When Does Social Security Disability Convert to Retirement?
When Does Social Security Disability Convert to Retirement?
You may have heard or read that the benefits you receive from Social Security disability convert when you reach the age of retirement. If you are concerned about the effect it will have on your ability to pay bills, the disability lawyers at the Law Firm want you to stop worrying. Here is a look at exactly what happens to your SSD payments when you retire and the reason why you have no reason to be concerned about it.What happened when you worked and paid Social Security taxes?When you worked at a job or through self-employment and paid Social Security taxes on your income, you paid into the Social Security system. By doing that for a long enough duration, you become entitled to receive Social Security retirement benefits. If you become disabled before reaching retirement age, your work history entitles you to apply for and receive benefits through the Social Security Disability Insurance program. Why does Social Security disability convert?If you qualify for SSDI by working long enough and meet the definition for being disabled as defined in the Social Security regulations, you are approved to receive a monthly payment equivalent to what you would get at retirement age. Therefore, once you reach full retirement age, the SSDI payments automatically convert to Social Security retirement benefits.Seeing disability convert to regular Social Security should generally not change the amount of the payment. You may see it go up if you received workers' compensation benefits while also receiving SSDI. The reason is that Social Security may offset a portion of the compensation payment to reduce what you get from SSDI, but the offset ends once the disability converts to retirement benefits.When does the conversion happen?The age when you become eligible to receive full retirement benefits depends on when you were born. Although 65 years of age is usually associated with retirement, only people born in 1937 or earlier could retire and receive Social Security retirement benefits at 65. Anyone born in 1960 or later reaches full retirement age at 67.
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About Francis Babet
Francis Babet loves pursuing excellence through writing and has a passion for legal topics. He currently writes for The Clauson law Firm, a US-based law firm that provides SSD, SSI, SSDI, Personal Injury, and Drugs and Devices. His work has been published on various sites related to Social Security Disability, Supplemental Security Income and more.