SSA Highlights 1.8 Million Disabled Business Owners in Self-Employment Guide
Updated
Updated · Forbes · Jul 16
SSA Highlights 1.8 Million Disabled Business Owners in Self-Employment Guide
1 articles · Updated · Forbes · Jul 16
Summary
A new guide frames self-employment as a practical path for SSDI recipients, pointing to more than 1.8 million U.S. business owners with disabilities and emphasizing flexible work arrangements.
Ticket to Work is presented as the main safeguard: beneficiaries can test self-employment for up to 9 non-consecutive months, plus a 3-month grace period, without losing full SSDI benefits.
After that trial phase, SSDI can continue during a 36-month eligibility period when earnings stay below 2026 SGA limits of $1,690 for non-blind workers and $2,830 for blind workers.
The guide also stresses risk management—starting with low-cost businesses, tracking income, expenses and hours, and using Employment Networks for benefits counseling and business planning.
For longer-term security, it notes expedited reinstatement is available for 60 months after benefits end, while Medicare can continue for up to 93 months after the trial work period.