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Yes, if you are receiving Social Security disability payments.
If you are applying for Medicaid on the basis of disability and you are not already receiving Social Security disability (RSDI or SSI), you might want to hire an attorney who specializes in Social Security disability. (Medicaid follows the Social Security rules for disability.)
You will need to check this with your local Social Security facility.
While receiving social security disability benefits, the maximum amount of additional monthly income allowed from working is $900 a month gross.
Your question is confusing. Are you asking about receiving monthly Social Security checks? Or are you asking about Social Security Disability payments. They are two different types of Social Security Benefits.
If while receiving social security retirement benefits, I get married, can my wife receive thru me, and if so how much if my monthly check is, $1738.
Yes, vacation pay counts as income when receiving survivor benefits. It shouldn't change the social security benefits you are receiving, however.
You get medicare soon after your 24th consecutive social security check. Sucks, don't it? If you retire at 62, you'll get it at 64. Unless you are receiving [Social Security] Disability Insurance Benefits, eligibility for all parts of Medicare begins at age 65.
Sixty-five, unless you're receiving Social Security disability.
No cap. Your savings are not a factor in receiving social security benefits. After all, the government is simply returning YOUR money that you paid into your whole working life.
Social security disability or a different type of disability insurance? For SSDI, children of divorced parents are still eligible for benefits regardless of whether the child lives with the parent receiving Social Security benefits or the parents remarry.
Accounts that have social security and ssi fund contained it it can not be levied account to federal law.