SSDI Lead Qualification Checklist for Disability Attorneys
Bill Rice
Founder & Lead Conversion Expert
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SSDI Lead Qualification Checklist for Disability Attorneys
Social Security Disability cases are often won or lost at intake. The difference between a profitable SSDI practice and one that bleeds time and money on dead-end claims usually comes down to how well you qualify leads before you invest resources.
When you're working aged SSDI leads — prospects who submitted an inquiry 30–180 days ago — qualification becomes even more critical. Some of these claimants have already been denied, some are frustrated with the process, and many are actively looking for representation.
Use this 7-point checklist to separate high-value, winnable cases from time wasters and to build a consistent, scalable intake process.
The 7-Point SSDI Qualification Checklist
1. Age Range: 50–64 Is the Sweet Spot
The Social Security Administration's grid rules heavily favor older claimants. For applicants age 50+, SSA considers age, education, and work history in addition to medical limitations, which significantly improves approval odds.
Priority age range:
- Focus on claimants 50–64
- Consider 65+ if they are not yet on full retirement benefits or have complex onset/offset issues
Red flag:
- Claimants under 40 face much higher denial rates under SSA rules
- Unless the medical evidence is very strong (e.g., severe, well-documented conditions), these cases may not be worth pursuing as a volume strategy
Scoring tip:
- Age 50–64 = 5 points
2. Current Representation Status
This should be the first question on every intake call:
"Are you currently represented by an attorney or advocate for your disability claim?"
If yes:
- They are already represented — do not solicit the case
- You may offer general information, but move on from the lead
If no, but they had an attorney before:
- Ask: "Have you ever had an attorney or advocate on this case?"
- If they say yes, dig deeper:
- Why did the attorney withdraw?
- Did the claimant fire the attorney, or did the attorney withdraw?
- At what stage did this happen?
Withdrawals can signal weak medical evidence, non-compliance, or difficult client behavior. Evaluate carefully before taking the case.
Scoring tip:
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