We do not request reimbursement of costs
(such as repayment for obtaining medical records)
from veterans nor from people who suffer from multiple sclerosis.
Getting a denial letter from the Social Security Administration (SSA) can feel devastating, especially when you are already struggling to pay bills and manage a serious medical condition. The truth is that an initial denial is not the end of your claim. In Texas, the majority of Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) applications are turned down on the first try, but many of those claims are eventually approved on appeal. If you understand the process and act within the deadlines, you still have a real chance of securing the benefits you have earned.
This guide walks Texas residents through every stage of the SSDI appeal process, what paperwork you need, how to strengthen your case, and when to bring in a Texas disability lawyer to protect your rights.
Before you can appeal effectively, it helps to understand why the SSA rejected your claim in the first place. Texas has one of the highest SSDI denial rates in the country, and most denials fall into a handful of predictable categories. Reviewing your denial notice carefully is the first step toward building a stronger case.
Some of the common reasons disability benefits get denied include insufficient medical evidence, earning above the substantial gainful activity (SGA) limit, failure to follow prescribed treatment, lack of cooperation with Disability Determination Services (DDS), or a gap in recent work history that disqualifies you from insured status.
Your denial letter will usually spell out the specific reason. Read it carefully and keep it somewhere safe, because every deadline in your appeal is calculated from the date on that notice.
You have 60 days from the date you receive your denial letter to file an appeal. The SSA assumes you received the letter five days after it was mailed, unless you can prove otherwise. That gives you roughly 65 days, but do not cut it close.
Missing the deadline almost always means starting over with a brand-new application, losing your original filing date, and forfeiting months of potential back pay. If something serious prevents you from filing on time (a hospitalization, for example), you can request an extension for good cause, but approval is not guaranteed.
The SSA uses the same four-stage appeals process nationwide. Each level is a fresh opportunity to present evidence and argue your case.
Reconsideration is the first step. A different claims examiner at the Texas Disability Determination Services office reviews your entire file, along with any new medical evidence you submit. You can file Form SSA-561 online, by mail, or in person at your local SSA field office.
Reconsideration approval rates are modest, often under 15 percent, so treat this stage seriously. Submit updated medical records, recent test results, and statements from treating physicians that speak directly to how your condition limits your ability to work.
If reconsideration is denied, the next stage is a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge. This is the stage where most Texas claimants finally win approval, and it is by far the most important level of the appeal.
Hearings in Texas are handled by offices in Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Fort Worth, and McAllen. You can appear in person, by video, or by phone. The judge will ask detailed questions about your medical conditions, daily activities, past work, and why you cannot return to any job in the national economy. A vocational expert and sometimes a medical expert will also testify.
If the ALJ denies your claim, you can request review by the SSA Appeals Council in Falls Church, Virginia. The Council may deny review, remand the case back to an ALJ for another hearing, or issue its own decision. Most requests are denied, but remands do happen when there are clear legal or procedural errors in the judge’s decision.
The final step is filing a civil action in U.S. District Court. In Texas, that could be the Northern, Southern, Eastern, or Western District depending on where you live. This is a formal legal proceeding with strict rules that almost always requires an experienced disability attorney.
Filing the paperwork on time is only the beginning. What actually wins appeals is evidence. The SSA needs to see that your medical condition prevents you from performing substantial gainful activity, and the burden is on you to prove it.
Once your appeal is filed, the wait begins. Reconsideration in Texas typically takes three to six months. ALJ hearings have longer queues, often nine to eighteen months depending on the hearing office. During this time, continue treatment, keep records current, and respond promptly to any SSA request. For a detailed look at what happens after an SSDI application is denied, review the dedicated resource on the topic.
You are not required to have an attorney to appeal an SSDI denial, but represented claimants are approved at significantly higher rates, especially at the ALJ hearing level. A disability lawyer knows how SSA rules apply, how judges evaluate testimony, and which medical evidence will move the needle.
A lawyer experienced in appealing a denied disability claim handles the paperwork, deadlines, and communication with SSA. Disability attorneys work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless you win, and fees are capped by federal law at 25 percent of back pay up to the SSA maximum.
You can file your SSDI appeal online, which is usually the fastest option. You will need your denial letter, a list of your current medications, updated contact information for your doctors, and details about any new medical treatment since your original application.
The SSA publishes official guidance on the federal appeal process at https://www.ssa.gov/benefits/disability/appeal.html, which is a reliable resource for forms and timelines straight from the agency.
An SSDI denial in Texas is discouraging, but it is a common part of the process, not a final answer. With the right strategy, strong medical evidence, and experienced legal support, you can turn a denial into an approval and secure the financial stability you need. If you are facing a denied SSDI claim, do not let the clock run out. Review your denial notice, gather updated medical evidence, and consider speaking with a Texas disability attorney who handles SSDI appeals every day.