If you are asking what disqualifies you from disability, you are not alone. Many people worry they will be turned down before they even apply. The Social Security Administration (SSA) does deny most claims at first. However, a denial is not the end. Understanding what disqualifies you helps you avoid simple mistakes. It also helps you know if you may qualify in the first place. We are not the SSA and not a law firm. We are here to explain the rules in plain words.
What Disqualifies You: What It Means
The SSA uses a five-step process to review each claim. At each step, you can be found “not disabled.” So what disqualifies you is really a list of ways a claim can fail along that path. It is not one single rule.
For example, the SSA first looks at your work and earnings. Then it looks at how severe your condition is. After that, it checks the Blue Book, which is the SSA Listing of Impairments. The Blue Book lists conditions and the medical proof each one needs.
In most cases, the rules focus on two things. First, can you do “substantial” work? Second, is your condition both severe and long-lasting? When the answer points the wrong way, that is what disqualifies you at that step.
Step by Step: What Actually Happens
The SSA checks the same five steps for almost every claim. Knowing each step shows you exactly what disqualifies you and where. It also shows where many claims are won.
| Step | What the SSA asks | What can disqualify you |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Work | Are you working above the limit? | Earning more than the SGA limit (see below) |
| 2. Severity | Is your condition severe? | A condition that only slightly limits you |
| 3. Listings | Do you meet a Blue Book listing? | Records that do not match the listing |
| 4. Past work | Can you still do old jobs? | Being able to return to past work |
| 5. Other work | Can you do any other job? | Being able to adjust to easier work |
Substantial gainful activity (SGA) is the key number at Step 1. It is the most you can earn each month and still apply. The SSA raises this dollar amount most years in January. Because it changes, we will not guess the figure. Please confirm the current 2026 SGA limit at ssa.gov before you apply.
At Steps 4 and 5, the SSA studies your residual functional capacity (RFC). Your RFC is what you can still do despite your condition. A strong RFC report from your doctor can change the result. As a result, good medical records matter at every step.
Work credits also matter for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). You earn credits by working and paying Social Security taxes. Not having enough recent credits is another thing that disqualifies you from SSDI. However, you may still qualify for Supplemental Security Income (SSI), which is based on financial need, not credits. USA.gov and ssa.gov both explain the difference.
What Disqualifies You at Appeal: The Deadline
If the SSA denies your claim, you can appeal. However, one missed date can cost you everything. The clock starts when you get your denial letter. Missing this deadline is the easiest way to disqualify your own claim.
You can appeal online at ssa.gov or by calling the SSA. The first appeal level is called Reconsideration. After that comes a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). SSA disposition statistics show many people win at the ALJ hearing stage. So an early denial does not mean you are done.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
The most common mistake is giving up after one “no.” Remember, most first claims are denied. Another mistake is thin medical proof. The SSA cannot approve what your records do not show. So keep seeing your doctors and follow their treatment plans.
For example, a missed doctor visit can look like you are not really sick. Skipping prescribed treatment without a good reason can also hurt. If you cannot afford care, tell the SSA why. The National Council on Aging (ncoa.org) lists programs that help older adults with costs.
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People also lose claims by earning a little too much during the process. Watch the SGA limit closely. Typically, even part-time work can push you over. Finally, do not ignore SSA letters. Each letter has a date, and that date can start a deadline.
What to Do Next
Start by gathering your medical records and a list of all your conditions. Write down every doctor, clinic, and medicine. Then check your work and earnings against the current SGA limit on ssa.gov. This shows you early whether what disqualifies you at Step 1 applies to your case.
If you were already denied, mark your 60-day deadline on a calendar today. File your appeal before that date. You can ask a free helper, a family member, or a representative to assist. The U.S. Department of Labor (dol.gov) and USA.gov also point to free support services you may use.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a high income always disqualify me?
Earning above the SGA limit can disqualify you for SSDI at Step 1. However, SSI looks at financial need instead. Check the current limits on ssa.gov before you decide.
Can I work a little and still apply?
You may work some, as long as you stay under the SGA limit. The SSA sets that monthly amount and updates it in January. Confirm the 2026 figure at ssa.gov.
Does one denial mean I am permanently disqualified?
No. Many claims are denied at first, then approved on appeal. You generally have 60 days to appeal each denial, so act quickly.
What disqualifies you if your condition is short-term?
The SSA requires that your condition last, or be expected to last, at least 12 months. A short-term injury usually will not qualify. Long-lasting, severe conditions have a better chance.
Will a past criminal record block my benefits?
A record by itself usually does not disqualify you. However, being in prison can pause payments. The SSA explains these special rules at ssa.gov.
See your state’s approval odds
Approval odds and wait times vary by where you live, even though the rules are the same everywhere. See your state’s numbers and the guides that fit your situation.
Sources & How to Verify
The information on this page comes from official government sources. Social Security Disability rules, benefit amounts, and the SGA limit change — usually every January — so always confirm the current figure and any deadline with the Social Security Administration before you act. We are an independent educational resource, not the SSA, and this page is not legal, medical, or financial advice.
- Social Security Administration: ssa.gov — the official source for eligibility, benefit amounts, and appeals
- SSA Blue Book (Listing of Impairments): ssa.gov/disability — the medical criteria the SSA uses to decide claims
- SSA disability data & appeals: ssa.gov/appeals — the appeal steps and disposition statistics
- U.S. Department of Labor: dol.gov — related federal program background
- National Council on Aging: ncoa.org — neutral benefits guidance
Content last reviewed June 2026. If you notice an outdated figure, please contact us.
Related Guides
- Conditions That Qualify for Disability
- How to Apply for Disability
- Denials & Appeals
- More in This Category
- Approval Odds by State
- Disability Glossary
Informational only — not legal, medical, or financial advice. Disability Claim Info is an independent educational resource, not the Social Security Administration, a law firm, or a medical or financial advisor, and this page does not provide legal, medical, or financial advice. Social Security Disability rules, benefit amounts, and deadlines change over time, and any estimate is illustrative only. Always confirm your eligibility, the current figure, and any deadline with the Social Security Administration and a licensed attorney or accredited representative before you act.