Direct answer
SSI presumptive disability — 6 months of payments while you wait
For certain obvious conditions — total blindness, amputation of two limbs, terminal illness, Down syndrome, severe intellectual disability, and others — SSA can pay up to 6 months of SSI while your formal disability claim is being decided.
Presumptive disability payments are not repaid even if the medical claim is later denied. Only SSI (not SSDI) has presumptive payments. The list of qualifying conditions is in POMS DI 11055 and includes conditions the field office can approve immediately.
Sourced from ssa.gov — see citations below.
Direct answer: For certain obvious conditions — total blindness, amputation of two limbs, terminal illness, Down syndrome, severe intellectual disability, and others — SSA can pay up to 6 months of SSI while your formal disability claim is being decided.
What is presumptive disability under SSI?
Presumptive disability payments are not repaid even if the medical claim is later denied. Only SSI (not SSDI) has presumptive payments. The list of qualifying conditions is in POMS DI 11055 and includes conditions the field office can approve immediately.
Where does this rule live in SSA's regulations?
SSA publishes the SSI eligibility rules in the SSI Eligibility page on ssa.gov and the annual 2026 SSI figures at ssa.gov/oact/cola/SSI.html. When SSA's public page and this article differ, ssa.gov controls.
What if I'm not sure I qualify?
Apply anyway. SSA determines eligibility on the facts of your case, and application itself protects the earliest possible filing date. There is no penalty for applying and being denied.
Topics
- ssi
- SSI vs SSDI
- eligibility
Sources
Every figure and rule on this page is drawn from official SSA publications. Verify at the links below.
- SSA — Understanding SSI Eligibility (ssa.gov)
- SSA — 2026 SSI Federal Payment Amounts (ssa.gov)
- SSA — SSI Spotlights (ssa.gov)