[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":838},["ShallowReactive",2],{"/en/guides/child-benefits/disability-benefits-children-usa":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"category":807,"description":808,"extension":809,"faq":810,"meta":829,"navigation":830,"path":831,"publishedAt":832,"relatedCalculator":833,"seo":834,"stem":835,"updatedAt":836,"__hash__":837},"guides_en/en/guides/child-benefits/disability-benefits-children-usa.md","Disability Benefits for Children 2026: SSI, SSDI & State Programs",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":785},"minimark",[9,13,17,29,34,128,132,138,143,183,186,190,197,203,207,210,215,253,258,274,279,290,294,301,316,320,323,385,388,392,494,498,513,527,538,541,545,556,559,563,577,580,584,590,644,647,654,658,661,681,684,688,719,725,729,732,756,764,768],[10,11,5],"h1",{"id":12},"disability-benefits-for-children-2026-ssi-ssdi-state-programs",[14,15,16],"p",{},"Raising a child with a disability involves unique financial pressures — additional medical costs, specialized equipment, therapies, and often reduced work hours for caregiving parents. Federal and state disability benefit programs exist specifically to help these families, but the rules are complex and many eligible children are never enrolled.",[14,18,19,20,24,25,28],{},"This guide covers the main disability benefit programs available for children in 2026: ",[21,22,23],"strong",{},"SSI (Supplemental Security Income)",", ",[21,26,27],{},"SSDI dependent benefits",", and key state programs.",[30,31,33],"h2",{"id":32},"overview-disability-benefits-available-for-children","Overview: Disability Benefits Available for Children",[35,36,37,56],"table",{},[38,39,40],"thead",{},[41,42,43,47,50,53],"tr",{},[44,45,46],"th",{},"Program",[44,48,49],{},"Who Pays",[44,51,52],{},"Monthly Amount",[44,54,55],{},"Eligibility Basis",[57,58,59,74,87,101,115],"tbody",{},[41,60,61,65,68,71],{},[62,63,64],"td",{},"SSI (needs-based)",[62,66,67],{},"Federal (SSA)",[62,69,70],{},"Up to $967",[62,72,73],{},"Disability + income/resource limits",[41,75,76,79,81,84],{},[62,77,78],{},"SSDI dependent",[62,80,67],{},[62,82,83],{},"Up to 50–75% of parent's PIA",[62,85,86],{},"Parent's work record",[41,88,89,92,95,98],{},[62,90,91],{},"State SSI supplement",[62,93,94],{},"State government",[62,96,97],{},"$0–$400+",[62,99,100],{},"Varies by state",[41,102,103,106,109,112],{},[62,104,105],{},"Katie Beckett/TEFRA",[62,107,108],{},"Medicaid (state/federal)",[62,110,111],{},"Health coverage",[62,113,114],{},"Child's disability (parent income excluded)",[41,116,117,120,123,125],{},[62,118,119],{},"CHIP",[62,121,122],{},"State/federal",[62,124,111],{},[62,126,127],{},"Income-based",[30,129,131],{"id":130},"ssi-for-disabled-children","SSI for Disabled Children",[14,133,134,137],{},[21,135,136],{},"Supplemental Security Income (SSI)"," is the primary disability benefit for children from low and moderate-income families. It provides monthly cash payments to cover basic needs.",[139,140,142],"h3",{"id":141},"_2026-ssi-benefit-rate","2026 SSI Benefit Rate",[35,144,145,155],{},[38,146,147],{},[41,148,149,152],{},[44,150,151],{},"Situation",[44,153,154],{},"Monthly Federal Benefit",[57,156,157,167,175],{},[41,158,159,162],{},[62,160,161],{},"Maximum (no countable income)",[62,163,164],{},[21,165,166],{},"$967/month",[41,168,169,172],{},[62,170,171],{},"Child with some parental income deemed",[62,173,174],{},"Reduced (see deeming table)",[41,176,177,180],{},[62,178,179],{},"State supplement added",[62,181,182],{},"$967 + state supplement",[14,184,185],{},"The federal SSI benefit rate increased to $967 in 2026 (from $943 in 2025) following the annual Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA).",[139,187,189],{"id":188},"resource-limits","Resource Limits",[14,191,192,193,196],{},"A disabled child must have countable resources of ",[21,194,195],{},"$2,000 or less"," (the same limit that has applied for decades, though reform proposals have been made). Countable resources include cash, bank accounts, investments, and property — but not a home, one car, household goods, or burial funds.",[14,198,199,202],{},[21,200,201],{},"ABLE accounts (see below) do not count"," toward the $2,000 resource limit up to $100,000, providing critical savings flexibility for families.",[139,204,206],{"id":205},"parental-income-deeming-how-it-works","Parental Income Deeming: How It Works",[14,208,209],{},"Since the child lives with and depends on their parents, the SSA \"deems\" a portion of parental income to the child. Only the deemed portion above exclusions reduces the SSI benefit.",[14,211,212],{},[21,213,214],{},"2026 Deeming Exclusions (Approximate)",[35,216,217,227],{},[38,218,219],{},[41,220,221,224],{},[44,222,223],{},"Family Composition",[44,225,226],{},"Parental Income Exclusion",[57,228,229,237,245],{},[41,230,231,234],{},[62,232,233],{},"1 parent, no other children",[62,235,236],{},"$2,037/month",[41,238,239,242],{},[62,240,241],{},"2 parents, no other children",[62,243,244],{},"$2,515/month",[41,246,247,250],{},[62,248,249],{},"Each additional non-disabled child",[62,251,252],{},"+$457/month",[14,254,255],{},[21,256,257],{},"Deeming calculation example:",[259,260,261,265,268,271],"ul",{},[262,263,264],"li",{},"Two parents, one non-disabled sibling, combined income: $4,000/month",[262,266,267],{},"Exclusion: $2,515 + $457 = $2,972",[262,269,270],{},"Deemed income: $4,000 − $2,972 = $1,028",[262,272,273],{},"SSI reduction: $1,028 (exceeds benefit, child receives $0)",[14,275,276],{},[21,277,278],{},"Same example at $3,200 income:",[259,280,281,284],{},[262,282,283],{},"Deemed income: $3,200 − $2,972 = $228",[262,285,286,287],{},"Child's SSI: $967 − $228 = ",[21,288,289],{},"$739/month",[30,291,293],{"id":292},"how-the-ssa-evaluates-childhood-disability","How the SSA Evaluates Childhood Disability",[14,295,296,297,300],{},"The SSA applies a ",[21,298,299],{},"six-step sequential evaluation"," to determine whether a child is disabled:",[302,303,304,307,310,313],"ol",{},[262,305,306],{},"Is the child engaged in substantial gainful activity (SGA)? If yes, deny.",[262,308,309],{},"Does the child have a medically determinable impairment that is severe? If no, deny.",[262,311,312],{},"Does the impairment meet or medically equal a listed impairment in the SSA's \"Blue Book\"? If yes, approve.",[262,314,315],{},"Does the impairment functionally equal the listings? Evaluate six domains of functioning.",[139,317,319],{"id":318},"six-domains-of-functioning","Six Domains of Functioning",[14,321,322],{},"For step 4, the SSA evaluates whether the child's impairments result in \"marked\" limitations in 2 domains or \"extreme\" limitation in 1 domain:",[35,324,325,335],{},[38,326,327],{},[41,328,329,332],{},[44,330,331],{},"Domain",[44,333,334],{},"What It Covers",[57,336,337,345,353,361,369,377],{},[41,338,339,342],{},[62,340,341],{},"Acquiring and using information",[62,343,344],{},"Learning, reading, writing, math",[41,346,347,350],{},[62,348,349],{},"Attending and completing tasks",[62,351,352],{},"Focus, persistence, finishing work",[41,354,355,358],{},[62,356,357],{},"Interacting and relating with others",[62,359,360],{},"Social skills, behavior",[41,362,363,366],{},[62,364,365],{},"Moving about and manipulating objects",[62,367,368],{},"Physical coordination, mobility",[41,370,371,374],{},[62,372,373],{},"Caring for yourself",[62,375,376],{},"Self-care, hygiene, safety",[41,378,379,382],{},[62,380,381],{},"Health and physical well-being",[62,383,384],{},"Effects of illness on daily functioning",[14,386,387],{},"\"Marked\" = more than moderate, less than extreme. \"Extreme\" = the most severe limitation that interferes with all useful function.",[139,389,391],{"id":390},"common-conditions-that-qualify","Common Conditions That Qualify",[35,393,394,404],{},[38,395,396],{},[41,397,398,401],{},[44,399,400],{},"Condition Category",[44,402,403],{},"Examples",[57,405,406,414,422,430,438,446,454,462,470,478,486],{},[41,407,408,411],{},[62,409,410],{},"Neurological",[62,412,413],{},"Cerebral palsy, epilepsy, spina bifida, TBI",[41,415,416,419],{},[62,417,418],{},"Intellectual/developmental",[62,420,421],{},"Intellectual disability, Down syndrome",[41,423,424,427],{},[62,425,426],{},"Autism spectrum",[62,428,429],{},"ASD at moderate/severe levels",[41,431,432,435],{},[62,433,434],{},"Mental health",[62,436,437],{},"Severe ADHD, childhood schizophrenia, severe anxiety",[41,439,440,443],{},[62,441,442],{},"Musculoskeletal",[62,444,445],{},"Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, limb loss",[41,447,448,451],{},[62,449,450],{},"Cardiovascular",[62,452,453],{},"Congenital heart defects, cardiomyopathy",[41,455,456,459],{},[62,457,458],{},"Hematological",[62,460,461],{},"Sickle cell disease, severe thalassemia",[41,463,464,467],{},[62,465,466],{},"Cancer",[62,468,469],{},"Active malignancies, aggressive treatment",[41,471,472,475],{},[62,473,474],{},"Visual",[62,476,477],{},"Blindness or severe visual impairment",[41,479,480,483],{},[62,481,482],{},"Hearing",[62,484,485],{},"Profound hearing loss",[41,487,488,491],{},[62,489,490],{},"Low birth weight",[62,492,493],{},"Very low birth weight in infants",[30,495,497],{"id":496},"ssdi-dependent-benefits-on-a-parents-record","SSDI Dependent Benefits on a Parent's Record",[14,499,500,501,504,505,508,509,512],{},"If a parent receives ",[21,502,503],{},"Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI)"," or ",[21,506,507],{},"Social Security retirement benefits",", their child can receive a ",[21,510,511],{},"dependent benefit",":",[259,514,515,521],{},[262,516,517,520],{},[21,518,519],{},"Amount:"," Up to 50% of the parent's Primary Insurance Amount (PIA)",[262,522,523,526],{},[21,524,525],{},"Eligibility:"," Child under 18 (or 18–19 in full-time school), unmarried, biological/adopted/stepchild",[14,528,529,530,533,534,537],{},"If a parent dies, the child can receive ",[21,531,532],{},"survivor benefits"," of up to ",[21,535,536],{},"75% of the parent's PIA",".",[14,539,540],{},"These SSDI-based benefits do not require the child themselves to be disabled. They are available to any qualifying child of an insured worker.",[30,542,544],{"id":543},"katie-beckett-tefra-medicaid-option","Katie Beckett (TEFRA) Medicaid Option",[14,546,547,548,551,552,555],{},"The ",[21,549,550],{},"Katie Beckett waiver"," (also called the TEFRA option) is a Medicaid provision that allows states to provide Medicaid to severely disabled children ",[21,553,554],{},"without counting the parents' income or resources"," — even if the parents earn too much for standard Medicaid.",[14,557,558],{},"This is particularly valuable for children who would qualify for institutional care (which Medicaid covers automatically) but are instead cared for at home. The program was named after Katie Beckett, whose family fought in the 1980s to bring her home from a hospital.",[14,560,561],{},[21,562,525],{},[259,564,565,568,571,574],{},[262,566,567],{},"Child under 18 (or under 19 in some states)",[262,569,570],{},"Medically eligible for institutional level of care",[262,572,573],{},"Safe to care for at home",[262,575,576],{},"Cost of home care must not exceed cost of institutional care",[14,578,579],{},"Not all states implement the Katie Beckett option the same way. Contact your state Medicaid agency to ask specifically about \"TEFRA Medicaid\" or \"Katie Beckett.\"",[30,581,583],{"id":582},"able-accounts-saving-without-losing-benefits","ABLE Accounts: Saving Without Losing Benefits",[14,585,586,589],{},[21,587,588],{},"ABLE accounts"," (Achieving a Better Life Experience) allow individuals with disabilities to save money without triggering SSI resource limits:",[35,591,592,602],{},[38,593,594],{},[41,595,596,599],{},[44,597,598],{},"Feature",[44,600,601],{},"Detail",[57,603,604,612,620,628,636],{},[41,605,606,609],{},[62,607,608],{},"Who can open one",[62,610,611],{},"Person with disability onset before age 26",[41,613,614,617],{},[62,615,616],{},"Annual contribution limit",[62,618,619],{},"$18,000/year (2026)",[41,621,622,625],{},[62,623,624],{},"SSI resource exclusion",[62,626,627],{},"Up to $100,000 doesn't count toward $2,000 limit",[41,629,630,633],{},[62,631,632],{},"Qualified expenses",[62,634,635],{},"Education, housing, transportation, health, assistive tech",[41,637,638,641],{},[62,639,640],{},"Tax treatment",[62,642,643],{},"Contributions after-tax; earnings and withdrawals tax-free",[14,645,646],{},"Families of disabled children should prioritize opening an ABLE account. Even small monthly contributions ($50–$100) can accumulate significant savings over a childhood without jeopardizing SSI eligibility.",[14,648,649,650,653],{},"Find ABLE account programs at ",[21,651,652],{},"ablenrc.org"," — many states offer their own plans and some accept out-of-state residents.",[30,655,657],{"id":656},"state-disability-programs","State Disability Programs",[14,659,660],{},"In addition to federal programs, many states offer:",[259,662,663,669,675],{},[262,664,665,668],{},[21,666,667],{},"State SSI supplements"," — additional monthly payments above the federal SSI rate (highest in California, New York, Massachusetts)",[262,670,671,674],{},[21,672,673],{},"State disability assistance"," — some states provide cash assistance to disabled children who don't qualify for federal SSI",[262,676,677,680],{},[21,678,679],{},"Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) Medicaid waivers"," — provide intensive support services (respite care, personal care, behavioral support) for children with significant disabilities",[14,682,683],{},"Contact your state's Medicaid or developmental disability agency to learn about specific waiver programs.",[30,685,687],{"id":686},"how-to-apply-for-child-ssi","How to Apply for Child SSI",[302,689,690,696,699,705,712],{},[262,691,692,695],{},[21,693,694],{},"Call 1-800-772-1213"," or visit a local SSA office to start the application process",[262,697,698],{},"A parent or guardian must apply on behalf of a child under 18",[262,700,701,704],{},[21,702,703],{},"Gather documentation:"," medical records, treatment history, school records (IEPs, evaluations), doctor letters, therapy notes",[262,706,707,708,711],{},"Complete ",[21,709,710],{},"Form SSA-8000"," (Application for Supplemental Security Income)",[262,713,714,715,718],{},"The SSA may request a ",[21,716,717],{},"Consultative Examination (CE)"," — a one-time exam by an SSA-appointed physician",[14,720,721,724],{},[21,722,723],{},"Processing time:"," 3–6 months average. If denied, file an appeal immediately — many approvals happen at the reconsideration or hearing stage.",[30,726,728],{"id":727},"related-benefits-for-families-with-disabled-children","Related Benefits for Families with Disabled Children",[14,730,731],{},"Families caring for a child with a disability should also explore:",[259,733,734,742,749],{},[262,735,736,741],{},[737,738,740],"a",{"href":739},"/en/guides/child-benefits/social-security-benefits-children/","Social Security Benefits for Children 2026"," — detailed guide to SSI, survivor benefits, and dependent benefits",[262,743,744,748],{},[737,745,747],{"href":746},"/en/guides/child-benefits/medicaid-for-children-eligibility/","Medicaid for Children 2026"," — comprehensive health coverage; automatic with SSI in most states",[262,750,751,755],{},[737,752,754],{"href":753},"/en/guides/child-benefits/child-tax-credit-2026/","Child Tax Credit 2026"," — up to $2,000 per child in tax credits for working parents",[14,757,758,759,763],{},"Use our ",[737,760,762],{"href":761},"/calculator/","Family Benefits Calculator"," to estimate your total benefit entitlement.",[30,765,767],{"id":766},"related-guides","Related Guides",[259,769,770,775,780],{},[262,771,772,774],{},[737,773,740],{"href":739}," — SSI, survivor, and dependent benefits",[262,776,777,779],{},[737,778,747],{"href":746}," — free health coverage for children under 19",[262,781,782,784],{},[737,783,754],{"href":753}," — federal tax credits for families",{"title":786,"searchDepth":787,"depth":787,"links":788},"",2,[789,790,796,800,801,802,803,804,805,806],{"id":32,"depth":787,"text":33},{"id":130,"depth":787,"text":131,"children":791},[792,794,795],{"id":141,"depth":793,"text":142},3,{"id":188,"depth":793,"text":189},{"id":205,"depth":793,"text":206},{"id":292,"depth":787,"text":293,"children":797},[798,799],{"id":318,"depth":793,"text":319},{"id":390,"depth":793,"text":391},{"id":496,"depth":787,"text":497},{"id":543,"depth":787,"text":544},{"id":582,"depth":787,"text":583},{"id":656,"depth":787,"text":657},{"id":686,"depth":787,"text":687},{"id":727,"depth":787,"text":728},{"id":766,"depth":787,"text":767},"child-benefits","Complete guide to disability benefits for children in 2026 — SSI income limits ($967/month), how the SSA evaluates child disability, parental income deeming, ABLE accounts, and state programs.","md",[811,814,817,820,823,826],{"question":812,"answer":813},"How much is the SSI disability benefit for a child in 2026?","The maximum federal SSI benefit for a disabled child in 2026 is $967 per month (the Federal Benefit Rate, increased from $943 in 2025 following the COLA adjustment). The actual benefit depends on the child's own income and a portion of the parents' income (deeming), so many children receive less than the maximum.",{"question":815,"answer":816},"What conditions qualify a child for SSI disability?","Any physical or mental condition that causes 'marked and severe functional limitations' lasting at least 12 months or expected to result in death can qualify. Common conditions include autism spectrum disorder, intellectual disability, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, congenital heart defects, Down syndrome, severe ADHD, childhood cancer, and low birth weight.",{"question":818,"answer":819},"How does parental income affect a child's SSI benefits?","The SSA 'deems' a portion of parental income to the child applicant, reducing the SSI benefit. Parents get exclusions based on family size — approximately $2,037/month for one parent and $457/month for each non-disabled child. Only income above these exclusions reduces the child's SSI award.",{"question":821,"answer":822},"Can a child receive both SSI and SSDI?","A child can receive SSI and also receive dependent or survivor SSDI benefits on a parent's Social Security record. The two payments are coordinated: SSDI benefits received by the child count as unearned income that may reduce the SSI payment. However, total income from both sources may exceed SSI alone.",{"question":824,"answer":825},"What is an ABLE account and how does it help disabled children?","An ABLE account is a tax-advantaged savings account for people with disabilities whose onset was before age 26. Contributions (up to $18,000/year in 2026) from family members do not count against SSI resource limits. Funds can be used for any qualified disability expense including education, housing, transportation, and healthcare.",{"question":827,"answer":828},"Do disability benefits for a child continue into adulthood?","SSI for children must be redetermined when the child turns 18, using adult disability criteria (which is stricter). Some children who qualified under childhood rules may be denied at the age-18 redetermination. Parents should prepare documentation and request a redetermination review well before the child's 18th birthday.",{},true,"/en/guides/child-benefits/disability-benefits-children-usa","2026-03-31","/child-benefits-calculator",{"title":5,"description":808},"en/guides/child-benefits/disability-benefits-children-usa",null,"T-gN1q71bx7vDl7QO5hJdE8rQVJnw2W5E5b1Qa1j7i0",1775557777213]