You attended a hearing on your Social Security disability claim. A
few weeks later, you receive a Notice of Decision in the mail that says
you have received a Partially Favorable decision. Does this mean that
you are only partially disabled, not fully disabled?
ANSWER:
No. Social Security does not make awards for partial disability. You
are either disabled or not disabled. There is no such category as
"partially disabled" within Social Security law.
A
"partially favorable" decision means that the administrative law judge
has found you to be disabled. However, he or she has changed some
material fact in your application. Most often, this change involves the
established onset date--the date you were found to have become
disabled. For example, in your application you may have alleged that
you became disabled on June 1, 2012. After reviewing the facts of the
case, the judge may have decided that you did not become disabled until
September 1, 2012. Therefore, he will amended the onset date to
September 1, a material change in the application.
This
change will affect the amount of your back pay. In short, you will not
be paid for the months June - August, 2012, a loss of 3 months of
benefits.The amount of your monthly benefit will not be affected. You
are still considered disabled, but for not as long a period as you
originally claimed. Since you lost part of your period of disability,
thus part of your back pay, the decision is partially favorable. In
other words, it is not as favorable to you as it would have been if the
judge had found that you became disabled in June instead of September.
I
often encounter well meaning public officials who believe that a
"partially favorable" decision means that the claimant is only
"partially disabled." This is not the case because, as I have said,
Social Security never makes any award for a "partial disability." You
are either disabled or you are not disabled - nothing in between. The
date on which you became disabled is an example of why a decision might
be "partially favorable.:"
The confusion is complicated by the fact that some agencies, such as the Veterans Administration, do make
partial disability awards. A VA claim decision may find that a veteran
is 50 percent disabled, or 80 percent disabled, for example. However,
Social Security will never make such an award. With Social Security, it
is all or none.
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