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✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦

SSDI and Workers' Comp in California: Can You Get Both?

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By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231

Can I get workers' comp and SSDI at the same time in California?

Yes. Both can pay at the same time. Social Security reduces your SSDI so the combined total stays at or below 80% of your pre-injury monthly earnings.

A serious work injury can end your income fast. You may qualify for California workers' comp. You may also qualify for federal Social Security Disability Insurance. The good news: both programs can pay you at the same time.

There is a trade-off. Social Security adds your workers' comp income to your SSDI. If both together push above 80% of what you earned before your injury, Social Security cuts your SSDI check. It does not cut your workers' comp.

How your case settles matters a great deal. A settlement with the right language can protect your SSDI for years. This page explains the offset math, the settlement strategy, and how SSDI differs from California's own state disability program.

How does the Social Security 80% offset rule work?

Social Security combines your monthly workers' comp with your SSDI benefit. If the total tops 80% of your average pre-injury earnings, Social Security trims SSDI to bring both under that cap.

Social Security uses something called your "average current earnings." This is usually your best earning year in the five years before your disability began. Social Security sets a ceiling at 80% of that number.

If SSDI plus workers' comp together go above that ceiling, Social Security reduces your SSDI. It does not touch your workers' comp. Here is a simple example:

ItemMonthly Amount
Pre-injury monthly earnings$5,000
80% ceiling$4,000
Workers' comp (TD) monthly$2,500
Your full SSDI benefit$2,000
Combined before the offset$4,500
Amount over the ceiling$500
SSDI after SSA reduces it$1,500
Total you actually receive$4,000

Social Security recalculates this every month. When your workers' comp payments stop, your full SSDI resumes. Always report any change in your workers' comp income to Social Security right away.

California temporary disability pays two-thirds of your average weekly wage. In 2026, the minimum is $264.61 per week and the maximum is $1,764.11 per week. Under Labor Code 4656, temporary disability can last up to 104 weeks within five years of your injury. Those weekly payments count as income in the offset calculation.

The offset applies to temporary disability payments, permanent disability payments, and any lump-sum settlement. The type of payment matters less than the monthly amount Social Security counts. A large lump sum can do the most damage without the right settlement language.

Can a workers' comp settlement protect my SSDI from the offset?

Yes. A settlement that spreads the lump sum over your life expectancy lowers the monthly income Social Security counts. That smaller number means a smaller offset and more SSDI protected.

When you settle your workers' comp case, you typically get one check. Without protection, Social Security may treat the entire amount as income in the month it arrives. This can wipe out your SSDI for months or even years.

A "spread-out" clause prevents this. The settlement agreement states that the lump sum covers payments spread across your remaining life expectancy. Social Security then divides the total by the months in that life expectancy. The result is a small monthly income figure. A smaller monthly figure means a smaller offset.

Here is how the same $120,000 settlement looks with and without a spread-out clause:

ScenarioMonthly income SSA countsEffect on SSDI
No spread-out clauseFull $120,000 in one monthSSDI suspended for many months
Spread-out clause (240-month life expectancy)$500 per monthMinimal offset, SSDI largely protected

This clause must be worded precisely. Social Security is strict. Vague or missing language may not be honored. Your attorney must include this wording before the workers' comp judge signs the settlement.

Settling also ends your employer's obligation to pay future medical costs. Under Labor Code 4600, your employer must cover 100% of injury-related treatment with no copay while your case remains open. Settlement ends that coverage. Think carefully before closing your case without understanding what you give up on the medical side.

What is the difference between SSDI and California SDI?

SSDI is a long-term federal program tied to Social Security work history. California SDI is a state short-term program funded by paycheck deductions, lasting up to 52 weeks.

Many injured workers confuse these two programs. They are entirely separate, with different rules, funding sources, and timelines.

FeatureSSDI (federal)California SDI (state)
Run bySocial Security AdministrationEDD (Employment Development Dept.)
Funded byFICA Social Security payroll taxesCalifornia CASDI paycheck deductions
DurationOngoing until recovery or age 65Up to 52 weeks
Qualifying conditionTotal disability lasting 12 or more monthsAny disability, work or non-work related
Federal 80% offset appliesYesNo

California SDI does not trigger the federal 80% offset. However, workers' comp and SDI generally cannot pay for the same period at the same time. SDI is most useful during the waiting period before workers' comp starts, or for conditions not caused by work.

SSDI requires proof that you cannot do any substantial paid work. The condition must be expected to last at least 12 months or result in death. That bar is much higher than California workers' comp. Workers' comp only requires that a work injury caused your condition.

Many seriously injured workers qualify for both. If your injury leaves you permanently unable to return to your occupation, consider applying for SSDI while your workers' comp case is still open. The two application processes are independent. Filing for SSDI does not harm your workers' comp claim.

What is a Medicare set-aside and does my settlement need one?

A Medicare set-aside reserves a portion of your settlement for future injury-related medical costs. It protects Medicare's interest so Medicare keeps paying after your workers' comp case closes.

If you are on Medicare now, or expect to be within 30 months of your settlement, federal rules expect you to protect Medicare's interests. Ignoring this step can mean Medicare refuses to pay future bills tied to your injury.

A Medicare set-aside (MSA) is a separate account funded from your settlement. You use those funds first for any injury-related medical care after settlement. Once the MSA is spent correctly, Medicare resumes as your primary payer. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has review thresholds. CMS review is generally triggered when your settlement exceeds $25,000 and you are already on Medicare, or exceeds $250,000 when Medicare enrollment is expected within 30 months.

Getting the MSA amount right matters. Too low, and you may be personally on the hook for future medical bills. Too high, and you reduce your net settlement without reason. An attorney working with an MSA specialist finds the right balance.

While your case is open, Labor Code 4600 guarantees full medical coverage at no cost to you. Settlement ends that coverage. Do not sign a settlement without understanding what you are giving up on the medical side and whether an MSA is needed to fill the gap.

Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780

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If you were hurt at work anywhere in Los Angeles County, Ventura County, San Bernardino County, Riverside County, or the Antelope Valley, figuring out how workers' comp and SSDI interact is not simple. The wrong settlement decision can cost you years of SSDI income.

Yazdchi Law represents injured workers across the Antelope Valley, San Fernando Valley, and Greater Los Angeles. The firm makes WCAB appearances at Van Nuys, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Pomona, San Bernardino, Riverside, and Oxnard.

Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in workers' compensation law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. That specialization means deep experience with cases where workers' comp intersects with federal SSDI and Medicare set-aside requirements.

A spread-out clause, an MSA, or the timing of your settlement can each affect your SSDI for years. These are not details to leave to chance. The right attorney gets all of them right before the judge signs off.

Call (661) 273-1780 for a free consultation. There is no fee unless you win. Eman Yazdchi will walk you through exactly how your SSDI and workers' comp benefits interact and how to structure your settlement to protect both.

Related questions

Keep reading to understand your California workers' comp benefits, your medical rights, and your next step after an injury.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will receiving workers' comp lower my Social Security disability check?

Yes, in most cases. The Social Security Administration adds your monthly workers' comp income to your SSDI benefit. If the combined total tops 80% of your average pre-injury earnings, Social Security reduces your SSDI to bring both under that ceiling. The offset disappears when your workers' comp payments stop, and your full SSDI resumes automatically.

Does a lump-sum workers' comp settlement affect my SSDI payments?

It can hurt badly without the right settlement language. Social Security may treat the entire lump sum as income in the month you receive it, suspending your SSDI for a long time. A properly worded spread-out clause tells Social Security to treat the settlement as spread across your life expectancy. This keeps the monthly income figure small and protects most of your SSDI check.

What is the difference between SSDI and California SDI?

SSDI is a long-term federal program run by Social Security and funded by FICA payroll taxes. California SDI is a state short-term program run by the EDD, funded by California paycheck deductions, and capped at 52 weeks of benefits. The federal 80% offset rule applies to SSDI when you also receive workers' comp. It does not apply to California SDI.

Can I collect California SDI and workers' comp at the same time?

Generally no, not for the same period of disability. If you are receiving workers' comp temporary disability, you typically cannot collect California SDI for those same weeks. SDI is most helpful during the waiting period before workers' comp starts, or for conditions that are not related to a work injury. Talk to your attorney about how to sequence these benefits.

Do I need a Medicare set-aside in my workers' comp settlement?

You likely need one if you are on Medicare now or expect to be within 30 months of your settlement. A Medicare set-aside reserves funds from your settlement to cover future injury-related medical costs before Medicare pays. Without a proper set-aside, Medicare may refuse to pay those future bills. An attorney working with an MSA specialist can calculate the right amount for your situation.

When should I report my workers' comp case to Social Security?

Right away. You are required to report any workers' comp income to Social Security. Failing to do so can result in an overpayment that Social Security demands back, sometimes with interest and penalties. Before your settlement is finalized, notify Social Security of the amount and terms. Proper reporting avoids a surprise debt after your case closes and protects your benefits going forward.

Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.

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