POMS Reference

DI 10105: Disability Insurance Benefits (DIB) and Freeze

BASIC (06-06)

A. Purpose of a disability freeze

The following describe the purpose of a Disability Freeze:

  • To eliminate the years of low earnings (due to a worker’s disability) from the computation of benefits and to preserve the worker’s insured status. A period of disability for a worker is therefore often referred to as a “disability freeze.”

  • Insured status is frozen to protect future rights and benefits.

  • When an onset is established several years in the past, it is the DIB freeze that preserves insured status and allows payment to start based on a recent claim.

  • Any year wholly or partially in a period of DIB is excluded from the computation (not counted among elapsed years). This preserves a benefit based on earnings at the time disability began.

  • See DI 10105.000, Disability Insurance Benefits (DIB) and Freeze.

  • See DI 26001.005 for Title II Disability Freeze provisions and exceptions.

B. Eligibility requirements for monthly DIB or freeze

To be entitled to monthly cash DIB or to the disability “freeze” (i.e., a period of disability), a disabled worker (i.e., number holder) must meet the following requirements:

  1. The worker must have disability insured status:

  2. The individual must file an application with the Social Security Administration. Cash benefits can be retroactive for no more than 12 months before the month the application is filed and cannot be paid under the law as amended in 1965 for months prior to September 1965.

  3. The individual must be disabled and furnish such proof of the existence of disability as may be required.

  4. For initial entitlement to DIB the number holder (NH) must serve a waiting period consisting of 5 full calendar months (DI 10105.070). Subsequent periods of entitlement may be exempt from this requirement (DI 10105.075).

C. Eligibility to freeze but not cash benefits

Certain persons may be eligible for the freeze but not for cash disability benefits.

They include:

  • Statutorily blind persons able to engage in substantial gainful activity, except those who come under an occupational disability and are not working.

  • Persons whose eligibility for a period of disability is based upon railroad earnings or military service not creditable for Social Security benefit purposes.