There will be payments for eligible disability beneficiaries on June 3, 12, 18, and 26. However, it will only be possible if you have a qualifying disability and meet other requirements Social Security set.
Disability beneficiaries must have filed for Social Security when their disability appeared and if they had paid enough taxes to the Administration. Those workers who do not pay payroll taxes to SSA are ineligible. Getting the approval from SSA is also a must.
Eligible disability beneficiaries on June 3
If you began receiving SSDI payments before May 1997, June 3 will be your next payment date. Therefore, those recipients who have been longer on Social Security may qualify.
But they will not be the only eligible recipients. Social Security claimed that if you are on SSDI and SSI (Supplemental Security Income) your next payment will be due on June 3 as well.
Bear in mind that the amounts will differ from one beneficiary to another. For example, if you are on SSI and SSDI, the second payment will be lower because SSI is only for low-income families.
Disability beneficiaries can receive up to $3,822
Even if some Americans on SSDI can receive an average payment worth $1,537, others may get a lot more. This happens when they have paid the maximum tax for the minimum number of years to SSA.
So, if you paid the maximum tax for 35 years, it means you earned the taxable maximum for all those years. Filing late is the only way to get so much money. Remember that early filing can give you a lot less. It can reduce your benefit by about 30%.
After June 3, there will also be disability benefits on:
- June 12: Payment for those SSDI recipients whose birthdays are from 1-10
- June 18: Payment for those SSDI recipients whose birthdays are from 11-20
- June 26: Payment for those SSDI recipients whose birthdays are from 21-31