Social Security Announces Big Change Impacting Millions
The Social Security Administration announced a major operational shift on Thursday that will fundamentally change how disability benefit reviews are handled nationwide.
The agency said this move will improve accountability and speed up decisions for millions of Americans receiving or applying for benefits.
“By centralizing medical continuing disability reviews under Social Security, we are taking another important step towards operational excellence, reducing improper payments, and providing best-in-class service to Americans in critical need of support,” SSA Commissioner Frank J. Bisignano said in a statement.
Why It Matters
This change affects millions of Americans who receive or apply for Social Security disability benefits because Continuing Disability Reviews (CDRs) are required to determine whether someone remains eligible for payments.
For beneficiaries, the shift could mean more consistent decision‑making and clearer accountability, since all medical reviews will now be overseen directly by SSA rather than split between federal and state agencies.
What To Know
Under the change, SSA will bring medical CDRs fully in‑house, ending the long‑standing practice of having state Disability Determination Services (DDS) process those reviews on the agency’s behalf. Instead, all medical CDRs will now be handled by SSA’s federal Disability Case Review (DCR) operation.
Medical CDRs are periodic reviews required by law to determine whether individuals receiving Social Security disability benefits remain eligible. While non‑medical reviews have already been handled by SSA, medical CDRs were previously conducted by state DDS offices.
By centralizing those reviews, SSA said it will assume “complete ownership and accountability” for all CDRs, placing them under direct federal oversight.
“With complete ownership and accountability of CDRs and the proven track record of our DCR, our state disability determination service partners will be able to focus on the adjudication of initial disability claims and reconsideration cases, provide eligible individuals with expedited access to benefits, and further reduce initial disability claims backlogs, which are already reaching historic lows,” Bisignano said.
The agency said the shift is also intended to ease pressure on state DDS offices, allowing them to focus more heavily on processing initial disability claims and reconsideration cases, which often involve lengthy wait times.
According to SSA, the backlog of initial disability claims reached an all‑time high of more than 1.26 million pending cases in June 2024. As of February, that backlog had been reduced to 831,000 claims, a decline of more than 33 percent.
“SSA is moving away from locally managed field offices toward a centralized national workload model,” Michael Ryan, a finance expert and the founder of MichaelRyanMoney.com, told Newsweek. “Cases and appointments get routed broadly instead of being handled mainly by your local office. In theory, this should even out workloads, reduce bottlenecks, and create more appointment slots.”
What People Are Saying
Kevin Thompson, the CEO of 9i Capital Group and the host of the 9innings podcast, told Newsweek: “The underlying problem hasn’t changed. Much of the backlog was created by staff attrition, and with additional DOGE cuts and reductions in force, the system remains stretched. For beneficiaries, that likely means more initial denials and a longer fight to receive benefits, even as the agency reports improved efficiency.”
Alex Beene, a financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek: “For beneficiaries, the biggest impact is mostly behind the scenes. Disability reviews will still happen, but SSA says state offices should now have more room to speed up initial claims and reconsideration cases for people waiting on decisions. The key thing to know is that this does not end eligibility reviews, so people receiving benefits should still respond quickly to SSA notices and keep their medical and contact information current.”
Finance expert Michael Ryan told Newsweek: “Your payment amount is not changing. But the way you get help is. More people pushed toward appointments instead of walk-ins. Cases routed to staff outside your local office. Longer wait times while the transition settles in.”
What Happens Next
SSA said its Disability Case Review operation will now handle medical CDRs for the entire country, while maintaining partnerships with state agencies to ensure smoother processing of disability claims overall.
But Ryan warned that friction could exist during the transition.
“When an understaffed agency centralizes service, the long-term goal may be efficiency,” Ryan said. “In the short term, a lot of people just experience it as confusion.”
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