The four basic factors SSA applies to every cancer claim under 13.00B, the distant metastases test that handles most automatic approvals, the three-year remission clock under 13.00H1, the durational windows for head and neck (18 months), bone sarcoma (12 months), acute leukemia (24 months), and bone marrow transplant (12 months), and the residual treatment side effects that win cases that don't meet a listing.

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The five paragraph A symptom clusters (trauma exposure, re-experiencing, avoidance, mood disturbance, hyperarousal), the four paragraph B mental functioning areas with marked or extreme limit ratings, the two-year paragraph C marginal adjustment path, the medical source statement that wins under 20 CFR 404.1520c, and how VA PTSD ratings translate into Listing 12.15 evidence.

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The four ischemic findings under 4.04A (ST depression, ST elevation, dropping systolic BP, imaging-confirmed ischemia) at 5 METs or less, the three-episode rule under 4.04B with revascularization or not-amenable-to-revascularization documentation, the 4.04C angiographic stenosis thresholds when exercise testing is too risky, and the very serious ADL limitation requirement that decides most 4.04C cases.

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The McDonald 2024 diagnostic criteria, the extreme motor limitation path under 11.09A (disorganization of motor function in two extremities), the marked physical plus marked mental functioning path under 11.09B, the four mental functioning areas, EDSS scoring and what 6.0+ means at SSA, SDMT and BICAMS for cognitive evidence, FSS and MFIS for fatigue, and the disease modifying therapy record that decides Step 3.

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The four subparts of 14.09, the inability-to-ambulate and inability-to-perform-fine-and-gross-movements standards, the organ-system-plus-constitutional-symptoms test under 14.09B, the spine flexion math under 14.09C (45-degree and 30-degree paths), the marked functional limitation test under 14.09D, and the medication and constitutional symptom documentation that wins inflammatory arthritis cases.

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The two proteinuria paths under 6.06A (10 g per 24 hours alone OR 3.5 g per 24 hours with serum albumin 3.0 g/dL or less), the 90-day durability test, why spot protein-to-creatinine ratios at 3.5+ qualify, the strict anasarca definition under 6.00C6, alternative paths via 6.03, 6.04, 6.05, and medical equivalence, plus RFC factors that win at Step 5.

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The four MDI anchors under SSR 19-4p, why migraine and cluster headache equal 11.02B and 11.02D, the once-a-week and once-every-two-weeks frequency rules, the marked functional limitation test, RFC math on absences and off-task time, and the documentation that wins headache disability cases.

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The automatic 1.20A and 1.20B subparts, the functional criteria fights under 1.20C and 1.20D, why Syme amputations are excluded, what counts as a documented medical need for an assistive device, prosthesis use rules under 1.00C6b, and how to get a treating physician statement that fits the listing language.

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The $2,982 individual threshold, $4,473 couple threshold, the six month installment cycle, the nine month resource exclusion under POMS SI 01130.600, and the three legal exceptions (terminal illness, outstanding debts for food, clothing, shelter, or medical care, and ineligibility). CA and TX worked examples with attorney fee math.

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The $2,410 monthly and $9,730 annual SEIE caps, the regularly attending student test, the SSA-1372 verification process, how the SEIE stacks with the general income and earned income exclusions, and what happens when a student turns 22 mid year. Real intake math for summer earners and college part timers.

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The seven paths under 5.05A through 5.05G. The 2-unit transfusion rule for variceal bleeding, the 60-day evaluation rule for ascites and encephalopathy, the ABG altitude tiers for hepatopulmonary syndrome, and the SSA CLD score formula with the sodium correction. CA hepatitis C and TX alcohol-related cirrhosis worked examples.

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Statutory blindness under 2.02 and 2.03A versus non-statutory disability under 2.03B, 2.03C, 2.04A, and 2.04B. Better-eye rules, VER testing, MD of 22 dB on HFA 30-2, visual efficiency formula. Blind SGA $2,830 in 2026, no title XVI duration requirement. CA RP and TX diabetic retinopathy worked examples.

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The dialysis listing 6.03, the automatic one-year transplant grant under 6.04, and the 6.05 lab + complication path with the eGFR 20 cutoff, the 90-day documentation rule, and BMI 18 anorexia criterion. CA and TX worked examples on diabetic nephropathy and PKD.

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The four paths under 11.02 (A monthly tonic-clonic, B weekly dyscognitive, C and D with marked limitation), the 11.00H4 counting rules, the 3-month adherence floor, and the witness-description requirement. CA idiopathic generalized and TX temporal lobe worked examples.

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Submit or inform 5 business days before your hearing or the ALJ can reject your evidence. Here is the exact rule text, the three mandatory good cause exceptions, how to count the deadline backwards, what the HALLEX manual tells judges to do, and the practical workflow that keeps your record clean.

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A CDR doesn't ask whether you're disabled today. It asks whether your condition improved since the comparison point decision. Here is how the 8-step CDR sequential under 20 CFR 404.1594 actually runs in 2026, the 5 Group I exceptions, the 4 Group II exceptions, and how to keep your checks coming during appeal.

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Self-employed claimants don't get SGA evaluated by income alone. SSA runs three tests: Significant Services and Substantial Income, Comparability, and Worth of Work. Here is how each test runs in 2026 with the $1,690 SGA threshold, what deductions to take, and how the 24-month rule changes everything for current beneficiaries.

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You can win SSDI at Step 3 even if you don't meet every Blue Book criterion. 20 CFR 404.1526 gives three routes to equal a listing: missing criteria with findings of equal medical significance, impairment not in the Blue Book, and combination of impairments. Here is the 2026 breakdown including SSR 17-2p and the medical consultant sign-off requirement.

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A closed SSDI or SSI denial isn't always final. 20 CFR 404.987 lets you reopen a prior decision under three different windows: 12 months for any reason, 4 years (SSDI) or 2 years (SSI) for good cause, and anytime for fraud, clerical error, or face-of-record mistakes. Here is the 2026 breakdown with worked examples and the POMS rules SSA actually uses.

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When a federal court remands your SSDI case under 42 USC 405(g), it picks either sentence four or sentence six. The choice decides when EAJA fees can be filed, whether you get a final judgment, and how your back pay timeline plays out. Here is the 2026 breakdown of Shalala v. Schaefer, Melkonyan v. Sullivan, the 90-day EAJA window, and the differences that actually matter.

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If your SSDI or SSI was terminated because work earnings exceeded SGA, you have 60 months to ask SSA to turn the check back on without filing a new application. Here is the 2026 breakdown of the EXR statute, the medical improvement standard, the 6 months of provisional cash, and worked examples that show how the timeline actually plays out.

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Section 207 of the Social Security Act protects your SSDI and SSI from most creditors, but four federal exceptions can still pull money out of your check. Here is the 2026 breakdown of the anti-attachment rule, the child support, federal tax, federal debt, and restitution carve-outs, and the 31 CFR 212 rule that shields two months of benefits in your bank account.

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The SSI resource limit is frozen at $2,000 for individuals and $3,000 for couples in 2026, where it has sat since 1989. Here is the 2026 breakdown of what counts as a resource, the home and one-car exclusions, ABLE accounts, burial funds, deeming rules for spouses and parents, and the worked examples that show how SSA decides eligibility.

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Section 1619(b) lets SSI recipients keep Medicaid even after their cash benefit drops to zero from work earnings. Here is the 2026 state threshold table for all 50 states plus DC, the Medicaid Use Test, the Threshold Test, the 209(b) state quirks, and how to qualify for an individualized higher threshold under POMS SI 02302.050.

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SSR 96-8p tells SSA how to write your Residual Functional Capacity. It requires function-by-function analysis before exertional categories, a narrative discussion citing specific evidence, and weight given to treating source opinions. Here is the 2026 breakdown of the 7 strength demands, mental categories, and how to spot a defective RFC.

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Wounded Warriors and 100 percent P&T veterans get fast-tracked SSDI claims in 2026, but the two programs work differently and one trips up almost everyone. Here is the 2026 breakdown of POMS DI 11005.604 and DI 23055, the VA rating letter trick, and why SSDI plus VA disability stack with no offset.

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Disabled Widow Benefits (DWB) under Section 202(e) pay surviving spouses ages 50 to 59 who can't work. Here is the 2026 breakdown of the prescribed period, the 71.5 percent of PIA payment, the 5-month waiting period, the remarriage rules at ages 50, 55, and 60, and how to file when the deadline is closing in.

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SSR 12-2p is the only SSA ruling about fibromyalgia. Here is the 2026 breakdown of the 1990 ACR tender point criteria, the 2010 ACR symptom criteria, the 12-month longitudinal record requirement, the exclusion workup SSA expects, and the treating rheumatologist evidence that moves fibromyalgia claims from initial denials to ALJ approvals.

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Disabled Adult Child (DAC) and Childhood Disability Benefits (CDB) pay a disabled adult on a parent's Social Security record. Here is the 2026 walkthrough of the onset-before-22 rule, the 50 percent and 75 percent PIA math, Medicare at month 25, the marriage termination trap under 20 CFR 404.352, and how to keep DAC benefits if you marry another Title II beneficiary.

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The April 2021 musculoskeletal rewrite replaced old Listing 1.04 with Listings 1.15 (nerve root compromise) and 1.16 (cauda equina and lumbar stenosis), plus 1.18 for major joints. The biggest change is the assistive device requirement under the D criterion. Here is what spinal claimants need to prove in 2026 to meet a Listing, why most back claims now win at step five instead, and how to build the medical record SSA actually wants.

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SSR 18-3p replaced the old SSR 82-59 on October 29, 2018 and rewrote how SSA handles failure-to-follow-treatment denials. The agency has to prove four prerequisites before it can deny on this ground, and six good-reason categories let a claimant beat the denial. Here is the 2026 walkthrough of every step, the religious objection rule under 20 CFR 404.1530(c)(2), the cost and side-effect defenses, and how to write the explanation that wins.

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Acquiescence Ruling 24-1(6), effective December 2, 2024, rescinded the old Drummond and Dennard rulings and changed how SSA handles prior ALJ findings in refiled disability claims. Here is what Earley v. Commissioner means in 2026, why the new rule applies nationwide, and how to use prior findings to strengthen your next application.

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20 CFR 404.957 lets an ALJ dismiss your SSDI hearing request for missed hearings, untimely filings, res judicata, or claimant death. Here is the 2026 breakdown of every dismissal ground, the good cause standard under (b)(2), the 60-day vacate window under 404.960, and how to fight a dismissal that ended your case.

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Your Established Onset Date controls how much retroactive money you get and when Medicare kicks in. Here is how SSR 18-1p and POMS DI 25501.250 set the EOD in 2026, the difference between AOD, POD, and EOD, traumatic vs non-traumatic onset, the Unsuccessful Work Attempt exception, and when ALJs call medical experts to infer onset.

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If your ALJ has a financial conflict, a prior relationship, or has said something that makes a reasonable person question impartiality, you can ask them to recuse. Here is how HALLEX I-2-1-60 works after the August 2024 rewrite by Transmittal I-2-257, the three mandatory disqualification grounds, and the appeal path if the ALJ refuses to step down.

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When a child on SSI turns 18, SSA must re-evaluate the case under the adult disability standard. About one in three children lose benefits. Here is how the redetermination works, what POMS DI 13006 requires, how Section 301 keeps payments going during vocational training, and the 10 day appeal window that protects benefits.

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After the Appeals Council denies review, your only option is federal district court. The 60 day clock starts ticking, the new Supplemental Rules govern the filing, and about 60% of cases remanded back to SSA end in approval. Here is the full process, sentence four vs sentence six remands, and how EAJA pays your attorney.

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If you have substance use in your medical record, SSA runs a separate six-step analysis on top of the regular five-step sequential evaluation. Here's how SSR 13-2p, 20 CFR 404.1535, and POMS DI 90070.050 actually work in 2026, the irreversible damage carve-out, what counts as a period of abstinence, and worked examples for depression, cirrhosis, and Wernicke-Korsakoff.

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If you get SSDI plus Medicaid, you're a dual eligible, and a D-SNP can wrap both programs into one card with $0 premiums, dental, vision, transportation, and a flex card for groceries or utilities. Here's how the four tiers (FIDE, HIDE, AIP, Coordination-Only) compare in 2026, the CY2026 Final Rule changes, integrated ID card rules, and a state-by-state look at Illinois, California, and Tennessee.

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BWE comes off countable earned income after the $65 plus half exclusion under POMS SI 00820.535. That makes it a near dollar-for-dollar boost to your SSI check. Here's the full walkthrough: who qualifies, what counts (taxes, FICA, guide dog, transportation, meals at work), why BWE beats IRWE, and a worked 2026 example for a blind worker earning $27,420 a year.

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The four MSPs cover Part B premiums and, for QMB, all Medicare cost sharing. 2026 limits: $1,350, $1,616, $1,816, and $5,405 monthly income, with $9,950 in countable resources. Annual value runs from $6,500 (QDWI) to $17,800 (QMB plus auto-deemed Extra Help). Here's who qualifies, what each tier pays, and how to apply through your state Medicaid office.

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