Social Security denies approximately 5% of initial disability applications. If your claim came back denied, that letter can feel like a door slamming shut, but it is not the end. Most successful disability cases are won on appeal, not at the initial stage. Understanding why SSA denied your claim is the first step toward building a stronger case.
The most common reasons for denial fall into a few clear categories: your medical evidence did not meet SSA’s standards, your income was too high, there were procedural problems with your application, or your condition did not meet the program’s technical requirements. Each of these has a path forward. This page walks through the eight most frequent denial reasons, what they mean in plain terms, and what Georgia claimants can do next.
Keener Law has represented disability claimants throughout the Marietta area and across Georgia for years. We’ve seen the full range of denial reasons and the strategies that work at reconsideration, at ALJ hearings, and beyond. Here’s what you need to know.
SSA’s denial letter tells you what happened. It rarely explains what to do about it. Below are the eight most common reasons claims are denied, along with what each denial actually means for your case.
This is the single most common reason SSA denies disability claims. SSA does not accept a doctor’s opinion alone. The agency needs objective medical records that document the severity of your condition over time. Treatment notes, imaging, lab results, specialist evaluations, and functional assessments all contribute to your medical record. If your records are sparse, outdated, or fail to connect your diagnosis to specific functional limitations, SSA’s examiner will typically deny the claim.
What makes this frustrating is that “insufficient” is often not about the seriousness of your condition, it’s about documentation. A claimant with severe back pain who sees a primary care doctor twice a year has a weaker record than one who sees an orthopedic specialist monthly. SSA evaluates your RFC (Residual Functional Capacity), an assessment of what you can still do physically and mentally despite your condition, largely from your medical records. Thin records produce an RFC that overstates your ability to work.
If this was your denial reason, the path forward is gathering more evidence: additional treating physician records, a detailed RFC opinion letter from your doctor, and potentially a consultative examination. An attorney can help you identify the specific gaps SSA flagged. Learn more about what conditions qualify for disability benefits and the medical evidence those conditions require.
SSDI is for people who cannot engage in Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA), SSA’s term for working and earning above a certain threshold. In 2026, the SGA limit is $1,6980 for non-blind applicants and higher for those who are blind. If SSA’s records show earnings above that limit during the period you claimed disability, your application will be denied on technical grounds before the medical review even begins.
This denial can happen even if you genuinely cannot perform your old job. If you worked part-time during your application period and earned above the SGA threshold, SSA treats that as evidence you can work. The fix depends on the specifics: if the income was from before your disability onset date, if it involved a trial work period, or if the earnings were misattributed, there are grounds to challenge the finding. This is an area where legal representation makes a concrete difference.
SSA expects claimants to follow treatment recommended by their doctors. If your records show that you stopped taking prescribed medication, skipped physical therapy, or declined a recommended surgery without a documented reason, SSA will question whether your condition is truly disabling, or whether you’d improve with treatment. This denial reason appears in the records more often than claimants expect, sometimes as a secondary factor alongside insufficient evidence.
Here’s the thing: SSA’s own regulations recognize exceptions. If you could not afford treatment, if your religion prohibits certain medical care, or if a doctor has determined that a treatment poses unacceptable risks, those are legitimate reasons for non-compliance. The problem is that claimants often do not document these reasons in their medical records or in their application. If treatment compliance was cited in your denial, your appeal needs to address it directly with supporting documentation.
SSA processes millions of claims. Procedural denials are more common than most claimants realize. Unsigned forms, missing authorization releases (like the SSA-827 medical records release), incomplete work history sections, or failure to list all treating physicians can trigger a denial before anyone reviews your medical condition.
These are the most preventable denials, and the most aggravating ones, because the underlying medical case may have been strong. On appeal, procedural denials are often easier to fix than medical ones: you complete the missing forms, provide the missing information, and resubmit. An attorney reviewing your file before submission catches these issues before they become denial letters. If your denial cited incomplete information, your appeal should address each missing item specifically and confirm it has been supplied.
SSDI is an insurance program funded by the Social Security taxes you pay throughout your working life. To qualify, you need enough work credits, typically 40 credits total, with at least 20 earned in the 10 years before you became disabled. If you haven’t worked enough or haven’t worked recently enough, SSA will deny your SSDI claim on technical grounds, regardless of how severe your condition is.
This matters because SSDI and SSI are different programs with different eligibility rules. SSI (Supplemental Security Income) does not require a work history; it’s need-based. If SSDI was denied because of insufficient work credits, you may still qualify for SSI if your income and assets fall below SSA’s limits. An attorney can review both programs against your specific situation. The distinction between the two is one of the most important things to understand after a denial, and one of the least-explained in SSA’s denial letters.
SSA’s definition of disability is strict: your condition must prevent substantial work and be expected to last at least 12 consecutive months, or be expected to result in death. This is where short-term and long-term disability insurance policies differ significantly from Social Security disability. A broken leg, a surgery with a predicted full recovery, or an illness with an expected treatment window of eight months will not qualify, even if you genuinely cannot work during that time.
If this was your denial reason, it is worth asking whether the prognosis in your medical records actually reflects reality. Doctors sometimes write optimistic recovery timelines that do not account for chronic complications. If your condition has persisted or worsened since the initial denial, updated records reflecting that timeline change your case. This denial reason is also worth contesting if you have a progressive condition that was expected to worsen, that trajectory matters under SSA’s rules.
SSA may request a consultative examination (CE), a medical exam arranged and paid for by SSA, when it determines your existing records are insufficient. Missing that appointment, failing to return SSA’s calls, or not responding to requests for additional information can result in denial for failure to cooperate. SSA takes this seriously. Missing a CE without a valid reason is treated as a refusal to cooperate, and refusal leads to denial.
If you missed a CE or SSA communication, document why. If there was a scheduling conflict, a transportation problem, or a medical reason you couldn’t attend, that needs to be part of your appeal record. SSA will often reschedule a CE if you contact them before the appointment. On appeal, you’ll need to address the missed contact directly and demonstrate your willingness to cooperate going forward. This is not a fatal denial, it’s a correctable one.
Reapplying with the same evidence after a denial produces the same result. SSA examiners see the identical record the previous examiner reviewed and reach the same conclusion. If you were denied before and filed a new application without adding new medical evidence (updated treatment records, a worsening condition, a new diagnosis, or a medical opinion you didn’t have before) SSA will deny again.
Sound familiar? Many claimants cycle through multiple denials this way, not realizing that the appeal process, not a new application, is the correct route after a denial. The Request for Reconsideration and then the ALJ hearing allow you to present new evidence and arguments to a decision-maker who reviews the full record. Hearings before Administrative Law Judges have a significantly higher approval rate than initial applications If you’ve been denied more than once, the appeal path is almost always the stronger option.
Georgia processes disability claims through the Georgia Disability Adjudication Services (DAS), a state agency that makes initial and reconsideration decisions on behalf of SSA. Georgia’s initial denial rate tracks close to the national average, but the specifics of how claims are handled vary at the local level.
For claimants in Marietta and Cobb County, ALJ hearings are typically held at the Atlanta Office of Hearing Operations at Suite 500, Marquis 1, 245 Peachtree Center Avenue, Atlanta, GA. Wait times from reconsideration denial to ALJ hearing can run 7 to 15 months or longer in Georgia, depending on case volume and current SSA backlogs. That timeline matters because it affects when you need to gather updated medical evidence, — records from three years ago carry less weight at a hearing than records from the past six months.
Here’s a Georgia-specific detail: our state agency is called DAS (Disability Adjudication Services), not DDS like most states. Georgia DAS orders consultative examinations often when existing medical records are thin, and nationally SSA orders a CE in roughly 20% to 30% of claims. A CE is not a substitute for your treating physician’s records: SSA gives more weight to longitudinal records from doctors who have treated you over time than to a one-time exam. If you receive notice of a CE, attend it, and work with your attorney to make sure your treating physician’s records are fully submitted first.
Keener Law’s practice focuses on Georgia claimants. Our team is familiar with the Atlanta OHO, Georgia DAS practices, and the procedural patterns that affect how claims move through the system here. That local experience informs how we build cases for clients in Marietta, Kennesaw, Smyrna, and throughout Cobb, Cherokee, and Fulton counties.
SSDI and SSI are both Social Security disability programs, but they have different eligibility rules, and different denial triggers. Many claimants don’t realize they may qualify for one but not the other, or that a denial for one program does not automatically mean a denial for both.
|
Denial Reason |
SSDI |
SSI |
|
Insufficient medical evidence |
Yes — applies to both |
Yes — applies to both |
|
Income above SGA limit |
Yes — earned income above SGA |
Yes — both earned and unearned income count |
|
Insufficient work credits |
Yes — required for SSDI eligibility |
No — SSI has no work history requirement |
|
Assets above limit |
No — SSDI has no asset test |
Yes — individual limit $2,000; couple limit $3,000 |
|
Date Last Insured passed |
Yes — must have been disabled before DLI |
No — SSI has no DLI requirement |
|
Condition not severe or lasting |
Yes — applies to both |
Yes — applies to both |
If you were denied SSDI because of insufficient work credits, SSI may still be an option, provided your income and assets fall within SSI’s limits. If you were denied SSI because of assets, SSDI may be available if your work history qualifies. A disability attorney can review both programs against your specific financial and medical situation and identify the stronger path. These are not either/or programs, some claimants qualify for both simultaneously. Learn more about Social Security disability rules for claimants over 50, where the medical-vocational grid rules can shift outcomes significantly.
A denial is not a final answer. Most denied claimants have the right to appeal, and the appeals process is where the majority of successful disability cases are ultimately won. Here is what to do after receiving a denial letter:
If you haven’t filed your appeal yet, start with the two most time-sensitive tasks: identify your deadline from the denial letter and contact a disability attorney before that window closes. Everything else can follow.
If you’re still in the application phase rather than appealing a denial, our guide on how to file for Social Security disability benefits in Georgia walks through the process from the beginning. For claimants who were denied and are considering reapplying rather than appealing, read our page on how to get approved for disability in Georgia for context on what approval actually requires.
Representation by a disability attorney does not just mean having someone to talk to, it means having someone who knows SSA’s five-step sequential evaluation process, understands what ALJs in the Atlanta Office of Hearing Operations look for, and knows how to build a medical record that holds up under cross-examination from a vocational expert.
Here’s what Keener Law’s team does for clients who come to us after a denial:
Our fee structure is contingency-based and regulated by SSA. You do not pay attorney fees unless we win your case. That means there is no financial barrier to getting experienced legal help at the point when it matters most — on appeal.
If your disability claim was denied, schedule a free consultation with Keener Law to review your denial and discuss your options. We serve Marietta, Kennesaw, Smyrna, Acworth, and clients throughout the greater Atlanta metro area.
Insufficient medical evidence is the most common reason SSA denies disability claims. SSA requires objective documentation, treatment records, imaging, specialist evaluations, that shows both the existence of your condition and its specific impact on what you can do. A diagnosis alone is not enough. If your records don’t show how your condition limits your ability to sit, stand, concentrate, or perform work tasks, SSA’s examiner will typically conclude that you can still work at some capacity and deny the claim.
There is no limit to how many times SSA can deny a disability claim. However, the appeal process has defined levels: initial denial, reconsideration, ALJ hearing, Appeals Council, and federal court. Most claimants who win their cases do so at the ALJ hearing level. Reapplying repeatedly without appealing resets your filing date and potentially reduces your back pay, the appeals path is almost always the stronger strategy after a denial.
Yes, you can reapply, but reapplying with the same evidence will produce the same denial. To succeed on a new application, you need new medical evidence, a worsened condition with updated documentation, or a change in circumstances that affects your eligibility (such as reaching a new age bracket under the medical-vocational grid). In most cases, appealing the original denial is more effective than starting over, because an appeal preserves your original filing date and any back pay tied to it.
The timeline varies by stage. Reconsideration decisions in Georgia typically take three to five months. If reconsideration is denied and you request an ALJ hearing, current wait times at the Atlanta Office of Hearing Operations run approximately 712 to 1518 months from the hearing request to the actual hearing date. The total time from initial application to ALJ decision can exceed two years in Georgia. This is why acting on deadlines, especially the 60-day window to appeal, matters so much.
You are not required to have a lawyer, but the data consistently shows that represented claimants have better outcomes at the ALJ hearing stage than unrepresented claimants. An attorney knows how to build a medical record, prepare you for hearing testimony, and challenge vocational expert testimony that SSA uses to argue you can perform other work. Because SSD attorneys work on contingency, and SSA caps the fee, there’s no upfront cost to getting legal help.
Reconsideration approvals are low, — historically around 10–15% nationally. ALJ hearing approval rates are significantly higher, typically in the range of 45–55%. The Appeals Council grants review in a small percentage of cases and rarely changes outcomes directly. Federal court is the final step and involves judicial review of the administrative record. Most claimants who ultimately win their cases do so at the ALJ hearing level, not at initial or reconsideration.
If your disability claim was denied in Georgia, the next step is understanding exactly why, and what your options are. Keener Law offers free consultations to review your denial letter, assess your case, and advise you on whether to appeal and how to build a stronger record.
Our team has worked with claimants throughout Marietta, Cobb County, and the greater Atlanta area. We know the Georgia DASDDS process, we’ve appeared before ALJs at the Atlanta Office of Hearing Operations, and we handle every case on contingency, which means no fee unless we win.
Call us at 770-955-3000 or use the form below to schedule your free consultation. If you were denied, the clock on your appeal is already running. Let’s talk before that deadline passes.
Disclaimer: This page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every disability case is different. For advice about your specific situation, contact a qualified Social Security Disability attorney or representative. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. [VERIFY: confirm this disclaimer satisfies Georgia State Bar advertising requirements]