SSDI & SSI in Kansas — the basics
- SSDI — based on your work history; no asset limit. Earning over $1,690/mo (the 2026 SGA limit) generally counts as working.
- SSI — needs-based; up to $994/mo in 2026, with strict income and roughly $2,000 in countable-asset limits.
- Kansas's Disability Determination Services reviews the medical evidence; the SSA makes the final decision.
Can’t work? You may be owed more.
SSDI & SSI can pay you monthly — plus back pay.
If a disability keeps you from working, you may qualify for monthly Social Security payments (SSI pays up to $994/mo in 2026) and retroactive back pay. Most claims are denied the first time — an accredited advocate dramatically improves your odds, and typically charges nothing unless you win.
Free to you · We may be compensated by the advocate, which never affects your benefits. Not the SSA; not legal advice.
How to qualify for Disability (SSDI/SSI) — and what counts against you
✓ How you qualify
- ✓SSDI: enough recent work credits + a disability lasting 12+ months that stops substantial work (earning over $1,690/mo in 2026)
- ✓SSI: limited income and assets (about $2,000 individual / $3,000 couple) with a qualifying disability
- ✓Strong, current medical evidence connecting the condition to your inability to work
✕ What counts against you
- ✕Earning above the $1,690/mo SGA limit
- ✕Too few recent work credits (for SSDI) or assets over the SSI limit
- ✕Insufficient medical evidence — the #1 reason claims are denied (most first claims are; appeals with help often win)
Kansas Disability (SSDI/SSI) — frequently asked questions
- What are the income limits for SSDI and SSI in 2026?
- SSDI is based on your work history and has no limit on unearned income, but earning more than $1,690/month (the 2026 SGA limit) generally means you aren't considered disabled. SSI is needs-based: in 2026 it pays up to $994/month for an individual, with strict income and roughly $2,000 in countable-asset limits.
- How much does Social Security Disability pay in Kansas?
- SSDI is based on your earnings record; SSI pays up to $994/month in 2026, and some states add a small supplement. Most claims are denied the first time — an accredited advocate can significantly improve your odds and protect your back pay.
- How do I apply for disability in Kansas?
- You apply through the Social Security Administration (ssa.gov), and Kansas's Disability Determination Services reviews the medical evidence. A free claim review can tell you whether it's worth pursuing and handle the paperwork.
Official source: SSA — Disability Benefits
Denied Disability (SSDI/SSI) in Kansas?
A denial is not the end — most are overturned on appeal with help. Get matched with an advocate who fights Disability (SSDI/SSI) denials in Kansas, often at no cost to you.
We may be compensated by the advocate, at no cost to you.
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