Your Right to Legal Representation According to the Social Security Administration
You have the right to have a representative, such as an lawyer, help you when you apply for Social Security benefits or Supplemental Security Income. The Social Security Administration is required to work with your representative the same as they would with you.
For your protection, your representative cannot charge or collect a fee from you without first getting written approval from us. However, your representative may accept money from you in advance as long as it is held in a trust or escrow account.
Both you and your representative are responsible for providing the Social Security Administratioin with accurate information. It is illegal to furnish false information knowingly and willfully. If you do, you may face criminal prosecution.
How a Lawyer Can Help Represent You
- Getting information from your Social Security file;
- Helping you get medical records or information to support your claim;
- Coming with you, or for you, to any interview, conference or hearing you have with us;
- Requesting a reconsideration, hearing or Appeals Council review; and
- Helping you and your witnesses prepare for a hearing and questioning any witnesses.
- Your representative also will receive a copy of the decision(s) we make on your claim(s).
How To Choose a Representative
You can choose an attorney or other qualified person to represent you. You also can have more than one representative. However, you cannot have as a representative someone who has been suspended or disqualified from representing others before the Social Security Administration or who may not, by law, act as a representative.
Some organizations can help you find an attorney or give you free legal services if you qualify. Some attorneys do not charge unless you receive benefits. Your Social Security office has a list of organizations that can help you find a representative.
You can appoint one or more people in a firm, corporation or other organization as your representative, but you may not appoint the firm, corporation or organization itself.
After you choose a representative, you must tell us in writing as soon as possible. To do this, get Form SSA-1696-U4, Appointment of Representative , from the social security website or from any Social Security office.
You must give the name of the person you are appointing and sign your name. If the person is not an attorney, he or she must, in writing, give his or her name; state that he or she accepts the appointment; and sign the form.
How Much Does Representation By A Lawyer Cost?
In order to charge you a fee for services, your representative first must file either a fee agreement or a fee petition with us.
Your representative cannot charge you more than the fee amount we approve. If you or your representative disagree with the fee we approve, either of you can ask us to look at it again.
A representative who charges or collects a fee without our approval, or charges or collects too much, may be suspended or disqualified from representing anyone before the Social Security Administration and also may face criminal prosecution.
How to File a Fee Agreement
If you and your representative have a written fee agreement, your representative may ask us to approve it any time before we decide your claim. Usually, we will approve the agreement and tell you in writing how much your representative may charge as long as:
You both signed the agreement;
Your claim was approved and resulted in past-due benefits; and
The fee you agreed on is no more than 25 percent of past-due benefits or $5,300, whichever is less.
If we do not approve the fee agreement, we will notify you and your representative in writing that your representative must file a fee petition.
How to File a Fee Petition
Your representative may give us a fee petition after completing
the work on your claim(s). This written request should describe
in detail the amount of time spent on each service your representative
provided. Your representative must give you a copy of the fee
petition and each attachment. If you disagree with the fee requested
or the information shown, contact the Social Security Administration
within 20 days. They will consider the reasonable value of the
representative’s
services and tell you, in writing, the amount of the fee we approve.
How Much Do You Pay a Representative ?
The amount of the fee the Social Security Administration decides your representative may charge is the most you owe for his or her services even if you agreed to pay your representative more. However, your representative can charge you for out-of-pocket expenses, such as medical reports, without approval of the Social Security Administration.
If an attorney represents you, the Social Security Administration usually withholds 25 percent (but never more) of your past-due benefits to pay toward the fee. The Social Security Administration pays the attorney’s fee from this money and send you any money left over.
Sometimes you must pay your representative directly:
You must pay the rest you owe if the amount of the approved fee is more than the amount of money the Social Security Administration withheld and paid your attorney for you.
You must pay the entire fee amount if:
Your representative is not an attorney;
The benefits are Supplemental Security Income (SSI);
the Social Security Administration did not withhold 25 percent from your past-due Social Security benefits; or
Your attorney did make a timely request for a fee and the Social Security Administration sent you the money which they should have withheld.
You must pay for out-of-pocket expenses your representative
incurs or expect(s) to incur (for example, the cost of getting
your doctor’s or hospital records).
Can Someone Else Pay Your Representative?
Even when someone else will pay the fee for you (for example, an insurance company), the Social Security Administration must approve the fee unless:
It is a nonprofit organization or federal, state, county or city agency that will pay the fee and any expenses from government funds; and
Your representative gives the Social Security Administration a written statement that you will not have to pay any fee or expenses.
Federal Court Disability Claim Appeals
The court can allow a reasonable fee for your attorney. The fee usually will not exceed 25 percent of all past-due benefits that result from the court’s decision. Your attorney cannot charge any additional fee for services before the court.
Social Security Disability Law Firm
Our Law Firm is experienced in the process of applying for Social Security Disability Benefits. We will help you navigate the difficult journey of getting the benefits you deserve.
Our lawyers can help you with denied claims, and more importantly, help you meet all the qualification guidelines so we can prove the extent of your diability to the Social Security Administration before your application is denied. We can help you throughout the entire disability benefits application process.
Help for Denied Disability Benefits
If your claim for Social Security Disability Benefits is denied, our lawyers will present your case at the hearings, providing a strong defense in an effort to reverse a denied claim.
Contact The Rasansky Law Firm for help with your Disability Benefits application or to fight a denied claim.



