The guidelines for working on SSDI with a Ticket to Work are as follows:When you first return to work you enter into your Trial Work Period. During your 9 month TWP, you are actually allowed to work and earn as much money as you can, and your benefits will not be affected. The only months that count as one of these TWP months would be months that you have earned over $750. However long it takes you accumulate 9 of those months over $750 will be the length of your Trial Work Period.
After your TWP is over, the first month that you earn over $1040(SGA) in gross wages, this starts your 3 month Grace Period.During your Grace Period, you are able to earn over $1040 and be guaranteed your SSDI check for that month and the next 2.If you continue after your Grace Period to earn over $1040 a month, that is when you will lose your benefit check.This is when your Extended Period of Eligibility starts. This is an additional 36 months after your TWP+Grace Period.
jbeany - the information you posted is *mostly* accurate. I just want to clarify a few things (I work for that awful SSA and doing the work reviews is my specialty)I just wanted to clarify those things. Is this something the EN provided in writing? If so, I can give you the policy references and you should let them know they are not very clear on those things. I hate when people get misleading information and then have their benefits affected.
Rerun - you won't get in any trouble for that amount of money! No worries! If you haven't already, you could call your local office and just say you were doing this work, and you were only earning $75/month but you thought you should report it. Honestly, unless you're earning thousands per year it won't trigger any alerts for us to look at you. Most of the time if it comes up somehow, it just gets marked down as insignificant because it's below the TWP amount even if you earned it all in 1 month, and we just let it go - not time or cost effective for someone to go printing and mailing forms, collecting pay stubs or a printout from the employer etc for something that would have no impact on your checks.All of those work incentives are available whether or not you enroll in the Ticket to Work, including the medicare benefit. The benefit of the Ticket to Work is that while it's assigned to an EN and in use, you cannot be medically ceased. So if someone starts using their TWP and continues working and has their checks suspended, that can prompt a medical review because if you're earning say $3,000/month that might indicate your condition has medically improved to the point where you don't meet the disability requirements. OR if you use your TWP months, complete your EPE and your benefits terminate, that can also prompt a medical review to see if we should be continuing Medicare (because if you're no longer meeting the medical requirements for disability, then the Medicare should stop since that is contingent on the disability). But again, working under the ticket with an employment network prevents medical reviews from being conducted. So it's extra protection in that regard from getting kicked off because you've "improved"
You're assuming the person is post transplant? If the person is using dialysis then their disability payment can be suspended/stopped but their Medicare continues no matter how much is earned right? Geoff is using dialysis, I believe.