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Denied for Diabetes? You're Not Alone — And It's Not Over.

Most diabetes disability claims are denied at the initial level. Here's why that happens and what you can do about it right now.

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We'll review your denial and tell you exactly what to do next.

0%+
of initial disability claims are denied

But with proper representation at the hearing level, approval rates improve significantly.

Why Diabetes Claims Get Denied

Understanding why your claim was denied is the first step to winning on appeal.

1

Insufficient Medical Evidence

The SSA didn't receive enough objective medical documentation — test results, specialist reports, treatment records — to verify the severity of your complications. This is the #1 reason diabetes claims are denied.

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2

Missing Specialist Records

You relied on primary care records without including documentation from your endocrinologist, neurologist, cardiologist, or other specialists who treat your specific complications. The SSA needs records from the doctors who know your condition best.

How to fix this →
3

Not Meeting a Specific Blue Book Listing

Your complications didn't match the exact medical criteria of a Blue Book listing. This doesn't mean you don't qualify — it means you need to pursue the RFC pathway, where most diabetes cases are ultimately won.

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4

Poor RFC Documentation

Your application didn't clearly demonstrate how your diabetes complications limit your ability to perform specific work activities. Saying "I have neuropathy" isn't enough — you need to show "I cannot stand for more than 15 minutes."

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5

Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) Issues

Your income at the time of application exceeded the SGA threshold ($1,620/month in 2026), or your work activity was interpreted as evidence that you can still work. Even part-time work can complicate a claim if not documented properly.

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The Appeals Process: What Happens Next

A denial is not the end — it's the beginning of the appeals process. Here's every stage and what to expect.

Initial Application

Where you are now if your first application was denied.

3–6 months

Reconsideration

A different examiner reviews your case with any new evidence you submit.

3–6 months
Best chance of approval

ALJ Hearing

You appear before an Administrative Law Judge. This is where most diabetes cases are won.

12–18 months

Appeals Council

Review of the ALJ decision if denied at the hearing level.

6–12 months

Federal Court

Final level of appeal. Rare but available if all other levels are exhausted.

Varies

Why the Hearing Level Changes Everything

The initial application and reconsideration are paper reviews — an examiner reads your file and makes a decision. The ALJ hearing is fundamentally different. Here's why it matters:

You Testify in Person

You can describe your daily life in your own words — how diabetes affects what you can and can't do. The judge sees and hears you, not just a file.

New Evidence Accepted

You can submit medical records, specialist evaluations, and test results that weren't in your original application. Updated evidence can completely change the outcome.

Vocational Expert Testifies

A vocational expert assesses whether any jobs exist that you could realistically perform given your specific limitations. Their testimony often supports the claimant.

You Have Representation

Your disability representative presents your case, cross-examines experts, and knows exactly what the judge needs to hear. This changes everything.

What to Do Right Now

If you've just been denied, here are the five most important steps — in order.

1

Don't Panic.

A denial is the start of the process for many people, not the end. The system is designed to deny many claims initially — especially for complex conditions like diabetes where complications span multiple body systems.

2

Note Your Appeal Deadline.

You have 60 days from the date on your denial letter to file an appeal. Circle this date. Set a reminder. Missing it can mean starting over from scratch and losing months of accumulated back pay.

3

Don't File a New Application.

Filing a new claim instead of appealing is one of the most expensive mistakes you can make. It resets your timeline and may cost you months or even years of back pay. Always appeal the existing denial.

4

Take Our Free Evaluation.

We'll review your specific situation and tell you exactly what likely went wrong and how to fix it. Our evaluation is designed to assess denied claims — we'll identify the strongest pathways forward.

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5

Start Gathering Additional Evidence.

New medical records, specialist evaluations, updated test results, a detailed physician statement — fresh evidence can transform a denied claim into an approved one. Don't wait for the appeal to be filed to start gathering evidence.

After Denial: Your Next Steps

A Guide for Denied Diabetes Disability Claimants

My Diabetes Benefits

Get Your Free After-Denial Guide

Step-by-step guidance for appealing a denied diabetes disability claim. What went wrong, what to do next, and how to build a case that wins.

  • Why diabetes claims get denied
  • The appeal process explained
  • Evidence strategies for a stronger case

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Don't Let a Denial Be the End of Your Story.

A diabetes disability specialist will review your denial and tell you exactly what to do next — which evidence to gather, which pathway to pursue, and how to build the case that wins.

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