What About Social Security Disability Benefits?
This is a question we hear quite often from our clients: Why do I need personal disability insurance? Won’t social security pay me disability benefits?
Unfortunately, most who apply for benefits do not receive them. On average, 65% of people filing claims do not receive any. For those who do receive benefits, the wait can be unbearable.
According to an article in USA Today the Social Security Administration faces a record — and rapidly growing — backlog of appeals by people who claim they are too disabled to work. Through June, it had just over 745,000 cases pending, and the wait for a hearing averaged 17 months, also a record.
Claimants in some parts of the country must wait up to 31 months, according to the agency. “People have died waiting for a hearing,” Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue says.
The agency says the backlog doubled in six years and could reach 1 million by 2010.
In another USA Today article, they report that of 2.5 million people who file disability claims annually, nearly two in three get denied initially. If they pursue a federal hearing, they join about 745,000 others whose appeals are backlogged. As of June, their average wait for a decision was 529 days. The lengthy waits lead to bankruptcies and foreclosures, drinking and drugs, depression and divorce, even suicide, according to claimants, their representatives and employees of the Social Security Administration.