How to Fill Out the SSA Function Report

✓ Verified June 27, 2026

function report forms can feel scary when you are tired, hurting, or worried about money. The SSA function report is a form the Social Security Administration (SSA) sends after you apply for disability. It asks how your health affects your daily life. This guide walks you through it in plain English. You do not need fancy words. You only need honest, clear answers about a normal day.

The short answer: The SSA function report (Form SSA-3373) asks how your condition limits everyday tasks. Answer for your worst and average days, give real examples, and return it by the date on the letter. Honest detail helps the SSA understand your true limits.

Function Report: What It Means

The SSA uses your medical records to judge your claim. However, records do not always show daily struggle. As a result, the SSA asks you to describe it yourself. This form is your chance to speak.

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The form covers cooking, cleaning, shopping, sleep, and self-care. It also asks about memory, focus, and getting along with others. Disability examiners use your answers to set your residual functional capacity (RFC). RFC means the most you can still do despite your condition. Your words matter here.

In most cases, the SSA mails this form during the first review or after a denial. Typically you get it with a deadline letter. Read that letter closely. The date on it is the date that counts.

Step by Step: What Actually Happens

The process is simple once you see the stages. Take it slowly. You can stop and rest, then return to it.

Stage What happens What you do
1. Form arrives The SSA mails the function report with a due date. Note the deadline. Call the SSA if the date is too soon.
2. Gather facts You think about a real, typical day. Jot down what hurts, what you skip, and what help you need.
3. Fill it out You answer each section honestly. Give examples. Describe bad days, not only good ones.
4. Return it The SSA reviews your answers with your records. Mail or upload it on time. Keep a copy for yourself.
5. Decision An examiner weighs everything together. Watch your mail for the result letter.

When you answer, write like you are talking to a kind nurse. For example, do not write “I cook.” Instead write “I make toast, but I sit down halfway because my back gives out.” That detail shows your real limit.

Answer for an average day and your worst day. Many claimants only describe good days by habit. Typically that hides how sick they truly are. Be honest about pain, fatigue, and the days you cannot get dressed.

The Deadline You Cannot Miss on the Function Report

The deadline letter usually gives you a set number of days to return the function report. If you miss it, the SSA may decide without your words. Call the SSA right away if you need more time. They can often help.

A separate, harder deadline applies if your claim was denied. This one can end a claim for good.

The 60-day appeal deadline: If the SSA denies your claim, you generally have only 60 days from the date on the denial letter to appeal. Miss it, and you may have to start over. Mark this date today. You can appeal online at ssa.gov, by phone, or by mail.

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

The biggest mistake is being too tough on yourself. Many people downplay their pain out of pride. However, the SSA cannot see what you hide. Tell the plain truth, even when it feels hard to admit.

Another mistake is leaving boxes blank. Empty answers give the examiner nothing to work with. For example, if you cannot lift a milk jug, say so and explain why. Match your answers to what your doctor already wrote in your records, too.

One more mistake is rushing. This form takes energy. Take breaks, fill it out over a few days, and ask a family member to help you remember details. Keep your tone calm and factual, not dramatic. Honest, specific answers carry the most weight.

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What to Do Next

Start by reading your letter and writing down the due date. Then keep a small notebook for one week. Each day, note what you could and could not do. Those notes make filling out the form much easier.

Confirm any current dollar figures, like the substantial gainful activity (SGA) limit, directly on ssa.gov, since these change every January. For free help, the National Council on Aging (ncoa.org) and USA.gov list local resources. If you were denied, act on the 60-day deadline before anything else.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the SSA function report actually called?

It is Form SSA-3373, the Function Report – Adult. The SSA may also send a similar form to a friend or relative. Both describe how your condition limits daily life.

Should I answer for my good days or bad days?

Describe both, and be clear which is which. Most claims fail because people only list good days. Honest detail about bad days shows your true limits.

Can someone help me fill out the form?

Yes. A family member, friend, or caregiver can help you write your answers. The form must still describe your own experience, in your own honest words.

What if I cannot meet the deadline on the form?

Call the SSA phone number on your letter before the date passes. In most cases they can give you more time. Do not simply ignore the letter.

Does the function report decide my whole claim?

No, but it matters a lot. The SSA combines your answers with medical records and work history. Together these set your RFC and shape the decision.

Bottom line: The function report is your voice in your own claim, so use it honestly and fully. Describe your average and worst days with real examples, and return the form on time. If you were denied, protect the 60-day appeal deadline above all.

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.

View Approval Odds by State →

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.

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