Free. No sign-up required. From a former SSA District Manager with 20 years inside Social Security.
▶ LIVE Dr. Ed does a Q&A almost every day on YouTube — Watch Now
Dr. Ed Weir, Former SSA District Manager
Dr. Ed Weir, PhD Former SSA District Manager · 20 Years Inside Social Security · “Former” Sergeant, USMC LIVE Q&A almost every day on YouTube
Childhood SSI, simply

Can my child get SSI?

Children with serious disabilities can qualify for SSI, but the medical rules are different from the adult rules. Parents' income and resources are partly counted as the child's. And benefits don't automatically continue past the eighteenth birthday — SSA re-evaluates using the adult standard, and many children lose SSI at that point.

Dr. Ed Weir, PhD · 20 years inside Social Security · "Former" Sergeant, USMC
Updated April 2026

Can my child get SSI?

Yes — your child may qualify for SSI if they have a medically determinable physical or mental impairment that causes marked and severe functional limitations expected to last twelve months or longer. SSA evaluates the child against childhood listings or by functional equivalence across six domains. Parent income and resources are deemed.

If your child also needs Medicare-related help once they turn eighteen and disability continues, a licensed advisor can walk you through the options.

Free help from licensed Medicare advisors

Most children on SSI get Medicaid, not Medicare. But once an adult child qualifies as a Disabled Adult Child on a parent's record and twenty-four months pass, Medicare enters the picture. A licensed advisor can explain the choices when that day comes — at no cost to you.

Call (352) 841-0632 or visit 24help.org/chapter

Here's what to do, in 4 steps.

Here's the order I'd work in if I were sitting at your kitchen table tonight. The application is its own task. The records you collect now will matter again at age eighteen.

1. Apply for SSI on your child's behalf

⏱ 1–2 hours initial; 3–6 months for decisionFree

Start at ssa.gov or call 1-800-772-1213. The disability application includes medical questionnaires (Form SSA-3820) and parent-deeming detail. Have your child's medical records, school IEPs, and your tax return on hand.

SSA child disability starter kit ›

2. Gather medical records, evaluations, and IEPs

⏱ 2–6 weeksFree (request copies)

SSA needs evidence of marked and severe functional limitations. Pediatricians, specialists, therapists, and the school IEP team all generate documentation that strengthens the case. Don't wait — schools are slow to release records.

POMS DI 25201.001 — child disability evidence ›

3. Save every record — you'll need them at age 18

⏱ OngoingFree

Continuous documentation matters. The age-eighteen redetermination uses the adult standard, and the case is much easier to win if you've been collecting evaluations and treatment notes the whole way through.

20 CFR 416.987 (age-18 redet) ›

4. Prepare for the age-18 redetermination 6+ months early

⏱ Begin 6–12 months before age 18Free (attorneys take fee from back pay)

About 30–40% of childhood SSI recipients lose benefits at the age-18 review because the adult standard is stricter. Start documenting your teen's adult-level functional limitations — work, daily living, social functioning — well before the eighteenth birthday. Consider a disability attorney if a denial seems likely.

20 CFR 416.987 (age-18 redet) ›

The numbers that matter for childhood SSI

100.00–112.00 (Blue Book Part B) Childhood listings sections
6 domains; marked in 2 OR extreme in 1 Functional equivalence domains
Age 18 — adult standard applies Age-18 redetermination cliff
Retroactive lump sum > $1,000 Dedicated account threshold

Which of these sounds more like you?

Pediatric SSI cases come in patterns. Pick the one closest to your situation.

My child has autismASD with documented functional impact

Many children with autism qualify under Listing 112.10 (Autism Spectrum Disorder, childhood) or by functional equivalence across the six domains. The IEP and school evaluations are gold here — they document exactly what SSA wants to see.

Gather speech and OT evaluations, behavioral evaluations, the most recent IEP, and any private psychological testing. SSA will look at how your child interacts with others, completes tasks, and cares for themselves compared to age-typical peers.

20 years at Social Security taught me this

I've seen autism cases approved on the first try when the school records were complete and denied on the first try when they weren't. The school file is the case.

My child has Down syndromeTrisomy 21 — typically meets a listing

Children with non-mosaic Down syndrome typically meet Listing 110.06 (chromosomal disorders) on documentation alone — the genetic test result is the medical evidence. Mosaic Down syndrome is evaluated on functional impact under Listing 112.06 or by functional equivalence.

Bring the karyotype or chromosomal analysis report. The financial side (parent deeming, the SSI federal benefit rate, dedicated accounts for retroactive pay) is usually the bigger question for these families.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Mosaic Down syndrome cases are more complex — if SSA denies on the listing, talk to a disability attorney about appealing on functional equivalence grounds.

My child has serious behavioral issuesMental disorders, ADHD, conduct, mood

Listings 112.04–112.15 cover childhood mental disorders — mood, anxiety, ADHD, conduct, psychotic, and others. Many cases come down to functional equivalence rather than meeting a listing on the dot, because childhood mental conditions cross domains.

The key is documenting marked limitation in two domains or extreme in one — commonly interacting with others, attending to tasks, and caring for self. School discipline records, behavioral therapy notes, and psychiatric evaluations all matter.

Don't get caught by this

Don't get caught by this — a single ADHD diagnosis isn't enough. SSA looks for marked or extreme functional impact, not just the diagnosis itself. Document the impact, not just the label.

We earn too much for SSIOr do you? Deeming has exclusions

Parent-to-child deeming reduces SSI based on parent income and resources, but the math has many exclusions: a portion of earned income, child support paid out, allowances for other children in the household, and more. Many families assume they're disqualified when they actually aren't.

Apply anyway. The denial letter, if it comes, will spell out the exact deeming math — and you may find a deduction or exclusion you missed.

20 years at Social Security taught me this

Most people don't realize: the deeming worksheet has a dozen exclusions. Two-parent households with two non-disabled siblings have substantially more deeming room than people expect.

My teen is turning 18 soonThe age-18 redetermination cliff

At 18, SSA redetermines disability using the ADULT standard — a stricter test that focuses on the ability to perform substantial gainful activity. About 30–40% of childhood SSI recipients lose benefits at this point.

Deeming also stops at 18, which sometimes increases the SSI payment for those who keep eligibility. If your teen is denied, file an appeal within sixty days — do not wait.

Don't get caught by this

Don't get caught by this — the age-18 redetermination is a separate decision from the childhood case. Documentation that won the childhood case may not be enough for the adult standard. Build the adult case starting at age 17.

My child got approved — back pay is comingDedicated account rules apply

When SSA owes a child more than one thousand dollars in retroactive SSI, the money must go into a dedicated account at a financial institution. Funds can only be used for medical and educational expenses, special equipment, housing modifications, and certain therapies.

The representative payee (usually the parent) tracks every withdrawal. SSA may audit the account. Keep receipts.

Don't get caught by this

Don't get caught by this — if you spend the back pay on rent or general living expenses, SSA can require repayment. The dedicated account isn't optional and the use restrictions are strict.

I'm caring for a niece, nephew, or grandchildCustody, deeming, and rep-payee rules

If you have legal custody or guardianship of a child who isn't yours, SSI is still on the table for them. Whose income gets deemed depends on the legal arrangement: a guardian's income may not be deemed at all, while a stepparent's typically is.

You'll likely need to be the representative payee — the person who manages the child's SSI on their behalf. SSA reviews payee performance annually.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Custody and deeming interact in non-obvious ways. If you're not the legal parent, talk to a disability attorney or your local Legal Aid before filing.

My situation isn't covered aboveTalk to someone who has the full picture

Pediatric SSI cases come in patterns, but every family is different. If your situation doesn't match any of the cards above, that doesn't mean your child doesn't qualify — it means a phone call to SSA or a free consultation with a disability attorney is the next move.

SSA's national line is 1-800-772-1213. Many disability attorneys offer free initial consultations and only charge if your case wins.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Pediatric cases that don't fit a clear pattern often turn on detail — talk to someone who can hear the whole story.

Other programs your family may qualify for

SSI rarely stands alone for a child with a disability. Medicaid, CHIP, special education services, and ABLE accounts often run alongside.

Disabled Adult Child (DAC)

If your child's disability began before age twenty-two and a parent later files for retirement or disability — or dies — your adult child may qualify for DAC benefits on the parent's record. DAC benefits do not have an asset test and may be substantially higher than SSI.

Medicaid (children's pathway)

Most children on SSI get Medicaid automatically (in 1634 states). Children who don't qualify for SSI may still qualify for Medicaid through the children's MAGI pathway, which uses different income rules.

CHIP (Children's Health Insurance Program)

If your family income is too high for Medicaid but you can't afford private insurance, your child may qualify for CHIP. State-administered; income limits vary.

SNAP (food assistance)

Households with a child receiving SSI often qualify for SNAP. Some states have streamlined SNAP enrollment for SSI households.

ABLE accounts

Tax-advantaged savings accounts for individuals whose disability began before age forty-six (per SECURE 2.0, effective 2026). Funds in an ABLE account up to one hundred thousand dollars don't count against the SSI resource limit.

Special education / IEP services

Under IDEA, your child has a federal right to a free appropriate public education with an Individualized Education Program (IEP) or 504 plan. The IEP also documents functional limitations — useful evidence for the SSI case.

Everything parents ask me

What's the disability standard for children on SSI?

Per 20 CFR § 416.906, a child under 18 is disabled for SSI if they have a medically determinable physical or mental impairment that causes "marked and severe functional limitations" and that has lasted or can be expected to last at least 12 continuous months (or to result in death). This is more restrictive than the adult standard, which focuses on inability to perform substantial gainful activity.

What are the 6 functional domains?

Per 20 CFR § 416.926a and POMS DI 25225.001, when a child doesn't meet a listing, SSA evaluates functional equivalence across six domains: (1) Acquiring and using information; (2) Attending and completing tasks; (3) Interacting and relating with others; (4) Moving about and manipulating objects; (5) Caring for yourself; (6) Health and physical well-being. "Marked" limitation in two domains OR "extreme" limitation in one domain functionally equals a listing.

What is parent-to-child deeming?

Deeming is the rule that treats some of a parent's income and resources as if they belong to the child for SSI purposes (POMS SI 01310). The deeming math reduces or eliminates SSI based on parent finances, but it includes substantial exclusions — part of earned income, allowances for non-disabled siblings, child support paid out, and more.

What happens at age 18?

Per 20 CFR § 416.987, SSA conducts an age-18 redetermination using the adult disability standard — a stricter test focused on inability to perform substantial gainful activity. About 30–40% of childhood SSI recipients lose benefits at this review. Deeming also stops at 18, which sometimes increases the SSI payment for those who keep eligibility.

Can my child still get Medicaid if they lose SSI at 18?

Possibly. Section 1619(b) preserves Medicaid for some people who lose SSI due to earnings. Your state may also have a separate Medicaid pathway for adults with disabilities, and Disabled Adult Child (DAC) status on a parent's record can include Medicaid in some states. Talk to your state Medicaid office before assuming Medicaid stops.

What is a dedicated account?

Per POMS SI 02101.020 and 42 USC § 1383(a)(2)(F), when SSA owes a child more than $1,000 in retroactive SSI, the money must go into a dedicated account at a financial institution. Funds can only be used for medical care, education, special equipment, housing modifications, and certain therapies. The representative payee tracks every withdrawal; SSA may audit.

Does my child's IEP help the SSI application?

Yes. The Individualized Education Program (IEP) and any school evaluations document functional limitations across exactly the kinds of areas SSA reviews — academic performance, social interaction, attention, self-care. Bring the most recent IEP plus any related psychological, speech, or OT evaluations to your application.

Can a child receive both SSI and child support?

Yes, but child support counts as unearned income to the child and reduces SSI. Per 20 CFR § 416.1124(c)(11), one-third of child support payments is excluded; the remaining two-thirds reduces SSI dollar-for-dollar after the general $20 unearned income exclusion.

Does my child get Medicaid automatically with SSI?

In 1634 states (about thirty-three states), yes — SSI eligibility automatically establishes Medicaid. In 209(b) states, you may need to apply separately because the state uses its own (sometimes stricter) Medicaid disability rules. Even if your child loses SSI at age 18, the Medicaid history can matter — some states have special pathways that preserve Medicaid for adults who had SSI as children.

Can I appeal a denial?

Yes. The same four-level appeal process applies as in adult cases: reconsideration, ALJ hearing, Appeals Council, federal court. The deadline is 60 days at each level. Pediatric SSI denials have notable reversal rates at the ALJ level — don't give up after the first denial.

Sources

Every figure and rule on this page is verified against primary sources. Last verified 2026-04-28.

  1. The functional equivalence framework evaluates 6 domains: (1) acquiring and using information; (2) attending and completing tasks; (3) interacting and relating with others; (4) moving about and …secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-05-08)
  2. Marked limitation in 2 domains OR extreme limitation in 1 domain functionally equals a childhood listing.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  3. Childhood Listings cover sections 100.00 through 114.00 in the SSA Blue Book (Listing of Impairments — Part B): 100.00 Low Birth Weight and Failure to Thrive; 101.00 Musculoskeletal; 102.00 Special …ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  4. Parent-to-child deeming reduces childhood SSI based on parent income and resources.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  5. Parent-to-child deeming continues through the month the child attains age 18 and stops the following month, per POMS SI 01310.115: deeming 'no longer applies beginning the month following the month …secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  6. Retroactive SSI past-due payments greater than 6 times the Federal Benefit Rate (6 × $994 = $5,964 in 2026) must be paid into a dedicated account with restricted-use rules under 42 USC § …secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  7. Dedicated account funds may be used for medical care, education or job-skills training, personal-needs assistance, special equipment, housing modifications, therapy or rehabilitation, and other items …secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  8. The 2026 SSI Federal Benefit Rate is $994/month for an eligible individual and $1,491/month for an eligible couple. The COLA effective January 2026 is 2.8 percent.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  9. Childhood SSI recipients in 1634 states automatically receive Medicaid; 209(b) states require separate Medicaid application with potentially stricter rules.secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  10. Childhood SSI uses a 'marked and severe functional limitations' standard — more restrictive than the adult standard — per 20 CFR § 416.906 and 42 USC § 1382c(a)(3)(C).ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  11. The age-18 redetermination uses the adult disability standard.ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  12. The 12-month duration requirement applies the same way for childhood and adult disability cases under 42 USC § 1382c(a)(3)(A).govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-29)
  13. Child support counts as unearned income to the child for SSI purposes; one-third of child support payments is excluded under 20 CFR § 416.1124(c)(11).ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-29)

Helping a niece, nephew, or grandchild?

If you're caring for a child who isn't yours, the application can still go forward — but the rules around custody, deeming, and representative payee work get more detailed. I have a separate primer for that.

→ Get help for someone else

Legal Disclosure

24Help.org is not affiliated with or endorsed by the federal Medicare program or CMS.

Chapter Advisory, LLC (“Chapter”) is a private health insurance agency. In California, Chapter does business as Chapter Insurance Services (Lic. No. 6003691). Chapter is not affiliated with or endorsed by any government entity. While Chapter has a database of every Medicare plan option nationwide and can help you to search among all options, it has contracts with many but not all plans. As a result, Chapter does not offer every plan available in your area. Currently, Chapter represents 50 organizations which offer 18,601 products nationwide. You can contact a licensed Chapter agent to find out the number of products available in your specific area. Please contact Medicare.gov, 1-800-Medicare, or your local State Health Insurance Program (SHIP) to get information on all of your options. Enrollment in a plan may be limited to certain times of the year unless you qualify for a Special Enrollment Period or you are in your Medicare Initial Enrollment Period.