your tax liability. However, you can use the lump-sum election (IRS Publication 915) to allocate the backpay to the tax years it covers. This often results in a lower total tax bill.
State Taxes
Most states do not tax Social Security disability benefits. However, a handful of states (including Connecticut, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, and West Virginia) may tax some or all of your SSDI benefits depending on income thresholds.
Withholding
If you expect to owe taxes on your SSDI, you can request federal tax withholding by filing IRS Form W-4V with SSA. You can choose to have 7%, 10%, 12%, or 22% withheld from your monthly benefit.
Get Approved and Keep More
ClaimPath helps you get approved for $79 flat. No attorney taking 25% of your backpay means more money in your pocket to cover any tax liability.
Start your ClaimPath application today.
Related Resources
- 2026 SSDI Payment Amounts
- How Much SSDI Backpay Will You Get?
- SSDI and Tax Filing Guide
- SSDI and the Earned Income Tax Credit
Frequently Asked Questions
Do You Pay Taxes on SSDI Benefits??
TL;DR: When SSDI is taxable, income thresholds, and how to reduce your tax bill. Whether your SSDI is taxable depends on your total income. If SSDI is your only income, you probably owe no federal tax.
Is SSDI Taxable??
SSDI benefits may be taxable at the federal level depending on your total income. SSA uses a formula based on "combined income" (adjusted gross income + nontaxable interest + half your SSDI benefits):
What should I know about ssi and taxes?
SSI benefits are never taxable at the federal level. SSI is a needs-based program and is excluded from gross income entirely.
What should I know about backpay and taxes?
SSDI backpay is reported as income in the year received, which can spike your tax liability. However, you can use the lump-sum election (IRS Publication 915) to allocate the backpay to the tax years it covers. This often results in a lower total tax bill.
What should I know about state taxes?
Most states do not tax Social Security disability benefits. However, a handful of states (including Connecticut, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, and West Virginia) may tax some or all of your SSDI benefits depending on income thresholds.
What should I know about withholding?
If you expect to owe taxes on your SSDI, you can request federal tax withholding by filing IRS Form W-4V with SSA. You can choose to have 7%, 10%, 12%, or 22% withheld from your monthly benefit.
What should I know about get approved and keep more?
ClaimPath helps you get approved for $79 flat. No attorney taking 25% of your backpay means more money in your pocket to cover any tax liability.