DAC numbers and limits
Here's what to do.
Here's what to do, in the order I'd do it.
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Document disability onset before age 22 — with date-stamped evidence
DAC requires proof the disability began before the child turned 22. School IEPs, special-education evaluations, childhood medical records, treatment notes from pediatricians or specialists. The earlier and more detailed, the better. If your child was approved for SSI as a minor, that prior approval is strong evidence — but SSA still re-evaluates under the adult standard at age 18. Get records before they're hard to find.
Time: Several hours over weeks Cost: Most records free SSA on family benefits
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File DAC the moment a parent's record activates
DAC eligibility opens when (a) a parent files for SSDI, (b) a parent files for retirement (age 62+), or (c) a parent dies. File the DAC application within months of that activation. Late filings still get back pay to the activation date in most cases, but some scenarios cap retroactivity. Don't wait — the application protects the filing date.
Time: 1–2 hours Cost: Free How to file for benefits
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Compare DAC vs. SSI math — DAC almost always wins
If your adult child currently receives SSI, calculate what DAC would pay: roughly 50% of the parent's PIA (alive parent) or 75% (deceased parent). For a parent with a $2,000/mo PIA, DAC could be $1,000–1,500/mo — dramatically higher than SSI's $994/mo. DAC also unlocks Medicare instead of SSI's Medicaid-only coverage. Run the numbers before deciding which to file.
Time: 20 minutes Cost: Free SSA Quick Calculator
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Marriage rules — understand them BEFORE the wedding
Marriage to a non-disabled, non-SSA-beneficiary person generally ENDS DAC eligibility. Marriage to another DAC, an SSDI beneficiary, or certain other Title II beneficiaries may preserve DAC under specific 'protected marriage' rules in 20 CFR 404.350(a)(5). Talk to SSA before any DAC beneficiary marries. Once DAC ends due to marriage, it may not be reinstated even after divorce.
Time: 30 minutes Cost: Free 20 CFR 404.350 — child's benefits
Which of these sounds more like you?
DAC paths look very different depending on your child's age, marital status, and where the parent is in the SSA system. Find your situation.
My adult disabled child is on SSI; I'm still workingDAC opens when YOU file for retirement or SSDI
Right now, your child is on SSI's $994/month with whatever Medicaid your state provides. The day you file for SSDI or retirement — even early retirement at 62 — your child becomes eligible to apply for DAC on your record. Same disability, different program, generally a much larger check.
This affects retirement-timing decisions. If your child's DAC will be substantially higher than their current SSI, that's a real reason to file for retirement at 62 even if it reduces your own benefit. The child gets DAC on your record for life (until marriage to a non-protected person).
This is also why preserving documentation of your child's pre-22 disability matters — you'll need it years later when DAC opens.
My disabled child's parent died — can they get survivor DAC?Yes — 75% of the deceased parent's PIA
When a parent on whose record a DAC could qualify dies, the surviving disabled adult child gets DAC at 75% of the deceased parent's PIA. This is often dramatically higher than the 50% paid while the parent was living.
File within months of the death. SSA needs the death certificate, proof of relationship, and proof of the disability onset before age 22. If the disabled child was already receiving DAC, the rate automatically converts from 50% to 75%.
If the surviving parent is also disabled, both DAC and a Mother's/Father's benefit may interact — talk to SSA about family maximum.
My DAC adult child wants to marry their partnerMarriage usually ends DAC — unless protected
Most marriages end DAC. The protected exceptions under 20 CFR 404.350(a)(5) are narrow: marriage to another DAC, to a fully insured Title II beneficiary, or under specific other categories. Marriage to a 'non-beneficiary' partner — even if disabled but on SSI only — generally terminates DAC.
This is a permanent decision. Once DAC ends due to marriage, even divorce may not restore it. Talk to a disability attorney AND to SSA before any wedding date is set.
Alternative: some couples in this situation choose to live together without legally marrying to preserve DAC. That's a personal decision, but it's the choice many DAC families face.
My SSI-recipient adult child should be converting to DAC — has SSA done it?Verify the conversion happened — SSA misses these
When a parent files for retirement or SSDI, an adult child already on SSI for childhood disability should auto-convert (or transition) to DAC plus possibly continued SSI top-up. But SSA sometimes misses the connection — especially if the parent and child are at different field offices.
Check: log in to your child's mySocialSecurity (or call SSA), confirm whether DAC has been added to their record. If not, file an explicit DAC claim citing your record. Don't assume the systems caught it.
If back pay is owed (DAC should have started months earlier), file the SSA-561 to request reconsideration of the omission. SSA generally pays back to the application date if you can show timely intent.
Will my DAC adult child lose Medicaid when DAC starts?The Pickle Amendment may protect Medicaid
When SSI ends because DAC starts (DAC is higher than SSI), some states automatically end Medicaid — because Medicaid was tied to SSI. The 1977 'Pickle Amendment' protects Medicaid in this scenario for many beneficiaries: if you would still qualify for SSI absent the new Title II income (DAC, SSDI), Medicaid is preserved.
Most states recognize Pickle. A few don't apply it consistently. If your state denies Medicaid after a DAC conversion, cite the Pickle Amendment in writing and request reconsideration.
Backup options: 1619(b) Medicaid (if any earned income), Medicare Savings Programs (if past 24-month wait and Medicare-eligible), or buy-in programs in some states.
I'm not sure my child's disability started before 22Document everything you have — SSA's evidence bar is reasonable
Pre-22 onset is a yes/no factual finding. SSA accepts a wide range of evidence: school records (IEP, 504 plan, special-ed evaluations), pediatric medical records, college disability office documentation, statements from caregivers and teachers contemporaneous with the child's youth.
The disability doesn't have to have been diagnosed before 22 — only present. Many adult-onset diagnoses (autism spectrum, mood disorders) trace back to childhood symptoms documented in school records but not formally diagnosed at the time.
If the only documentation is sparse, reconstruct as much as possible: yearbooks, family photos with medical context, statements from extended family. SSA evaluates the totality.
My DAC adult child has worked some — does that disqualify them?Substantial work after 22 can disqualify; small work doesn't
DAC requires the disabled adult child to be unable to engage in substantial gainful activity (SGA) at the time the parent's record activates and continuously thereafter.
Some work after age 22 is OK — sheltered workshops, supported employment, unsuccessful work attempts, work below SGA. Substantial sustained work above SGA after age 22 generally ends DAC eligibility.
If there's been on-and-off work, document each period: dates, earnings, why it ended. Unsuccessful work attempts and special-conditions analysis (POMS DI 10505.010) can preserve eligibility despite some work history.
I'm a sibling helping plan for my disabled brother/sister's DAC futureYou may be the long-term bridge — plan for it now
Many disabled adult children outlive their parents. As a sibling, you may eventually be the rep payee, the trustee of a Special Needs Trust, or the helper navigating SSA on their behalf.
While parents are alive: get the disability documentation file complete — IEPs, medical records, prior approvals. Make sure DAC was filed for when the parents' records activated. If parents have set up a Special Needs Trust, get the trust documents and meet the trustee.
When parents die: file for survivor DAC (75% of deceased parent's PIA) within months. File for Medicare if past the 24-month wait. Request rep payee status if your sibling can't manage their own funds.
Everything people ask me
What is a Disabled Adult Child (DAC) benefit?
A Social Security benefit paid to an unmarried adult child (age 18+) whose disability began before age 22, on a parent's earnings record. The parent must be receiving retirement or SSDI, or have died. DAC pays roughly 50% of the parent's PIA while the parent is alive, 75% if the parent is deceased.
What's the disability standard for DAC?
The adult standard — inability to do SGA due to a medically determinable impairment lasting 12+ months or expected to result in death. Same standard as adult SSDI. NOT the children's 'marked and severe functional limitations' standard.
When does DAC eligibility open?
When a parent of the disabled adult child (a) files for SSDI, (b) files for retirement (typically age 62+), or (c) dies. The disabled child has to have already been disabled before age 22, but doesn't have to have been formally approved — the DAC application is the time for SSA to make the disability finding.
Will DAC end if my disabled adult child gets married?
Generally yes — marriage to a non-protected person ends DAC. Exceptions: marriage to another DAC, an SSDI beneficiary, or specific other Title II beneficiaries under 20 CFR 404.350(a)(5). Once DAC ends due to marriage, it may not be reinstated even after divorce. Get legal advice before the wedding.
Can my child get DAC AND SSI at the same time?
Yes — if DAC is below the SSI floor ($994/month in 2026), SSI tops up the difference. Resource limits still apply to the SSI portion ($2,000 individual). Most parents on lower-PIA earnings records have DAC + SSI as the right combination.
Does DAC get Medicare?
Yes — DAC beneficiaries get Medicare 24 months after DAC cash entitlement begins, same as regular SSDI beneficiaries. Combined with prior Medicaid (in many cases), this makes DAC adults dual-eligible.
What documents prove pre-age-22 disability onset?
School records (IEP, 504 plan, special-ed evaluations), pediatric medical records, prior SSI approval as a minor, statements from teachers and caregivers, college disability office documentation. Earlier and date-stamped is best. SSA evaluates the totality of evidence — you don't need a single 'proof' document.
Can DAC be claimed retroactively?
DAC back pay is generally limited to 6–12 months before the application date. If a parent's record activated years ago and DAC wasn't filed, that lost cash is mostly gone. File the moment a parent's record activates — don't wait.
What is the Pickle Amendment?
A 1977 federal law that protects Medicaid eligibility for former SSI recipients who lose SSI cash because of a Title II benefit (like DAC) starting or increasing. If, removing the Title II benefit, the person would still qualify for SSI, the state must continue Medicaid. Most relevant for DAC adults whose new DAC pushes them off SSI cash.
Can a parent file for DAC alongside their own retirement application?
Yes — the same field office appointment can handle both. The parent files for retirement; the disabled adult child files for DAC on the parent's record. Bring evidence of the child's pre-22 disability onset and current medical records. SSA processes both in parallel.
Programs that interact with DAC
DAC eligibility unlocks Medicare and triggers questions about Medicaid, ABLE, and continuing SSI top-up. Here's the map.
SSI eligibility (disability)
DAC beneficiaries with low PIA — if DAC is below SSI floor, concurrent SSI may still top up.
Medicare for SSDI/DAC
DAC beneficiaries past 24-month wait — Medicare follows DAC entitlement just like regular SSDI.
SSDI (own work record)
DAC beneficiaries with sufficient credits — may also qualify on own record; SSA pays the higher benefit.
Concurrent SSI + DAC
DAC beneficiaries with low parent PIA — SSI tops up if DAC below the federal benefit rate.
ABLE accounts
DAC beneficiaries with disability onset before 26 (or 46 in 2026+) — ABLE excludes savings up to $100K from SSI/Medicaid asset tests.
Medicaid (state-specific)
DAC beneficiaries with low income — the 'Pickle Amendment' protects Medicaid for some DAC recipients who lose SSI due to DAC entitlement.
I'll let you know when the rules change.
DAC dollar amounts move with parent PIA recalculations and COLA. Marriage rules and Medicare-link rules also evolve. I'll send a short note when they shift.
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