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Can I work and keep my SSDI? — Trial Work Period and Ticket to Work

Most people on SSDI are scared to work because they think any paycheck will sink their benefits. That's not how the rules read. Social Security built work incentives — Trial Work Period, Extended Period of Eligibility, Ticket to Work, expedited reinstatement — specifically so you can test the waters without losing what took you years to qualify for. The catch is the rules are layered, and a wrong move at the wrong month can cost you. Here's the order to learn them.

Dr. Ed Weir
Dr. Ed Weir 20 years inside Social Security. Plain-English help, no sign-up required.
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2026 work incentive numbers

$1,210 TWP service-month threshold
9 service months TWP service months allowed
36 months Extended Period of Eligibility
5 years Expedited reinstatement window

Here's what to do.

Here's what to do, in the order I'd do it.

  1. Pull your TWP ledger from your mySocialSecurity account

    Before you accept any work, log in to mySocialSecurity and check your earnings record. SSA tracks every reported wage — those are the numbers they'll use to count TWP service months. If past months are wrong, file Form SSA-7008 to correct them now. You don't want a TWP fight later because a 2024 paycheck got reported funny.

    Time: 10 minutes Cost: Free mySocialSecurity sign-in

  2. Call WIPA before you start — it's free and they read the rules better than most attorneys

    Work Incentives Planning and Assistance (WIPA) projects are federally funded benefits counselors who do nothing but read the SSDI work incentive rules and apply them to your situation. They are FREE. Find your local WIPA, give them your earnings expectation, and ask them to map out where TWP, EPE, and SGA will hit you. This single call has saved more SSDI beneficiaries than any rule I know.

    Time: 30–60 minutes Cost: Free Find your WIPA project

  3. Assign your Ticket to Work to an Employment Network if a CDR is your real worry

    If you're nervous about Continuing Disability Reviews while you test work, the single biggest protection is to assign your Ticket to Work to an Employment Network (EN) or your state Vocational Rehab agency and make 'timely progress.' While the Ticket is in use and you're meeting milestones, SSA cannot initiate a medical CDR. The Ticket is free; the EN is paid by SSA, not you.

    Time: 1–2 hours Cost: Free Choose Work — Ticket to Work program

  4. Don't run out the TWP without understanding what comes next

    Once your 9 TWP months are used, you're in the Extended Period of Eligibility for 36 months. In any month earnings exceed SGA, you get no SSDI cash that month. The first time you cross SGA after TWP, SSA also starts a 'cessation' clock — if EPE expires while you're still over SGA, benefits terminate. After termination, expedited reinstatement only works within 5 years. People burn through TWP in a few months without realizing the consequences are stacking. Don't.

    Time: 30 minutes reading Cost: Free Red Book — work incentives reference

Which of these sounds more like you?

How the work incentives apply depends on whether you've started working yet, where you are in your TWP, and whether you've already crossed SGA. Find your situation.

I'm on SSDI and considering my first month of workPlan the calendar before you take the job

Your TWP starts the first month you cross the service-month threshold ($1,160 in 2026) or work 80+ self-employment hours. It does NOT start because you're 'thinking about working' or because you signed an offer letter. Once a service month is logged, the rolling 60-month TWP clock has begun.

Before the first paycheck: notify SSA you're starting work, ideally in writing. The Form SSA-820 (work activity report) creates a paper trail. WIPA can help you fill it out free.

If the work fails within 6 months because of your condition, an Unsuccessful Work Attempt under POMS DI 11010.145 means those months don't count against TWP. Document the start date, the end date, the medical reason it ended.

I'm partway through my Trial Work Period and not sure where I standGet an exact count from SSA, in writing

Don't guess. Send SSA a written request — or visit a field office — and ask for a TWP service-month count. They keep the official ledger.

Key rule most people miss: TWP service months count when ANY single month crosses the threshold. They don't have to be consecutive. They count over a rolling 60-month window. If you used 4 service months in 2022 and 5 service months in 2025, you're done with TWP — even though the months were spread out.

While in TWP, your full SSDI cash continues no matter how high your earnings climb. The exposure begins after month 9.

I've used all 9 TWP months and I'm in the EPETrack each month against SGA, separately

In the 36-month Extended Period of Eligibility, the test changes. Each month is independent: gross earnings under SGA = full SSDI cash; gross earnings over SGA = no SSDI cash that month.

First month over SGA after TWP: SSA also marks a 'cessation month.' That's the start of a clock — if EPE ends while you're still over SGA, benefits terminate.

Deductions that lower countable earnings: Impairment-Related Work Expenses (IRWE), employer subsidies, special conditions per POMS DI 10505.010, and Unsuccessful Work Attempt rules. Document them or you lose them.

My SSDI was terminated because of work — can I get back on?Use Expedited Reinstatement — don't reapply

If your SSDI ended because of SGA-level earnings within the last 5 years AND your medical condition is the same one (or worse), Expedited Reinstatement under Section 1148 of the Social Security Act gets you provisional benefits while SSA reviews your case — without filing a new application.

Provisional payments last up to 6 months while SSA decides. If they say yes, regular SSDI resumes; if they say no, you don't have to repay the provisional months unless you knew you weren't eligible.

Key deadline: 5 years from termination. Past that window, you must reapply from scratch and re-prove disability.

I'm self-employed — do the same rules apply?Self-employment is its own playbook

For self-employed beneficiaries, a TWP service month is any month you net over the threshold OR work over 80 hours in the business. Both triggers count.

SGA evaluation for self-employment uses a 3-test framework under POMS DI 10510.010: significant services + substantial income test, comparability of work test, and worth-of-work test. SSA looks beyond just the bottom line.

Keep contemporaneous records: hours worked, gross income, business expenses. The hours matter as much as the dollars.

My IRWE expenses are big — do they reduce TWP earnings or only SGA earnings?IRWE applies differently to TWP vs. SGA

Under the rules in 20 CFR 404.1576 and 20 CFR 404.1592, IRWE deductions DO NOT reduce earnings for the TWP service-month test. The TWP threshold is gross.

IRWE deductions DO reduce countable earnings for the SGA test in the EPE and beyond. So a $2,000 month with $500 in documented IRWE counts as $2,000 against TWP service-month status, but only $1,500 against SGA.

Document every IRWE expense with receipts and a medical reason. Examples: medication taken to enable working, wheelchair-accessible transportation to work, attendant care during work hours.

I want to use my Ticket to Work — how do I start?Pick an EN or your state Voc Rehab

Ticket to Work is automatic for SSDI and SSI disability beneficiaries age 18–64. You don't have to apply for the Ticket itself — you have it the moment you're approved.

To use it: choose either an Employment Network (EN) or your state Vocational Rehabilitation agency, then sign an Individual Work Plan or Individual Plan for Employment. While you're making 'timely progress' under that plan, SSA cannot start a medical CDR.

Both ENs and Voc Rehab are FREE. The EN is paid by SSA when you reach earnings milestones; you never pay them.

I'm helping a family member return to work on SSDIBe the record-keeper

The single most useful role you can play is keeping the calendar. A simple spreadsheet with three columns — month, gross earnings, IRWE — covers most of it. Add a column for hours if they're self-employed.

Report every wage to SSA: the family member or their authorized representative can use the SSA Telephone Wage Reporting line, the mySocialSecurity portal, or paper. Keep proof of every report.

A WIPA counselor will read the rules with the family member at no charge. Get them on the phone before any work decision is final. They will save you mistakes that compound for years.

Everything people ask me

What's the difference between TWP and SGA?

TWP is a 9-month grace period where any earnings are allowed without affecting your SSDI cash. SGA is the post-TWP test — monthly earnings above SGA stop your check that month, earnings below SGA continue it. TWP is one-time per work attempt; SGA is checked every month forever after.

Do TWP service months have to be consecutive?

No. TWP service months are counted whenever you cross the threshold within a rolling 60-month window. You can use 3 in 2024, 2 in 2025, and 4 in 2026, and TWP is exhausted. The clock looks back 60 months from any current month.

What's the 2026 TWP threshold?

$1,210/month for wage earners or 80+ hours/month for self-employment. Either trigger creates a service month. The threshold updates with COLA each January.

What is the Extended Period of Eligibility (EPE)?

EPE is the 36 calendar months immediately following your last TWP service month. During EPE, SSA checks each month independently against SGA. Below SGA = full SSDI cash; above SGA = no cash that month, but eligibility stays alive.

What happens to Medicare when I'm working on SSDI?

Once you have Medicare on SSDI, you keep premium-free Part A for at least 93 months past TWP — even if you eventually work yourself off SSDI cash. After that, you can keep Medicare by paying the Part A premium yourself. The protection is in Section 1818A of the Social Security Act.

Does Ticket to Work cost anything?

No. Ticket to Work is free. Employment Networks are paid by SSA when you hit earnings milestones — not by you. State Vocational Rehabilitation is also free. Anyone asking you to pay for 'Ticket to Work services' is not legitimate.

Can SSA do a CDR while I'm using my Ticket?

If your Ticket is assigned to an EN or VR agency AND you're making 'timely progress' under your work plan, SSA cannot start a medical CDR. SSA can still do a non-medical or work CDR. If you stop using the Ticket or fall behind on milestones, the medical CDR protection ends.

What's the difference between WIPA and an Employment Network?

WIPA (Work Incentives Planning and Assistance) is a free benefits-counseling project. They explain the rules. They don't help you find a job. Employment Networks are job-placement and ongoing-employment-support providers under Ticket to Work. Most beneficiaries should call WIPA first — free — before assigning their Ticket.

What happens to SSI if I'm concurrent and start working?

SSI doesn't use TWP — it uses the 1-for-2 earned income formula plus the $20 general and $65 earned income disregards. SSI also has Section 1619(a) (continued cash above SGA) and 1619(b) (continued Medicaid even after SSI cash stops). Concurrent rules are layered — a WIPA counselor or attorney is essential.

What is PABSS?

Protection and Advocacy for Beneficiaries of Social Security (PABSS) is a free legal-advocacy program for SSDI/SSI beneficiaries who run into employment barriers — work-related disputes with SSA, employer ADA disputes, Voc Rehab disputes. Each state has a designated PABSS provider. Use it free if you need a legal voice.

Programs that interact with returning to work

Going back to work touches your medical, food, and housing benefits — not just your SSDI cash. Here's what else moves when your earnings change.

Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA)

Anyone working while on SSDI — SGA is the line your earnings cross to trigger benefit suspension after TWP.

Continuing Disability Review (CDR)

Approved SSDI beneficiaries — a Ticket-to-Work assignment with timely progress prevents medical CDRs.

Medicare for SSDI beneficiaries

After 24-month wait — Part A continues premium-free for at least 93 months past TWP if benefits cease due to work.

SSI (Supplemental Security Income)

Concurrent SSI/SSDI recipients — SSI uses the 1-for-2 earned income formula instead of SGA, plus the Section 1619(b) Medicaid protection.

SNAP (food assistance)

Returning workers under 130% FPL — SNAP recalculates with new earnings; report wages within 10 days of the change.

Section 8 / HUD housing

HUD-assisted residents — most programs require income reporting within 10 days; the Earned Income Disregard may protect rent for up to 24 months.

I'll let you know when the rules change.

TWP and SGA thresholds update every January with COLA. Ticket to Work program guidance also shifts. I'll send a short note when they do.

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