Parent Focus: Four Ways Benefits Support Work
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The Basics
Your child can work, even if he or she has a disability and gets benefits from the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) or Supplemental Security Income (SSI). In fact, AHCCCS and SSI are designed so that people who work end up better off.
With a job, your child can:
- Keep AHCCCS health coverage even while making as much as $79,270 per year
- Have more total income and keep getting SSI
- Save up some money and keep getting SSI
- Get back on SSI if it stops and is needed later
You can help your son or daughter plan for work. Get started by understanding these four ways benefits programs and a job can work together.
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Benefits for Young People
Find out how benefits support young people who work.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
SSI helps people with disabilities and seniors who have low income and resources.
AHCCCS for People with Disabilities
There are more ways to qualify for AHCCCS if you have a disability.
Parent Focus: Four Ways Benefits Support Work
- The Basics
- 1) AHCCCS Covers People With Disabilities Who Work
- 2) A Job + SSI = More Money
- 3) Your Child Can Save More
- 4) Your Child Will Stay Connected to SSI
- Next Steps
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AHCCCS Covers People With Disabilities Who Work
These rules mean your child can keep AHCCCS even while making a lot of money at work:
- If your child gets SSI benefits while working, AHCCCS will continue automatically.
- If your child used to get SSI benefits, but now makes enough money that SSI benefits ended, SSI's 1619(b) rule means AHCCCS will continue automatically even if your child makes up to $56,455 per year.
- AHCCCS Freedom to Work lets your child pay a small monthly premium ($35 or less) to get AHCCCS coverage if your child makes $79,270 per year or less.
- If your child's income is even higher than that, he or she can get private health coverage through work or on HealthCare.gov. Private insurance companies cannot deny coverage to your child.
Your child can get health coverage after getting a job.
Learn more about AHCCCS Freedom to Work and SSI 1619(b).
Learn more
Benefits for Young People
Find out how benefits support young people who work.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
SSI helps people with disabilities and seniors who have low income and resources.
AHCCCS for People with Disabilities
There are more ways to qualify for AHCCCS if you have a disability.
Parent Focus: Four Ways Benefits Support Work
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A Job + SSI = More Money
Getting a job doesn’t mean your child will stop getting Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits. SSI makes sure your child will be better off when working.
SSI Rules that Help Young People who Get Jobs
SSI is based on financial need. That’s why people worry that if they get jobs, they’ll lose their SSI benefits. These rules show why you don’t need to worry:
- The Student Earned Income Exclusion (SEIE) means that if your child gets a job while in school, his or her SSI benefit probably won’t go down. That means your child will get money from work and SSI at the same time.
- With the SEIE, anyone under 22 and regularly attending school can make up to $2,350 per month up to a total of $9,460 in a year, without having that money reduce their SSI benefits at all!
- If your child doesn’t qualify for the SEIE, working is still a good idea, because SSI counts less than half of what a person earns at a job when calculating his or her benefit.
If your child is in school and under 22, the SEIE means he or she can work and keep getting as much SSI as ever. For every additional dollar your child earns that is not excluded by the SEIE, your child’s SSI benefits amount will only go down by 50 cents. No matter what, SSI's rules mean that your child will have more money overall while working.
Learn more
Benefits for Young People
Find out how benefits support young people who work.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
SSI helps people with disabilities and seniors who have low income and resources.
AHCCCS for People with Disabilities
There are more ways to qualify for AHCCCS if you have a disability.
Parent Focus: Four Ways Benefits Support Work
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Your Child Can Save More
As your child makes more money, he or she can start saving for bigger goals, like college, a car, or someday buying a home. Building assets will be a key to comfort and security for your child’s entire life.
SSI Rules Help People who Work and Save
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) has a $2,000 resource limit. However, your child can save way more money than these limits if he or she gets a job, because:
- Not all resources are counted, so your child can own a car or get certain types of financial aid for school that won’t be counted against the resource limit.
- ABLE accounts let you and your child put money into a special account where the first $100,000 will not count against the resource limit.
- Savings in a Plan to Achieve Self-Support (PASS) or Individual Development Account (IDA) are not counted. These special types of accounts let your child save for specific expenses, like school tuition.
- Assets in certain types of trusts do not count.
Saving money for the future is important. Talk to a Work Incentive Consultant to figure out which asset-building strategies will let your child keep getting SSI.
AHCCCS does not have a resource limit, so how much your child has in resources does not affect health coverage.
Learn more
Benefits for Young People
Find out how benefits support young people who work.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
SSI helps people with disabilities and seniors who have low income and resources.
AHCCCS for People with Disabilities
There are more ways to qualify for AHCCCS if you have a disability.
Parent Focus: Four Ways Benefits Support Work
- The Basics
- 1) AHCCCS Covers People With Disabilities Who Work
- 2) A Job + SSI = More Money
- 3) Your Child Can Save More
- 4) Your Child Will Stay Connected to SSI
- Next Steps
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Your Child Will Stay Connected to SSI
The more your child works, the more money your child can make. If he or she makes enough, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits may stop, but overall your child will be much better off!
SSI Has a Safety Net for People who Lose Benefits and Need Them Later
Even if your child makes a lot more money than he or she ever got from SSI, you will probably worry about what would happen if the job ended. Would your child be able to get back on SSI if needed?
Yes.
SSI’s 1619(b) rule helps people who stop getting SSI get back on it easily. If a job ends or earnings go down, your child can just report the change to Social Security and SSI benefits will start up again. He or she will not even have to reapply.
1619(b) is for people earning less than $56,455 in a year. If your child earns more than that, other rules can help your child start getting SSI benefits again if they are needed.
If your child stops getting SSI benefits due to work income and then that income goes down, he or she can get back on SSI.
Learn more
Benefits for Young People
Find out how benefits support young people who work.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
SSI helps people with disabilities and seniors who have low income and resources.
AHCCCS for People with Disabilities
There are more ways to qualify for AHCCCS if you have a disability.
Parent Focus: Four Ways Benefits Support Work
Try It
Next Steps
Learn More on DB101
Use DB101’s School and Work Estimator to get a sense of how work could impact your child’s benefits.
For more about these and other ways benefits support work, read DB101’s articles about:
- Parent Focus: Turning 18, which looks at how your child's benefits might change at age 18.
- Benefits for Young People, including details about many different benefits and how rules change as your child gets older.
- Supplemental Security Income, which covers SSI’s rules in detail.
- Income-based AHCCCS, which covers people with and without disabilities.
- Disability-based AHCCCS, another way people with disabilities may qualify for AHCCCS coverage.
- Building Your Assets and Wealth, an introduction to asset-building strategies.
- Plans to Achieve Self-Support, an in-depth look at the ways a PASS can help.
- Individual Development Accounts, a detailed look at IDAs and how to set them up.
Benefits and Work Incentives Consulting Services
If you're currently on SSI, SSDI, or CDB benefits, and you're looking for a job, you should qualify for free benefits consulting services. Trained Work Incentive Counsultants at Benefits 2 Work Arizona can help you understand Social Security work incentives, disability benefit programs, and how they are impacted by work. Their goal is to help you avoid complications while developing a sustainable financial plan for your future.
You can contact Benefits 2 Work Arizona at 1-866-304-WORK (9675) toll-free to find a Work Incentive Consultant serving your community.
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Benefits for Young People
Find out how benefits support young people who work.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
SSI helps people with disabilities and seniors who have low income and resources.
AHCCCS for People with Disabilities
There are more ways to qualify for AHCCCS if you have a disability.