How Vocational Expert Testimony Affects Your SSDI Claim
TL;DR: What VEs do, how hypotheticals work, and how to challenge their opinions. SSA uses a complex system of medical-vocational rules to decide if you can work. Understanding how age, education, work experience, and physical capacity interact can make or break your claim. ClaimPath builds SSA-compliant documents for $79.
How SSA Decides If You Can Work
What VEs do, how hypotheticals work, and how to challenge their opinions.
When SSA cannot approve your claim based on medical evidence alone (meeting or equaling a listing), they use a five-step sequential evaluation. Steps 4 and 5 involve vocational factors:
Step 4: Can You Do Your Past Work?
SSA determines your Residual Functional Capacity (RFC), which describes the maximum you can still do despite your limitations. If your RFC allows you to perform any of your past jobs (as generally performed in the national economy), your claim is denied.
Step 5: Can You Do Any Other Work?
If you cannot do past work, SSA considers whether you can adjust to other work. This is where age, education, and transferable skills matter.
The Grid Rules
SSA's Medical-Vocational Guidelines ("grid rules") are tables that direct decisions based on four factors:
| Factor | Categories |
|---|---|
| RFC/Exertional capacity | Sedentary, light, medium, heavy |
| Age | Under 50, 50-54, 55+ |
| Education | Illiterate, marginal, limited, high school+, college |
| Work experience | Unskilled, semi-skilled (non-transferable), skilled (transferable) |
The grid rules become increasingly favorable with age. A 55-year-old with limited education and unskilled work history who is restricted to sedentary work is directed to be found "disabled" by the grid. A 40-year-old with the same profile may not be.
Why This Matters for Your Application
Your work history report needs to accurately describe the physical demands and skill level of your past jobs. Under-reporting demands (making your past work sound easier than it was) hurts you because SSA will conclude you can still do that work. Over-reporting skills hurts you because SSA will argue those skills transfer to other jobs.
Vocational Expert Testimony
At hearings, SSA uses vocational experts (VEs) who testify about what jobs exist in the national economy that match your RFC. The VE's testimony can make or break your case. Understanding how VEs evaluate transferable skills and available jobs is crucial for hearing preparation.
How ClaimPath Helps
ClaimPath generates work history descriptions and functional limitation reports in SSA's language for $79. The documents properly characterize your occupational demands and connect your medical limitations to your inability to work. This framing matters enormously for vocational analysis.
Start your ClaimPath application and get your vocational factors documented correctly.
Related Resources
- Grid Rules Explained
- Transferable Skills Analysis
- Vocational Expert Testimony
- Exertional Limitations
Frequently Asked Questions
How Vocational Expert Testimony Affects Your SSDI Claim?
TL;DR: What VEs do, how hypotheticals work, and how to challenge their opinions. SSA uses a complex system of medical-vocational rules to decide if you can work. Understanding how age, education, work experience, and physical capacity interact can make or break your claim.
How SSA Decides If You Can Work?
What VEs do, how hypotheticals work, and how to challenge their opinions.
What should I know about the grid rules?
SSA's Medical-Vocational Guidelines ("grid rules") are tables that direct decisions based on four factors:
Why This Matters for Your Application?
Your work history report needs to accurately describe the physical demands and skill level of your past jobs. Under-reporting demands (making your past work sound easier than it was) hurts you because SSA will conclude you can still do that work. Over-reporting skills hurts you because SSA will argue those skills transfer to other jobs.
What should I know about vocational expert testimony?
At hearings, SSA uses vocational experts (VEs) who testify about what jobs exist in the national economy that match your RFC. The VE's testimony can make or break your case. Understanding how VEs evaluate transferable skills and available jobs is crucial for hearing preparation.
How ClaimPath Helps?
ClaimPath generates work history descriptions and functional limitation reports in SSA's language for $79. The documents properly characterize your occupational demands and connect your medical limitations to your inability to work. This framing matters enormously for vocational analysis.