
How the 2025 cola affects social security disability benefits
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Social Security offers several work incentives aimed at helping people with disabilities explore options for going back to work. One of these is a trial work period: An SSDI recipient can
work, and earn any amount of income, for any nine months over a rolling five-year period without losing benefits. In 2025, the SSA counts a month toward your trial work period quota if you
earned at least $1,160, up from $1,110 in 2024. SSI FEDERAL PAYMENTS Supplemental Security Income is distinct from traditional Social Security benefits — it is funded by general U.S. tax
revenue, not Social Security payroll taxes, for one thing — but the SSA administers this safety net program, delivering monthly benefits to about 7.4 million people who are 65 or older,
blind or have a disability and have very low income and few financial resources. With the 2025 COLA, the maximum federal payment to an individual SSI recipient will go up from $943 a month
to $967. (Most states provide supplemental payments to some SSI beneficiaries.) A married couple in which both spouses are SSI-eligible can receive up to $1,450 a month, up from $1,415 in
2024. SSI benefits are generally paid on the first of the month, but because Jan. 1 is a federal holiday, SSI recipients get their first COLA-boosted payment on the prior business day — in
this case, Tuesday, Dec. 31. Most people applying for SSI are subject to the substantial gainful activity limits at the filing stage — if their work income exceeds the cap at the time they
claim benefits, the claim will likely be denied. The SGA cap does not apply once an applicant has been approved for and is receiving SSI. However, once people start getting SSI, they are
subject to a different income limit. If they are working or receiving money from other sources such as government benefits, investments or family members, a portion of that income is
deducted from their monthly SSI payment. If this “countable income” exceeds the 2025 federal payment standard of $967 for a single person and $1,450 for a couple, they will get no SSI
benefit that month. The annual change in income limits has an additional impact on some younger people receiving SSI on the basis of disability or blindness. Those regularly attending a
secondary school, college or university or getting vocational or technical training can earn up to a certain amount from work each month and not have it count against their SSI benefit. In
2025, this “student earned income exclusion” increases from $2,290 to $2,350 a month, up to an annual maximum of $9,460 ($9,230 in 2024).