Alaska
Alaska Social Security Disability: Rates & Wait Times

Social Security disability in Alaska runs on the same federal rules as every other state, but two things are local: Alaska adds a state supplement to federal SSI through its Adult Public Assistance (APA) program, and an SSI approval does not bring Medicaid automatically. Alaska is an SSI-criteria state, so Medicaid takes a separate application. The disability test, benefit formulas, and appeals levels are set by the Social Security Administration (SSA), not Juneau.
This guide is part of our Social Security Disability by State series.
What Social Security disability is (SSDI vs SSI)
Social Security runs two separate federal disability programs, and they operate the same way in Alaska as nationwide. SSDI pays workers who have enough recent work credits and have paid Social Security taxes; the monthly amount is based on your earnings record, not on financial need. SSI is a needs-based program for people who are disabled, blind, or aged with very limited income and resources, regardless of work history. SSA sets the disability definition, the dollar amounts, and the rules for both. For 2026 the federal SSI rate is $994 for an individual and $1,491 for a couple, reflecting a 2.8 percent cost-of-living adjustment (SSA, 2026 COLA fact sheet). Some applicants qualify for both at once, called a concurrent claim. Alaska does not change SSDI or SSI eligibility, but it does add a state supplement to SSI through Adult Public Assistance, covered below.
Who qualifies (the 5-step test and work credits)
The disability standard is federal and applies identically in every state. To be found disabled, you must have a medically determinable physical or mental impairment that prevents substantial gainful activity (SGA) and that has lasted, or is expected to last, at least 12 months or to result in death. SSA uses a five-step sequential evaluation: (1) are you working above SGA, (2) is your impairment severe, (3) does it meet or equal a Listing of Impairments (the "Blue Book"), (4) can you do your past work, and (5) can you adjust to other work given your age, education, and skills. For 2026 the SGA limit is $1,690 a month for non-blind individuals and $2,830 for blind individuals (SSA, 2026). SSDI also requires enough work credits, generally 40 credits with 20 earned in the last 10 years for older workers, and fewer for younger workers. None of these rules are different in Alaska.

Watch out: Earning above the SGA limit (in 2026, $1,690 a month for non-blind applicants) can defeat a claim before SSA ever reaches your medical evidence. SSA counts gross monthly earnings, not take-home pay.
Alaska disability approval rates
The percentage of claims approved at the first level is decided by the state Disability Determination Services (DDS) agency, and it varies by state. In Alaska, that agency is Disability Determination Services, operated within the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development under contract with SSA and funded with federal dollars. Nationwide, SSA's data shows the initial level is where most applicants are denied: across recent years only about 18 to 21 percent of all disabled-worker applicants were awarded benefits at the initial step, with more awards coming later at reconsideration and at the hearing level (SSA, Annual Statistical Report on the SSDI Program, 2024). Alaska is a small-population state, so SSA's per-state figures cover relatively few cases and can swing year to year; treat the national pattern as your baseline rather than reading a single year's rate as fixed. Either way, a first-level denial is common and is not the end of the process.
How long disability takes in Alaska
Processing has three main stages, and only the wait, not the rules, is local. The initial DDS decision generally takes several months while the agency gathers medical records and may schedule a consultative exam. If you are denied, reconsideration is the next step, another DDS review that usually adds a few months. The longest wait is the ALJ hearing. SSA's Anchorage hearing office serves the entire state, holding hearings for claimants in Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, and remote communities, often by video or phone to spare long-distance travel. According to SSA hearing data, the national average wait until a hearing is held has run around 8 months in recent reporting, with individual offices ranging higher or lower (SSA, Average Wait Time Until Hearing Held). Because a single office covers a very large geographic area, scheduling and travel logistics can lengthen the practical wait for some Alaska claimants.
SSI and the Alaska state supplement (APA)
Alaska is one of the states that pays a state supplement on top of federal SSI, and it does so through the Adult Public Assistance (APA) program run by the state, not by SSA. For a single adult who is aged, blind, or disabled and living independently, APA generally adds up to about $362 a month on top of the federal SSI benefit, so the combined total for an individual can reach roughly $1,356 a month in 2026 (federal SSI of $994 plus the APA supplement). The exact APA amount depends on your living arrangement and other countable income, and the state sets and administers it, which is why you deal with the Alaska Department of Health for APA rather than with SSA. SSDI, by contrast, is based on your earnings record and is unaffected by the state supplement question.

Here is how the two programs compare:
| Feature | SSDI | SSI (with Alaska APA) |
|---|---|---|
| Based on | Work credits and earnings record | Financial need (limited income and resources) |
| Funded by | Social Security payroll taxes | Federal SSI plus the state-run APA supplement |
| 2026 federal base | Varies by earnings record | $994 individual / $1,491 couple |
| Alaska add-on | None | APA, up to about $362/mo for a single adult living independently |
| Linked health coverage | Medicare after 24 months | Medicaid, but by separate application |
Medicaid after a disability approval in Alaska
Alaska is an SSI-criteria state, not a Section 1634 state. That distinction matters: in a 1634 state, an SSI approval enrolls you in Medicaid automatically, but in an SSI-criteria state like Alaska, Medicaid uses the same financial rules as SSI yet still requires a separate Medicaid application even after SSI is approved (SSA POMS SI 01715.020). So in Alaska an SSI or APA approval does not by itself put you on Medicaid; you (or your representative) must file with the state to get health coverage. The third model, Section 209(b), uses criteria stricter than SSI, and Alaska does not use that approach. SSDI recipients follow a different track entirely: SSDI generally leads to Medicare, but only after a 24-month waiting period from entitlement, which is a federal rule.
Watch out: Do not assume an SSI approval automatically gives you Medicaid in Alaska. Because Alaska is an SSI-criteria state, you must file a separate Medicaid application to get health coverage, so submit it promptly after your SSI or APA approval.
How to apply for disability in Alaska
You apply for SSDI and SSI through SSA, not a state office, because the disability decision is federal. There are three ways to file: online at the SSA website, by phone at 1-800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325-0778) to schedule an appointment, or in person at a local Social Security field office by appointment. After you file, SSA sends the medical portion of your claim to Alaska Disability Determination Services for the initial decision. For the state supplement and Medicaid, you deal with the Alaska Department of Health, which runs Adult Public Assistance and Medicaid. Separately, the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation within the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development helps people with disabilities prepare for, find, and keep employment; those services are independent of your SSA disability claim.
How to appeal a denial
The appeals process is federal and has the same four levels everywhere: reconsideration, an ALJ hearing, Appeals Council review, and finally a federal court lawsuit. After an initial denial you generally have 60 days to request reconsideration, and another 60 days to request a hearing if reconsideration is denied. The hearing stage is where Alaska's wait time matters most, because the Anchorage hearing office covers the whole state and can take many months to schedule a hearing. Many applicants denied at the initial and reconsideration levels are later approved at the hearing, which is why meeting each 60-day appeal deadline matters so much. SSA, not the state, decides each appeal.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the disability approval rate in Alaska?
The first-level decision is made by Alaska Disability Determination Services. Nationwide, SSA data shows only about 18 to 21 percent of disabled-worker applicants are awarded at the initial level, with more approvals later at reconsideration and at the hearing stage (SSA, 2024). Because Alaska has a small caseload, its per-state rate can swing year to year, so treat the national pattern as your baseline and expect that a first denial is common rather than final.
How long does it take to get disability in Alaska?
The initial decision usually takes several months, reconsideration adds a few more, and the ALJ hearing is the longest stage. SSA hearing data shows the national average wait until a hearing is held has run around 8 months recently. Alaska's Anchorage hearing office serves the whole state, often by video for Fairbanks, Juneau, and remote claimants.
Does Alaska have a state SSI supplement?
Yes. Alaska pays a state supplement on top of federal SSI through its Adult Public Assistance (APA) program, generally up to about $362 a month for a single adult living independently, so the combined total can reach roughly $1,356 a month in 2026. The state runs and administers APA, and the exact amount depends on your living arrangement and other income.
What is the difference between SSDI and SSI?
SSDI is based on your work credits and earnings record and is not need-based. SSI is need-based for people with limited income and resources. Both use the same federal disability test. In Alaska, SSI carries the APA state supplement, but Medicaid requires a separate application, while SSDI leads to Medicare after a 24-month federal waiting period.
Do I get Medicaid if I am approved for SSI in Alaska?
Not automatically. Alaska is an SSI-criteria state, not a Section 1634 state, so Medicaid uses the same financial rules as SSI but still requires a separate Medicaid application after your SSI approval (SSA POMS SI 01715.020). File with the Alaska Department of Health promptly so coverage is not delayed. SSDI recipients instead qualify for Medicare after a 24-month waiting period.
How do I apply for disability in Alaska?
Apply for SSDI and SSI through SSA online, by phone at 1-800-772-1213, or in person at a local Social Security office by appointment. SSA forwards the medical decision to Alaska Disability Determination Services. For the APA supplement and Medicaid, you apply through the Alaska Department of Health. The Division of Vocational Rehabilitation offers separate employment services.
Can I work while on disability?
Limited work is allowed, but earning above the federal substantial gainful activity limit can end SSDI eligibility. For 2026 the SGA limit is $1,690 a month for non-blind workers and $2,830 for blind workers (SSA, 2026). SSA also offers work-incentive programs that let some beneficiaries test working without immediately losing benefits.
What conditions automatically qualify for disability?
No condition is approved automatically by name. SSA maintains a Listing of Impairments (the Blue Book) of conditions that may qualify if your medical evidence meets the listing's specific criteria, and the Compassionate Allowances program fast-tracks certain severe conditions. You still must meet SSA's medical standard. These rules are federal and the same in Alaska.
Denied disability in Alaska? Get a free case review
Most disability claims are denied at first, and a representative sharply improves your odds on appeal, especially at the hearing. Get a free, no-obligation review from a Alaska disability attorney or advocate. Representatives are generally paid only if you win, out of your back pay and capped by federal law.
Sources and References
- SSA, 2026 Cost-of-Living Adjustment Fact Sheet (federal SSI rate, SGA limits, 2026)(ssa.gov).gov
- SSA, State Assistance Programs for SSI Recipients (Alaska state supplement via APA)(ssa.gov).gov
- SSA POMS SI 01715.020, List of State Medicaid Programs (Alaska SSI-criteria classification)(ssa.gov).gov
- SSA, Annual Statistical Report on the SSDI Program, 2024 (initial allowance rates by level)(ssa.gov).gov
- SSA, Average Wait Time Until Hearing Held Report (Anchorage hearing office serves Alaska)(ssa.gov).gov
- Alaska Department of Health, Adult Public Assistance (state SSI supplement and Medicaid)(health.alaska.gov).gov
- Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development, Disability Determination Services and Division of Vocational Rehabilitation(labor.alaska.gov).gov