If you've been told your hearing loss is severe or profound, you may already know that daily life looks different: strained conversations, missed alarms, the exhausting work of lip-reading through every interaction. What you might not know is that the Social Security Administration (SSA) recognizes severe hearing loss as a potentially disabling condition and that two federal programs exist to provide monthly payments to people whose hearing loss meets specific medical criteria. Understanding which one you might qualify for is the first practical step toward getting support.
The two programs are Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). They share the same disability definition but differ significantly in how you qualify financially. Knowing that distinction upfront saves you time and shapes which application you pursue.
How the SSA Evaluates Hearing Loss as a Disability
The SSA uses a document called the Blue Book to assess whether a medical condition is severe enough to qualify someone for disability benefits. Hearing loss falls under Section 2.00 of that document, which covers special senses and speech. The two specific listings you'll encounter are 2.10, for hearing loss without a cochlear implant, and 2.11, for hearing loss that has been treated with one.
Under Listing 2.10, you qualify if your better ear shows an average air conduction hearing threshold of 90 decibels (dB) or greater, along with a bone conduction threshold of 60 dB or greater, or if your word recognition score in the better ear is 40% or lower. That's a high bar. It describes profound deafness, the kind where even a lawnmower or a vacuum cleaner is inaudible without amplification. The SSA won't accept your self-reported experience alone; it requires documented audiometric testing, typically a pure-tone audiogram and a speech discrimination test administered by a licensed audiologist. You can learn more about what qualifies at the level of severity on hearing loss classified as a disability.
For people who have received a cochlear implant, Listing 2.11 applies. The SSA automatically considers you disabled for one year after the implant surgery. After that first year, you remain eligible if your score on the Hearing in Noise Test (HINT) is 60% or lower. If your hearing loss is significant but doesn't reach these thresholds, that doesn't necessarily mean you're disqualified. The SSA can still evaluate your case through what's called a Residual Functional Capacity (RFC) assessment, which looks at how your hearing loss limits specific work tasks such as following verbal instructions, using a telephone, or working in environments that require clear communication.
SSDI and SSI: Which Program Fits Your Situation
Once the SSA determines your hearing loss is severe enough to qualify, the next question is which program to apply for. The core differences between SSI and SSDI come down to how you've worked and what you currently own. SSDI is an insurance program funded through payroll taxes. To qualify, you typically need to have worked at least five of the last ten years and earned enough Social Security credits through that work. In 2026, you earn one credit for every $1,890 in covered wages, with a maximum of four credits per year. Your monthly benefit under SSDI is based on your lifetime earnings record, so people who worked longer at higher wages generally receive more.
SSI works differently. It doesn't require any work history. Instead, it's a needs-based program for people with limited income and limited assets. In 2026, the federal benefit rate is $994 per month for an individual and $1,491 for a couple. To receive SSI, your countable resources (cash, bank accounts, stocks, and similar assets) can't exceed $2,000 if you're single or $3,000 if you're married. Your home and one vehicle are typically excluded from that count. SSI also connects you directly to Medicaid in most states, which matters if you need coverage for ongoing medical care or hearing-related treatment.
Some people qualify for both programs at once, a situation the SSA calls concurrent benefits. This happens when your SSDI payment is low enough that you still fall within SSI's financial limits. If that describes you, applying for both simultaneously means you don't leave money on the table.
What Medical Documentation You Need
The quality of your medical records is often what separates an approved application from a denied one. The SSA requires an otologic examination, which is a physical evaluation of your ears conducted by a physician, as well as audiometric testing that meets its specific standards. Results must come from a licensed audiologist using calibrated equipment, and the testing environment must meet SSA acoustic requirements.
The tests themselves include pure-tone air and bone conduction audiometry and word recognition testing. If standard audiometry isn't reliable for a given applicant, the SSA may order auditory brainstem response (ABR) testing, which measures how the auditory nerve responds to sound and doesn't require active participation from the person being tested. Your audiologist's clinical notes should document the testing conditions and explain how the results reflect your real-world hearing limits.
Gather records from every provider who has treated your hearing condition, including diagnosis notes, imaging, if applicable, and any records of surgical procedures. The SSA also wants a complete list of the medications you're taking and a work history that explains what job tasks your hearing loss prevents you from performing. If you've been wearing hearing aids, note that the SSA evaluates your hearing without amplification when applying the Blue Book thresholds.
How to Apply and What to Expect
You can apply for both SSDI and SSI online through the Social Security Administration's website, by phone, or in person at a local SSA office. If you're applying for SSI specifically, the process includes an in-person interview where a representative reviews your financial situation in detail, so come prepared with bank account information, property records, and documentation of any income you receive.
Most initial decisions take three to six months. A significant percentage of first applications are denied, including many that are ultimately approved on appeal, so a denial isn't the end of the road. You have the right to request reconsideration and, if needed, a hearing before an administrative law judge. Approval rates at the hearing stage are substantially higher than at the initial review level, which is why many applicants with strong medical documentation eventually succeed even after an early denial.
Throughout the process, the condition you're claiming must have lasted or be expected to last at least 12 months. For most people with profound or severe-to-profound sensorineural hearing loss, this threshold isn't the obstacle; the medical documentation and financial eligibility requirements tend to be the areas that determine outcomes.
Healthcare Coverage That Comes With Each Program
The program you qualify for also determines what healthcare coverage you receive. SSDI connects to Medicare, but there's a 24-month waiting period after your benefits begin before coverage kicks in. SSI, by contrast, typically connects you to Medicaid immediately upon approval in most states. For people who need regular audiology appointments, prescription medications, or specialist visits, that timeline difference is significant. It's one reason that applicants who qualify for SSI, even as a secondary benefit alongside SSDI, often benefit from applying for both. Medicare coverage for hearing tests is more limited than many people expect, which makes understanding your broader coverage options that much more important.
Taking the First Step Toward Benefits
Severe and profound hearing loss is one of the conditions the SSA's disability framework was designed to address. The criteria are strict, the documentation requirements are real, and the process takes time, but people do qualify and receive monthly support as a result. If you've had a recent audiogram showing significant threshold elevation, or if your word recognition scores have dropped to the point where speech is difficult to understand even in quiet settings, it's worth understanding whether you meet the Blue Book criteria before deciding not to apply.
Start by gathering your audiometric records and scheduling a consultation with your audiologist to discuss how your results compare to the SSA thresholds. From there, reviewing the eligibility rules for both SSDI and SSI side by side will tell you which path makes sense for your work history and financial situation. Filing for both simultaneously, if you may qualify for each, is a legitimate and commonly recommended approach.