Can You Work While On Disability?

Christy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has.

Christy Bieber, J.D. Contributor

Christy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has.

Written By Christy Bieber, J.D. Contributor

Christy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has.

Christy Bieber, J.D. Contributor

Christy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has.

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Adam has resided at the intersection of legal and journalism for two decades. An award-winning journalist and legal strategist, he’s covered high-profile trials in Florida. After law school, Adam and spent two years clerking for a U.S. District Co.

Adam has resided at the intersection of legal and journalism for two decades. An award-winning journalist and legal strategist, he’s covered high-profile trials in Florida. After law school, Adam and spent two years clerking for a U.S. District Co.

Adam has resided at the intersection of legal and journalism for two decades. An award-winning journalist and legal strategist, he’s covered high-profile trials in Florida. After law school, Adam and spent two years clerking for a U.S. District Co.

Adam has resided at the intersection of legal and journalism for two decades. An award-winning journalist and legal strategist, he’s covered high-profile trials in Florida. After law school, Adam and spent two years clerking for a U.S. District Co.

Updated: Apr 26, 2023, 3:04am

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Can You Work While On Disability?

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Table of Contents

If you become disabled, you may be entitled to disability benefits through one of several programs including Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), Supplemental Security Income (SSI) or workers’ compensation disability benefits.

Once you are collecting these benefits, you may wonder, can you work while on disability? This is an important question to answer because you may want to try to get back into the workforce without jeopardizing your benefits.

This guide explains the rules for working while collecting benefits so you’ll know exactly what to expect.

Can You Work While on Disability?

Answering the question, can you work while on disability, is more complicated than you might think because there are many different programs you may receive disability benefits from.

In some cases, it is possible to work while still getting benefits. However, your benefits may be reduced, paused or stopped altogether once your income exceeds a certain level. It is very important to understand the rules for working with your specific type of benefits so you don’t lose out on income that you are counting on.

An experienced disability benefits lawyer can help you to understand when you can work, what the limits are on earning income while getting benefits and how you can try to resume working without putting your household income in jeopardy.

Can You Work While Collecting SSDI?

SSDI benefits are available through the Social Security Administration. SSDI stands for Social Security Disability Insurance and these benefits are earned benefits. When you pay Social Security taxes, you essentially buy into this insurance program that pays you a portion of your average wages if you become too disabled to hold a job.

There are several rules that could affect whether you can work while collecting SSDI. First and foremost, you cannot get these benefits if you are engaged in “substantial gainful activity.” This is defined as earning more than a set amount each month. In 2023, you’re deemed to be engaged in SGA if you earn at least $2,460 if you are blind or $1,470 if you are not blind.

The Social Security Administration does provide the option for current beneficiaries to attempt to return to work without risking the loss of their benefits. This is done through a Trial Work Period. Under the rules of the Trial Work Period:

These rules can seem very complicated, but the bottom line is, the trial work period is designed to help you go back to work. An experienced disability benefits lawyer can help you to work within the guidelines set by the Social Security Administration to ensure you don’t cause your benefits to stop when you didn’t intend to.

Can You Work While Collecting SSI?

SSI stands for Supplemental Security Income. These benefits are also available to disabled individuals but unlike SSDI, they are not an earned benefit and they are means-tested benefits so higher earners or individuals with more than $2,000 in countable financial resources are not eligible for them.

To qualify for SSI, you are not allowed to be engaged in Substantial Gainful Activity. This is the same basic rule that applies to SSDI benefits, although the SGA rules don’t apply to blind people for purposes of SSI eligibility. If you earn above $1,470 if you are not blind, the SSA determines you are engaged in SGA and you won’t be able to get SSI benefits.

Once you have been approved for benefits, SGA no longer is the key test of eligibility though. Instead, if you begin working, your benefits can be reduced based on how much you earn.

In 2023, the maximum federal SSI benefit is $914 per month. This doesn’t include any supplementary state income, which may be available in a limited number of states. But, your benefit can be reduced once you have countable income.

Countable income is defined to include both earned and unearned income. Earned income is wages from a job, while unearned income is any other money or items that can be used to obtain food and shelter including support from family and friends, free food or shelter provided to you or certain other benefits such as unemployment benefits.

You are allowed to subtract—or exclude—some of both your earned and unearned income, though. For example, you can exclude the first $20 per month in unearned income. You can also exclude income being used towards a plan to become self-supporting, state-funded needs-based assistance, certain HUD housing subsidies and the first $60 of irregular income.

You can also exclude the first $65 per month in earned income, plus any of the $20 unearned income exemption if you didn’t use it to exclude unearned income. And only half your remaining earned income counts above the $65 or $85 amount.

So, for example, if you make $1,085 per month and don’t have any other income, you’d subtract $85 and take half the remaining amount so you would have $500 in countable income. This would be subtracted from your $914 monthly benefit, leaving you with around $414.00.

Based on these rules, you start to lose some of your SSI benefits once you make more than $65 (or $85 if you don’t have unearned income). But you can earn around $1,913 per month before you lose your SSi benefits entirely (assuming you have no other income besides your earnings from work).

Can You Work While Collecting Workers' Comp Disability Benefits?

Workers’ comp provides disability benefits if you are unable to work due to an on the job injury or illness.

If you return to work full time, you cannot continue to collect these benefits. In some cases, however, you may be able to work part-time or still do some type of work while disabled. If that’s the case, you may be entitled to partial disability benefits if you were earning less than you did before you suffered your injury.

State rules can differ on how partial disability benefits work and when you are entitled to them, so you should speak with a workers’ comp attorney in your state to better understand the rules for working while collecting this type of benefit.

Getting Help From a Disability Benefits Lawyer

As you can see, you can’t just ask ‘can you work while on disability’ and expect a simple answer. You do not want to lose benefits you need, so talk with an experienced workers’ comp disability benefits lawyer before you get a job so you don’t jeopardize the income you and your loved ones may have been counting on.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

How much money can I make on disability?

The amount of money you can make while on disability varies depending on the type of benefits you are earning. For example, if you are collecting Social Security Disability Insurance, you may be able to work and earn as much as you want for nine months out of a rolling 60 month period before your benefits are affected at all. A disability benefits lawyer can help you understand the rules for earning money without jeopardizing the benefits you have coming into your household.

What can cause you to lose Social Security disability benefits?

You could lose Social Security Disability benefits if you no longer meet the definition of disabled. In some cases, earning too much money could also cause you to lose your benefits—but this depends on the type of disability income you are receiving. If you are collecting SSDI benefits, a trial work period allows you to test out returning to work for nine months out of a rolling 60 month period before you lose any disability benefits. If you are collecting SSI benefits, however, benefits can be reduced once your countable earnings exceed a certain threshold.

How long can you stay on Social Security Disability?

You can potentially continue collecting Social Security Disability Insurance benefits until retirement age if you continue to meet the definition of disabled and you do not work for too many months and earn too much money during that period of time. Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits, on the other hand, can persist even into retirement if you continue to meet eligibility requirements including having countable income below a certain threshold.