Nearly 70% of first-time SSDI applications are denied — but over half of those claimants win on appeal with a local attorney. This directory helps you find a disability lawyer who knows Kentucky and Ohio Social Security courts, charges no upfront fee, and gets paid only if you win.
The same federal process — but local attorneys know the ALJ judges, the SSA field offices, and the shortcuts that matter in this specific region.
File online at ssa.gov or in person at your local SSA field office. Covington office serves Boone & Kenton County; Cincinnati serves Hamilton County. Approval rate: ~22–30%. Most people hire an attorney only after denial — but hiring one at this stage can improve your odds from the start.
After denial, you have 60 days to request reconsideration. A different SSA examiner reviews your file. Approval rate: ~12–15% — this stage is mostly a formality, but you must complete it to get to the hearing stage. Do not skip this step even if it feels futile.
Administrative Law Judge hearing — this is where the majority of successful claims are won. An ALJ reviews your full record, may call a vocational expert, and you can testify about your limitations. Approval rate with attorney: ~55–60%. NKY claimants are assigned to the Lexington, KY Office of Hearings Operations. Hamilton County (OH) cases go to the Cincinnati OHO.
If the ALJ denies, you can appeal to the SSA Appeals Council (Richmond, VA), then to U.S. District Court. Most attorneys handle Appeals Council; fewer take federal court appeals. For KY claimants, federal cases go to the Eastern District of Kentucky. For Hamilton County, the Southern District of Ohio.
| Factor | SSDI (Disability Insurance) | SSI (Supplemental Security Income) |
|---|---|---|
| Who qualifies | Workers with enough paid work credits (typically 5 of last 10 years) | Low-income, low-asset individuals regardless of work history |
| Benefit amount | Based on your earnings history — average ~$1,350/month (2024) | Fixed federal rate — $943/month (2024 individual) |
| Medicare eligibility | After 24-month waiting period from approval | Qualifies for Medicaid immediately in KY and OH |
| Back pay | Up to 12 months before application date; no limit from onset date | Back to application date only (no retroactive period) |
| Work history required | Yes — credits based on age and years worked | No work history required |
| Asset limits | None | $2,000 individual / $3,000 couple |
| Kentucky notes | KY Medicaid may supplement during 24-month wait via kynect.ky.gov | KY SSI recipients auto-qualify for Medicaid via DCBS |
Estimate how much in back benefits you may be owed — and what an attorney's fee would be.
Find your estimated benefit at ssa.gov/myaccount. If unknown, use $1,350 (national average).
The date you became unable to work. This is the starting point for back pay.
Enter your information to estimate your potential SSDI back pay and attorney fee cap.
This estimator provides a rough illustration only. Actual back pay depends on your established onset date, SSA processing times, and approval date — all determined by SSA. This is not legal advice.
Local attorneys who handle SSDI and SSI cases — and know the ALJ judges and SSA offices in this region.
Covington SSA Office
2321 Anderson Rd., Covington, KY 41011
Phone: (866) 964-0747
Hours: Mon–Fri, 9:00 AM–4:00 PM
Walk-in available; appointments recommended
SSA Office of Hearings Operations — Lexington
310 W. Liberty St., Lexington, KY 40507
Phone: (877) 512-8589
Most hearings conducted via video from Covington SSA office
Covington SSA Office
2321 Anderson Rd., Covington, KY 41011
Phone: (866) 964-0747
Hours: Mon–Fri, 9:00 AM–4:00 PM
SSA OHO — Lexington, KY
310 W. Liberty St., Lexington, KY 40507
Phone: (877) 512-8589
Covington SSA Office
2321 Anderson Rd., Covington, KY 41011
Phone: (866) 964-0747
Hours: Mon–Fri, 9:00 AM–4:00 PM
Newport residents: ~3 miles via US-27 N
SSA OHO — Lexington, KY
310 W. Liberty St., Lexington, KY 40507
Phone: (877) 512-8589
Cincinnati SSA Office (Downtown)
550 Main St., Room 4-500, Cincinnati, OH 45202
Phone: (866) 964-0771
Hours: Mon–Fri, 9:00 AM–4:00 PM
Cincinnati SSA Office (Blue Ash)
4555 Lake Forest Dr., Suite 100, Blue Ash, OH 45242
Phone: (866) 964-0713
Hours: Mon–Fri, 9:00 AM–4:00 PM
SSA OHO — Cincinnati
550 Main St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
Phone: (866) 964-0771
Ohio ALJ hearings in Cincinnati — separate from KY hearing office
SSDI and SSI attorneys work on contingency and won't charge you for the first meeting. But the more you bring, the more useful that meeting will be. Download the checklist to take with you.
Download Checklist (PDF)Free — no email required.
Field offices, hearing offices, and online options — what each does and when to use it.
Serves Boone, Kenton, and Campbell counties. Apply for SSDI/SSI, get replacement Social Security cards, update records.
Primary field office for Hamilton County. Full services — applications, appeals, record updates. Busiest office in the region.
Suburban Cincinnati office serving northeast Hamilton County and Warren County. Less crowded than downtown; same full services.
Handles ALJ hearings for all Kentucky claimants including NKY. Most hearings are conducted by video from the local SSA field office — you typically do not travel to Lexington.
Handles ALJ hearings for all Ohio claimants including Hamilton County. In-person or video hearings at the Cincinnati SSA office.
Apply for SSDI/SSI online, check your application status, appeal a denial, and review your earnings record — all without visiting an office.
Real questions from people in NKY and Cincinnati dealing with SSDI and SSI claims.
Social Security disability attorneys work exclusively on contingency — you pay nothing upfront, ever. Federal law caps their fee at 25% of your back pay, up to a maximum of $7,200 (the cap is periodically adjusted). If you don't win, you owe nothing. The fee is paid directly by SSA out of your back pay before you receive it. There is no risk to hiring a disability attorney in this field.
Almost certainly yes, if you have a legitimate disability. Nationally, about 67–70% of initial applications are denied — but roughly 55% of those who appeal to the ALJ hearing stage win with attorney representation. The appeal process is long (12–24+ months) but the back pay accumulates during that time. Claimants who are eventually approved after a long appeal often receive $20,000–$60,000+ in back pay. The 60-day appeal deadline is critical — if you miss it, you generally have to start over from scratch and lose the original application date, which directly reduces back pay.
SSA uses a federal "Blue Book" of qualifying conditions, but the key standard is whether your condition prevents you from doing any substantial gainful work — not just your previous job. Common approved conditions include: musculoskeletal disorders (back, joints), cardiovascular conditions, mental disorders (depression, PTSD, bipolar, schizophrenia), neurological conditions (epilepsy, MS, Parkinson's), cancer, diabetes with complications, and respiratory disorders (COPD). Many claims are denied initially because medical documentation is insufficient — not because the condition doesn't qualify. An attorney helps gather the right evidence.
Expect the full process — initial application through ALJ hearing — to take 2–4 years in the current environment. Breakdown: Initial application decision takes 3–6 months. Reconsideration takes another 3–5 months. ALJ hearing wait time in Kentucky is currently 12–18 months after requesting the hearing. The process is long, which is why back pay accumulates — and why you want an attorney who tracks your case actively and doesn't let it stall.
Limited work is possible during the application process. SSA has a "substantial gainful activity" (SGA) threshold — in 2024, you cannot earn more than $1,550/month ($2,590 if blind) and be considered disabled. Earning above this amount will result in denial. However, working below this threshold does not disqualify you and may actually help your case by showing you tried to continue working but couldn't. If you're already approved and want to try working, SSA has a "Ticket to Work" program that allows a trial work period without losing benefits immediately.
Compassionate Allowances (CAL) is a fast-track SSA program for conditions so severe they nearly always meet the disability standard — approvals can come in weeks rather than years. The program covers about 250+ conditions including ALS, most terminal cancers, early-onset Alzheimer's, and certain rare diseases. If you or your doctor believes your condition may qualify, tell your attorney immediately. They can flag your application for expedited processing. The full CAL list is at ssa.gov/compassionateallowances.
An ALJ (Administrative Law Judge) hearing is not a courtroom trial — it's a smaller, less formal proceeding. Typically present: you, your attorney, the ALJ, and often a vocational expert (VE) who testifies about what jobs someone with your limitations could do. The hearing usually lasts 45–75 minutes. Your attorney will question you and cross-examine the VE. The ALJ may ask you questions directly. For NKY claimants, hearings are typically held by video at the Covington SSA office, not in Lexington. The ALJ decision usually comes in writing within 60–90 days after the hearing.
They're separate programs that can overlap. Workers' compensation is a Kentucky state program administered through the Department of Workers' Claims — it covers injuries that occurred on the job and is paid by your employer's insurer. SSDI is a federal program for long-term disability regardless of how it started. You can receive both simultaneously, but there's an "offset" — if combined workers' comp and SSDI exceed 80% of your average pre-disability earnings, SSDI is reduced. This is a complex calculation that disability attorneys handle routinely; mention any workers' comp claims to your attorney upfront.
Disability Attorney NKY is an informational directory only — not a law firm and not affiliated with the Social Security Administration. Nothing on this site constitutes legal advice or a guarantee of any outcome. SSA office hours, benefit amounts, fee caps, and hearing wait times change — always verify directly with SSA or a licensed attorney before relying on any information here. Attorney listings represent publicly available information and do not constitute an endorsement. Last verified: May 2025.