The Trial Work Period, Explained

✓ Verified July 01, 2026

A trial work period is a special rule from the Social Security Administration (SSA) that lets you test a job without instantly losing your disability check. It exists because many people on benefits want to try working again, but they are scared of what happens to their money. The trial work period gives you a safe runway. For a set number of months, you can earn any amount and still keep your full Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) payment. This guide explains how it works in plain terms.

The short answer: The trial work period lets you work for 9 months while keeping your full SSDI check, no matter how much you earn. These 9 months do not have to be in a row. You only “use up” a month when your earnings cross a small dollar limit that the SSA sets each year. Confirm the current-year amount on ssa.gov before you count your months.

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What the Trial Work Period Means

The trial work period is a built-in test drive for returning to work. The SSA knows that going back to a job is risky when you are disabled. Pain, fatigue, or memory trouble can flare up. So the rule lets you try, fail, and keep your benefits while you find out.

Here is how it works. You get 9 “trial” months. In each of those months, you keep your full SSDI check, even if you earn a high wage. The 9 months are counted inside a rolling 60-month window, which is 5 years. They do not need to be back-to-back.

For example, say Maria has SSDI and tries a part-time job. She works 3 months, then her health forces a break. Later she works 6 more months. That is 9 trial months total. Throughout all 9, her SSDI payment keeps arriving in full.

The Numbers, in Plain English

A month only counts as a trial month when your earnings pass a small “services” amount that the SSA updates every January. If you earn under that amount, the month does not count. As a result, low-earning months do not eat into your 9 months. This protects you on slow months.

The dollar limits change each year. So always check the current-year figure on ssa.gov rather than trusting an old number. The table below shows the parts that stay fixed and the parts you must confirm.

Rule 2026 figure
Number of trial work months 9 months (fixed)
Window the 9 months fall inside 60 months / 5 years (fixed)
Monthly earnings that “trigger” a trial month Set yearly — confirm exact amount on ssa.gov
Your SSDI check during trial months Full payment, any earning level
Period right after the 9 months 36-month Extended Period of Eligibility (fixed)
Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) limit after the trial Set yearly — confirm exact amount on ssa.gov

Notice the two amounts marked “confirm.” The SSA raises these most Januarys for cost of living. However, the 9-month and 60-month rules do not change. You can rely on those.

Who It Applies To

This rule is for people who get SSDI, which is based on your past work and the credits you earned. If you receive SSDI, you typically get a trial work period. It starts the first month you earn over the yearly “services” amount.

Supplemental Security Income (SSI) works differently. SSI is a need-based program for people with low income and few resources. SSI does not use the trial work period. Instead, the SSA lowers your SSI gradually as your wages go up. Many people receive both programs, so check which rules apply to you.

One key point: a trial work period does not, by itself, end your benefits. You keep your medical eligibility during the test. The SSA is checking whether you can work, not punishing you for trying. In most cases, your check stays steady through all 9 months.

How It Fits Your Overall Benefits

The trial work period is the first stage in a longer “back to work” path. After your 9 trial months end, you enter the 36-month Extended Period of Eligibility. During that stretch, you get your full SSDI check for any month your earnings stay under the SGA limit. Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) is the wage line the SSA uses to decide if work counts as full work.

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This matters for your money planning. Typically, your benefits do not stop the day you start a job. The SSA also offers “expedited reinstatement.” If your benefits later end because of work, but your disability stops you again within 5 years, you can ask for them back without a brand-new application.

For deeper details, the SSA publishes a free booklet called the Red Book on ssa.gov. The U.S. Department of Labor (dol.gov), USA.gov, and the National Council on Aging (ncoa.org) also have plain-language help on work and benefits. We are an independent educational site, not the SSA, so always verify your own case with the agency.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will the trial work period stop my disability check?

No. During your 9 trial months, you keep your full SSDI payment no matter how much you earn. The check does not shrink. Your medical eligibility also stays in place.

Do my 9 months have to be in a row?

No. The 9 months simply need to fall inside a rolling 60-month window. You can work, stop, and start again. Each month over the yearly limit counts as one of your nine.

How do I know if a month counts?

A month counts only if your earnings pass the SSA’s yearly “services” amount. If you earn less, that month is free. Confirm the current-year figure on ssa.gov before you count.

Does this apply to SSI too?

No. The trial work period is an SSDI rule only. SSI uses a different system that reduces your payment slowly as income rises. If you get both, ask the SSA how each one treats your work.

Should I report my work to the SSA?

Yes, report your earnings promptly. Good records protect you and prevent overpayment problems later. You may report by phone, online, or at a local office, and keep copies for yourself.

Bottom line: The trial work period is a safety net, not a trap. It gives you 9 months to test a job while keeping your full SSDI check, and those months can be spread across 5 years. Confirm the current dollar limits on ssa.gov, report your work, and take the test drive at your own pace.

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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