Three groups of beneficiaries of the federal disability program known as SSDI are expecting their monthly payments this week and next, according to a schedule the Social Security Administration (SSA) has maintained unchanged for years, organizing deposits based on each recipient’s date of birth.
This is no small detail: millions of Americans who are unable to work due to severe medical conditions depend on this SSDI income to cover rent, medication, and food. And the gap between the payment date and their bills being due is often just hours.
Upcoming SSDI Benefits: March Dates to Come
Those born between the 11th and 20th of any month will receive their payment on Wednesday, March 18th. Those born between the 21st and 31st will receive theirs on Wednesday, March 25th. Both groups are among the largest in the system.
The group of those with birthdates from the 1st to the 10th of any month received their payment on Wednesday, March 11th. The deposits are made directly into bank accounts, although some account holders note that the funds may take up to two business days to arrive, depending on the financial institution.
Average Disability Benefits in March
The average monthly payment received by SSDI beneficiaries in 2026 is around $1,633, a figure that reflects the cost-of-living adjustment applied at the beginning of the year. This adjustment, known as COLA, was 2.8% for this cycle and was based on the inflation rate recorded during the reference period.
For those receiving this average, the money represents virtually their entire monthly income. There is no other employment, no second source of income: disability, by definition, prevents it.
But the average masks a considerable gap. The maximum possible payment within the program reaches $4,152 per month for workers who, during their working lives, reached the maximum contribution ceiling to the system.
Who Can Get the Top SSDI Benefit in 2026?
It’s a benefit few attain, and which depends directly on how much they earned and contributed before their medical condition interrupted their working life. At the opposite end of the spectrum, there are beneficiaries who receive amounts significantly below the average, especially those with short or low-income work histories.
For beneficiaries who also have a spouse and dependent children, the system provides family payments averaging $2,937 per month. This figure recognizes the additional burden of supporting a household when the sole income comes from a federal disability program.
There’s a line SSDI recipients can’t cross without consequences. It’s called substantial work activity, and in 2026, the Social Security Administration set the limit at $1,690 per month. Anyone exceeding that income threshold could lose their benefits. It’s a boundary that creates constant tension for those trying to partially re-enter the workforce: any well-paying job could cost them their entire benefit.
People Who Are Eligible for SSDI
The program is not designed for those experiencing temporary hardship. SSDI covers only individuals with medical conditions that federal criteria define as severe and projected to last at least twelve months or that could result in the beneficiary’s passing away.
The qualification process is lengthy, documented, and frequently contested. Many applicants wait years before receiving approval. Within the same universe of federal support programs, there is also SSI, which is based not on employment history but on the applicant’s income and assets.
In 2026, this program pays a maximum of $994 per month for individuals and $1,491 for qualifying couples. This is a minimum that the federal government considers essential to cover basic needs, although disability advocacy organizations have pointed out for years that these figures fall far short of the actual cost of living in most cities across the country.
