Working Part-Time While on SSDI: What's Allowed
TL;DR: Earning below SGA, reporting requirements, and avoiding overpayments. Understanding how work activity interacts with SSDI is essential for protecting your benefits. ClaimPath builds SSA-compliant documents for $79 flat to help you get approved.
What You Need to Know
Earning below SGA, reporting requirements, and avoiding overpayments.
The relationship between work and disability benefits is one of the most confusing areas of the SSDI system. Getting it wrong can cost you your benefits or lead to overpayments SSA will demand back. Getting it right means you can maximize your income while protecting your eligibility.
Key Rules
SGA Limits
The fundamental rule: earning above $1,620/month in 2026 ($2,700 if blind) means SSA considers you capable of substantial gainful activity, which disqualifies you from SSDI. This applies whether you are applying or already receiving benefits (outside the trial work period).
What Counts as Earnings
Not all income is treated equally by SSA:
| Income Type | Counts Toward SGA? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Wages/salary | Yes | Primary earnings from employment |
| Self-employment income | Yes (with adjustments) | Net earnings after business expenses |
| Investment income | No | Dividends, interest, capital gains |
| Rental income | Usually no | Unless actively managing properties |
| Pension/retirement | No | Not earned income |
| VA disability | No | Not earned income |
| Workers' comp | No (but may offset SSDI) | Different rules apply |
Deductions from Earnings
SSA allows certain deductions that can bring your countable earnings below SGA:
- Impairment-Related Work Expenses (IRWE): Costs for items you need because of your disability to work
- Subsidies: If an employer pays more than the value of your work output
- Unincurred business expenses: For self-employed, contributions from others
Reporting Work Activity
You must report all work activity to SSA, including:
- Starting or stopping work
- Changes in hours or pay
- Self-employment activities
- Volunteer work (while not counted for SGA, SSA wants to know)
Report through your my Social Security account, the SSA mobile app, by phone at 1-800-772-1213, or in writing to your local office. Failure to report can result in overpayments.
Work Incentive Programs
SSA offers several programs to help you test your ability to work without immediately losing benefits:
- Trial Work Period: 9 months of unlimited earnings with full benefits
- Extended Period of Eligibility: 36 months where benefits fluctuate with earnings
- Expedited Reinstatement: Fast-track return to benefits if work does not work out within 5 years
- Ticket to Work: Free job training and placement services
- PASS (Plan to Achieve Self-Support): Set aside income/resources for a work goal while keeping SSI
Getting Approved in the First Place
Before worrying about work incentives, you need to get approved. ClaimPath builds SSA-compliant documents for $79 flat that give you the best shot at initial approval.
| Option | Cost on $15,000 Backpay | You Keep |
|---|---|---|
| Disability attorney | $3,750 | $11,250 |
| Allsup | $3,750-$4,950 | $10,050-$11,250 |
| ClaimPath | $79 | $14,921 |
Start your ClaimPath application and build your case for $79.
Related Resources
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I know about working part-time while on ssdi: what's allowed?
TL;DR: Earning below SGA, reporting requirements, and avoiding overpayments. Understanding how work activity interacts with SSDI is essential for protecting your benefits. ClaimPath builds SSA-compliant documents for $79 flat to help you get approved.
What You Need to Know?
Earning below SGA, reporting requirements, and avoiding overpayments.
What should I know about key rules?
The fundamental rule: earning above $1,620/month in 2026 ($2,700 if blind) means SSA considers you capable of substantial gainful activity, which disqualifies you from SSDI. This applies whether you are applying or already receiving benefits (outside the trial work period).
What should I know about reporting work activity?
You must report all work activity to SSA, including:
What should I know about work incentive programs?
SSA offers several programs to help you test your ability to work without immediately losing benefits:
What should I know about getting approved in the first place?
Before worrying about work incentives, you need to get approved. ClaimPath builds SSA-compliant documents for $79 flat that give you the best shot at initial approval.