The Social Security Administration (SSA) added thirteen new serious medical conditions to its Compassionate Allowances (CAL) program on August 11, 2025. This update brings the total number of conditions that qualify for an expedited disability benefit claim review process to 300.
The fundamental objective of the CAL program is to quickly identify claims where the medical disability is so severe and evident that it unequivocally meets Social Security’s legal standards, allowing for an expedited decision and avoiding the lengthy delays of the standard process.
The expansion of Social Security’s CAL program
The SSA’s standard process for conducting a disability evaluation includes a series of mandatory steps: first, a work history check; then, a medical evaluation by a state agency (known as Disability Determination Services or DDS); and finally, the approval or denial decision by a local SSA office.
These stages often cause significant delays and can negatively impact the beneficiary’s quality of life while waiting for approval. By fiscal year 2025, average wait times for an initial decision exceeded 230 days, or more than seven months.
The CAL program seeks to drastically reduce this timeframe for the most critical cases. Since its inception, this initiative has benefited more than 1.1 million people.
The inclusion of these thirteen conditions is a new effort by the Social Security to encompass rare, complex, or particularly devastating diseases that, by their nature, meet disability criteria from the moment of diagnosis.
The essential criteria for inclusion on the CAL list require that the condition impedes substantial gainful activity (SGA), has a projected duration of at least 12 months, or is terminal. The efficiency of the CAL process is enhanced by the use of electronic health records (Health IT), which streamlines the review of clinical documentation.
The 13 new conditions accepted by the SSA in the CAL program
- Au-Kline Syndrome: Genetic disorder with developmental delay, intellectual disability, and distinctive facial features.
- Bilateral Anophthalmia: Congenital absence of both eyes, frequently associated with other malformations.
- Carey-Fineman-Ziter Syndrome: A rare muscle disorder with facial paralysis, weakness, and craniofacial malformations.
- Harlequin Ichthyosis (infantile): A serious skin disease that forms thick, rigid patches at birth.
- Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation: A stem cell transplant procedure for serious blood or immune system disorders.
- LMNA-related Congenital Muscular Dystrophy: Genetic muscular dystrophy with severe weakness since childhood.
- Progressive Muscular Atrophy: Neuromuscular disease that causes progressive loss of strength and muscle mass.
- Pulmonary Amyloidosis – AL Type: Abnormal accumulation of proteins in the lungs that compromises respiratory function.
- Rasmussen Encephalitis: Chronic inflammation of one hemisphere of the brain with severe seizures.
- Thymic Carcinoma: Aggressive cancer that originates in the thymus gland.
- Turnpenny-Fry Syndrome: A genetic disorder with growth retardation, intellectual disability, and characteristic facial features.
- WHO Grade III Meningiomas: Rapidly growing, highly recurrent malignant brain tumors.
- Zhu-Tokita-Takenouchi-Kim Syndrome: A rare genetic disorder with developmental delay, microcephaly, and motor problems.
The addition of these thirteen conditions comes as initial disability benefit applications reached nearly 957,000 in fiscal year 2025. Caseloads and the complexity of evaluations contribute to long wait times.
The Compassionate Allowances program functions as a highly efficient triage mechanism within this pipeline, diverting the most medically indisputable cases into a fast-track pathway. The SSA bases inclusions on solid medical evidence demonstrating that these conditions consistently meet the legal definition of disability under the Social Security Act.
What benefits can people with these conditions receive?
These individuals are generally eligible for two types of benefits. The first is Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), which relies on work credits accumulated by the worker over a minimum number of years before experiencing a condition that prevents them from performing work.
Otherwise, you can rely on the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program, which is not based on work credits but on an individual’s need. While SSDI can provide a maximum monthly amount of up to $4,018, SSI is substantially lower, capped at $967.