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Types of Social Security Benefits
There are several kinds of disability
benefits for which a person may be eligible.
The medical rules are the same
for each of
these programs – you must found to be under
a disability as defined by Social Security’s
own regulations.
The non-medical
requirements are different for each program.
The
five main programs are:
·
Disability Insurance Benefits (DIB)
·
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
·
Child’s Disability Benefits (CDB)
·
Disabled Widow/Widower Benefits (DWB)
·
Disabled Adult Child Benefits (DAC)
Disability Insurance Benefits
(DIB)
You are only eligible for these benefits if
you have paid a certain amount of Social
Security tax over a period of time to
effectuate coverage. Your prior work history
will determine when DIB coverage starts and
when it ends. Disability Insurance Benefits,
is, as the name implies, an insurance
program. A worker has a certain percentage
of his or her earnings taken out of each
paycheck. These withholdings are pooled
together with other workers’ earnings and
used to “pay out” on disability claims. To
effectuate coverage, you must have worked at
least twenty calendar quarters (5 years)
within the last forty calendar quarters (10
years) before your disability began. (There
is a different rule for people whose
disability began before age 30). To be
entitled to DIB, you must prove that your
disability began while disability insurance
was in force. Generally, the longer you have
worked and the more you earned the larger
the benefit amount you are entitled to if
you become disabled. There are no household
income restrictions on a DIB claim;
therefore, even if your spouse is still
working and financially able to support you,
you are entitled to DIB benefits if you are
found to be disabled.
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Supplemental Security Income
(SSI)
SSI is a Federal income supplement program
funded by general tax revenues (not Social
Security taxes) . It is designed to help
aged, blind, and disabled people who have
little or no income. SSI benefits are not
based on your prior work or a family
member's prior work.
To get SSI, you must have limited income and
resources. To be eligible for SSI, you must
be found disabled under the same rules used
for DIB, or be blind, or over age 65. You
must also have very little household income
or property to be financially eligible for
SSI. Even if you are found to be disabled
under Social Security’s regulations, if your
household income exceeds a certain maximum
level you will not qualify for SSI benefits.
For a disabled person with little or no past
work experience whose spouse is able to care
for the family financially, this is a harsh
reminder that SSI benefits were created to
afford minimal economic relief to disabled
persons who would not otherwise receive the
necessary financial support they need.
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Child’s Disability Benefits
(CDB)
Child’s Disability Benefits is a type of SSI
program. It provides financial support to
children age 17 or younger who are disabled.
Social Security uses different rules for
determining disability in a child’s claim
than in an adult claim. To be found
disabled, the child must have a physical or
mental condition which causes marked and
severe functional limitations. As with SSI
claims, to be eligible for Child’s
Disability Benefits the parents’ household
income must not exceed a certain maximum
level. Northwest Disability Services is one
of only a few law firms in Minnesota that
will handle Child’s Disability Benefits
claims.
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Disabled Widow/Widower Benefits
(DWB)
This is a special disability program for
certain widows and widowers, based on the
Social Security tax paid by his or her
deceased spouse. To qualify for Disabled
Widow/Widower Benefits, you must be between
the ages of 50 and 60, and have been married
for at least 10 years to the person who was
covered under Social Security at the time of
his or her death, and show that you are
under a disability. You must prove that your
disability began within seven years of your
spouse’s death.
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Disabled Adult Child Benefits
(DAC)
Disabled Adult Child Benefits generally may
be paid to a child age 18 or older who
became disabled before age 22, and to a
full-time elementary or secondary school
student under age 19. If the parent is
alive, he or she must be entitled to
retirement or disability benefits. If
deceased, the parent must have worked long
enough under Social Security for survivor's
benefits to be paid on the record.
A child age 18 or older may be entitled to
Social Security benefits based on his or her
disability when a parent who has worked long
enough under the program is entitled to
disability benefits or is deceased. The
criteria used to evaluate the disability are
the same as those used to evaluate
disability in adults. The child must be
unable to work because of a medical
condition that has lasted or is expected
either to last at least 12 months or to
result in death. The child's disability must
have begun before age 22.
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