Benefits For Children With Disabilities FIVE OR SEVEN CHANNEL 125.7 S2 EN 05 10026

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2017

Benefits For
Children With
Disabilities

SocialSecurity.gov

What’s inside
Introduction

1

Supplemental Security
Income (SSI) payments for
children with disabilities

1

Social Security Disability
Insurance (SSDI) benefits
for adults disabled since
childhood

6

Applying for SSI payments
or SSDI benefits and how
you can help

8

Employment support
programs for young people
with disabilities

9

Medicaid and Medicare

11

Children’s Health
Insurance Program

12

Other health care services

13

Contacting Social Security

14

Introduction
This booklet is for the parents,
caregivers, or representatives of
children younger than age 18 who have
disabilities that might make them eligible
for Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
payments. It is also for adults who
became disabled in childhood (prior
to age 22), and who might be entitled
to Social Security Disability Insurance
(SSDI) benefits. (We call this SSDI
benefit a “child’s” benefit because
it’s paid on a parent’s Social Security
earnings record.)
This booklet will help you decide if you,
your child, or a child you know, might be
eligible for SSI or Social Security.

Supplemental Security Income
(SSI) payments for children
with disabilities
SSI makes monthly payments to people
with low income and limited resources
who are 65 or older, or blind, or disabled.
Your child, if younger than age 18,
can qualify if he or she has a physical
or mental condition, or combination of
conditions, that meets Social Security’s
definition of disability for children, and
if his or her income and resources fall
within the eligibility limits. The amount of
the SSI payment is different from state
to state because some states add to the
SSI payment. Your local Social Security
office can tell you more about your
state’s total SSI payment.
1

SSI rules about income
and resources
We consider your child’s income and
resources when deciding if your child
is eligible for SSI. We also consider the
income and resources of family members
living in the child’s household. These
rules apply if your child lives at home.
They also apply if he or she is away at
school but returns home from time to
time and is subject to your control.
If your child’s income and resources,
or the income and resources of family
members living in the child’s household,
are more than the amount allowed,
we will deny the child’s application for
SSI payments.
We limit the monthly SSI payment to $30
when a child is in a medical facility, and
health insurance pays for his or her care.
SSI rules about disability
Your child must meet all of the following
requirements to be considered disabled
and, therefore, eligible for SSI:
• The child must not be working or
earning more than $1,170 a month in
2017. (This earnings amount usually
changes every year.)
• The child must have a physical or
mental condition, or a combination of
conditions, that result in “marked and
severe functional limitations.” This
means that the condition(s) must very
seriously limit your child’s activities.
2

• The child’s condition(s) must have been
disabling, or be expected to be disabling,
for at least 12 months; or the condition(s)
must be expected to result in death.
Providing information about your
child’s condition
When you apply for SSI payments for
your child based on a disability, we will
ask you for detailed information about
the child’s medical condition and about
how it affects his or her ability to perform
daily activities. We also will ask you to
give permission to the doctors, teachers,
therapists, and other professionals who
have information about your child’s
condition to send the information to us.
If you have any of your child’s medical
or school records, please bring them
with you. This will help speed up the
decision-making process.
What happens next?
We send all of the information you give us
to the Disability Determination Services
office in your state. Doctors and other
trained staff in that state agency will review
the information, and will request your
child’s medical and school records, and
any other information needed to decide if
your child meets our criteria for disability.
If the state agency can’t make a disability
determination using only the medical
information, school records, and other
facts they have, they may ask you to
take your child for a medical examination
or test. We will pay for the exam or test.
3

We may make immediate SSI
payments to your child
The state agency may take three to five
months to decide if your child meets our
criteria for disability. For some medical
conditions, however, we make SSI
payments right away, and for up to six
months, while the state agency decides
if your child has a qualifying disability.
Following are some of the conditions that
may qualify:
• HIV infection in combination with
other impairments
• Total blindness
• Total deafness
• Cerebral palsy
• Down syndrome
• Muscular dystrophy
• Severe intellectual disability (child age
4 or older)
• Birth weight below 2 pounds, 10
ounces — We evaluate low birth
weight in infants from birth to
attainment of age 1 and failure to
thrive in infants and toddlers from
birth to attainment of age 3. We
use the infant’s birth weight as
documented by an original or certified
copy of the infant’s birth certificate
or by a medical record signed by a
physician.
If your child has one of the qualifying
conditions, he or she will get SSI
payments right away. If the state agency
ultimately decides that your child’s
4

disability is not severe enough for SSI,
you won’t have to pay back the SSI
payments that your child got.
SSI disability reviews
After your child starts receiving SSI, the
law requires that we review your child’s
medical condition from time to time to
verify that his or her disability still meets
our criteria. We must do this review:
• At least every three years for
children younger than age 18
whose conditions are expected to
improve; and
• By age 1 for babies who are getting
SSI payments because of their low
birth weight. If we determine their
medical condition isn’t expected to
improve by their first birthday, we may
schedule the review for a later date.
We may perform a disability review even
if your child’s condition isn’t expected
to improve. When we do a review,
you must present evidence that your
child’s disability still severely limits his
or her daily activities and that your child
has been receiving treatment that’s
considered medically necessary for his
or her medical condition.
What happens when your child
turns age 18
In the SSI program, a child becomes
an adult at age 18, and we use different
medical and nonmedical rules when
deciding if an adult can get SSI disability
payments. For example, we don’t count
5

the income and resources of family
members when deciding whether an
adult meets the financial limits for SSI.
We count only the adult’s income and
resources. We also use the disability
rules for adults when deciding whether
an adult is disabled.
• If your child is already receiving
SSI payments, we must review the
child’s medical condition when he or
she turns age 18. We usually do this
review during the one-year period that
begins on your child’s 18th birthday.
We will use the adult disability rules
to decide whether your 18-year-old is
eligible for SSI.
• Even if your child wasn’t eligible for
SSI before his or her 18th birthday
because you and your spouse had too
much income or too many resources,
he or she may become eligible for SSI
at age 18.
For more information, read Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) (Publication
No. 05-11000).

Social Security Disability
Insurance (SSDI) benefits for
adults disabled since childhood
The SSDI program pays benefits to
adults who have a disability that began
before they became 22-years-old. We
consider this SSDI benefit as a “child’s”
benefit because it’s paid on a parent’s
Social Security earnings record.
6

For a disabled adult to become entitled
to this “child” benefit, one of his or
her parents:
• Must be receiving Social Security
retirement or disability benefits; or
• Must have died and have worked
enough to qualify for Social Security.
These benefits also are payable to an
adult if he or she is disabled at age 18,
and if they received dependents benefits
on a parent’s Social Security earnings
record prior to age 18. We make the
disability determination using the
disability rules for adults.
SSDI disabled adult “child” benefits
continue as long as the individual
remains disabled. Your child
doesn’t need to have worked to get
these benefits.
How we determine if your
“child” is disabled and entitled
to SSDI benefits
If your child is age 18 or older, we will
evaluate his or her claim and determine
disability in the same way we would
determine disability for any adult. We
send the application to the Disability
Determination Services in your state
that makes the disability determination
for us. For detailed information about
how we determine disability for adults,
read Disability Benefits (Publication
No. 05-10029).

7

Applying for SSI payments or
SSDI benefits and how you
can help
You can apply for SSI payments or SSDI
benefits for your child by calling Social
Security toll-free at 1-800-772-1213 or by
visiting your local Social Security office.
If you are applying for SSI payments
for your child, you should have his or
her Social Security number and birth
certificate with you. If you are applying
for SSDI benefits for your child based on
your own earnings record, please have
your own Social Security number with
you, or the Social Security number of the
retired, disabled, or deceased parent on
whose record the SSDI claim is being
filed, in addition to the child’s Social
Security number and birth certificate.
You can help us make a determination by:
• Telling us as much as you can about
your child’s medical condition(s);
• Giving us the dates of visits to doctors
or hospitals, the patient account
numbers for any doctors or hospitals,
and any other information that will
help us get your child’s medical
records; and
• Providing us with copies of any
medical reports or information you
have in your possession.
NOTE: You don’t need to request
information from your child’s doctors.
We will contact them directly for reports
or information that we need to make a
decision about your child’s disability.
8

If your child is younger than age 18
and applying for SSI, you must provide
records that show your income and
resources, as well as those of your
child. We also will ask you to describe
how your child’s disability affects his or
her ability to perform daily activities. In
addition, we will ask for the names of
teachers, day care providers, and family
members who can provide information
about how your child functions. If you
have school records, you should bring
them to the interview.
In many communities, special
arrangements have been made with
medical providers, social service
agencies, and schools to help us get
the evidence we need to process your
child’s claim. Your cooperation in getting
records and other information, however,
will help us finish our job more quickly.

Employment support
programs for young people
with disabilities
We have many ways to encourage
young people who are receiving SSI
payments or SSDI benefits and who
want to go to work.
Under SSI:
• When we figure your child’s monthly
SSI payment, we don’t count most
of your child’s income. If your child
is younger than age 22, and is a
student who regularly attends school,
we exclude even more of his or
9

•

•

•
•

her earnings each month. In 2017,
disabled students younger than
age 22 may exclude $1,790 of their
monthly earnings, with an annual limit
of $7,200, when counting their income
for SSI. These limits may increase
each year.
With a Plan to Achieve Self-Support
(PASS), a child who is age 15 or older
can save some income and resources
to pay for education and other things
needed to be able to work. We don’t
count the saved income when we
figure your child’s income for SSI. We
don’t count the saved income and
resources when we figure the amount
of your child’s payment.
Because of a medical condition(s),
your child may need certain items
and services to work, such as a
wheelchair or a personal assistant.
When figuring your child’s SSI
payment, we won’t count some, or
all, of the amount paid for these items
and services in your child’s earnings.
Your child older than age 15 may get
help with rehabilitation and training.
Medicaid coverage will continue
even if your child’s earnings are
high enough to stop the monthly SSI
payment as long as the earnings are
under a certain amount.

10

Under SSDI:
• An adult disabled before age 22 can
get the same help with work expenses
explained above for an SSI child, and
help with rehabilitation and training.
• Benefit payments may continue until
the individual can work regularly.
• Medicare may continue for up to 93
months (seven years, nine months).
You can get more information about
these programs at our website,
www.socialsecurity.gov, or by calling
us toll-free at 1-800-772-1213.

Medicaid and Medicare
Medicaid is a health care program for
people with low incomes and limited
resources. In most states, children who
get SSI payments qualify for Medicaid.
In many states, Medicaid comes
automatically with SSI eligibility. In other
states, you must sign up for it. And some
children can get Medicaid coverage
even if they don’t qualify for SSI. Check
with your local Social Security office,
your state Medicaid agency, or your
state or county social services office for
more information.
Medicare is a federal health insurance
program for people age 65 or older, and
for people who have been getting Social
Security disability benefits for at least
two years.

11

There are two exceptions to this rule.
Your disabled adult child can get
Medicare immediately if he or she:
• Has a chronic renal disease and
needs a kidney transplant or
maintenance dialysis; or
• Has Lou Gehrig’s disease
(amyotrophic lateral sclerosis).

Children’s Health
Insurance Program
The Children’s Health Insurance
Program enables states to provide
health insurance to children from working
families with incomes too high to qualify
for Medicaid, but too low to afford private
health insurance. The program provides
coverage for prescription drugs, vision,
hearing, and mental health services,
and is available in all 50 states and the
District of Columbia. Your state Medicaid
agency can provide more information
about this program, or you can get more
information about coverage for your
children at www.insurekidsnow.gov on
the Internet or by calling 1-877-543-7669.

12

Other health care services
When your child gets SSI, we’ll refer
you to places where you can get
health care services for your child.
These services are under the Children
with Special Health Care Needs
provision of the Social Security Act.
State health agencies usually manage
these programs.
States call these services by many
different names, including Children’s
Special Health Services, Children’s
Medical Services, and Handicapped
Children’s Program. Most programs
provide services through clinics, private
offices, hospital-based outpatient
and inpatient treatment centers, or
community agencies.
Even if your child doesn’t get SSI, one of
these programs may be able to help you.
Local health departments, social service
offices, or hospitals should be able to
help you contact your local Children with
Special Health Care Needs program.

13

Contacting Social Security
There are several ways to contact
Social Security, including online, by
phone, and in person. We’re here to
answer your questions and to serve
you. For more than 80 years, Social
Security has helped secure today and
tomorrow by providing benefits and
financial protection for millions of people
throughout their life’s journey.
Visit our website
The most convenient way to conduct
Social Security business from
anywhere at any time, is to visit
www.socialsecurity.gov. There,
you can:
• Create a my Social Security account
to review your Social Security
Statement, verify your earnings, print
a benefit verification letter, change
your direct deposit information,
request a replacement Medicare
card, get a replacement 1099/1042S,
and more;
• Apply for Extra Help with Medicare
prescription drug plan costs;
• Apply for retirement, disability, and
Medicare benefits;
• Find copies of our publications;
• Get answers to frequently asked
questions; and
• So much more!

14

Call us
If you don’t have access to the internet,
we offer many automated services by
telephone, 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week. Call us toll-free at 1-800-772-1213
or at our TTY number, 1-800-325-0778,
if you’re deaf or hard of hearing.
If you need to speak to a person, we can
answer your calls from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. We ask for
your patience during busy periods since
you may experience higher than usual
rate of busy signals and longer hold
times to speak to us. We look forward to
serving you.

15

Social Security Administration | Publication No. 05-10026
ICN 455360 | Unit of Issue — HD (one hundred)
January 2017(Recycle prior editions)
Benefits For Children With Disabilities
Produced and published at U.S. taxpayer expense
Printed on recycled paper



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