Arthritis is a common health problem where joints swell, hurt, and can be hard to move.
About 1 in 4 adults in the U.S. have some form of this condition.

Social Security Administration: SSDI Arthritis
Arthritis can make work hard or impossible. The Social Security Administration (SSA) knows this.
They see arthritis as a disability if it stops you from working for at least one year or it could cause death.
There are many kinds of arthritis, and some hit you so badly that they match the SSA’s list of disabilities.
For SSDI benefits to kick in, your doctor must say you have arthritis, and it stops you from working like before.
The SSA considers the severity of your pain, the distance you can move, and whether tools like walkers help you get around.
They also want to know about surgeries and treatments tried but didn’t fix things.
Evidence is key – stuff like medical records that show how much arthritis changes what you do each day.
Qualifying Types of Arthritis for SSDI Benefits
Arthritis is a disease that causes pain and swelling in the joints.
Some forms of arthritis can be so bad that they make it hard for people to work and do everyday things.
The following forms of arthritis that may qualify for SSDI benefits include, but are not limited to:
- Ankylosing Spondylitis: This type causes pain in the spine and makes it less flexible. It can also affect other joints and organs in the body.
- Gout: It often hits the big toe first, causing severe pain, redness, and swelling because of too much uric acid.
- Juvenile Arthritis: Kids get this kind, which leads to joint pain, swelling, and stiffness.
- Osteoarthritis: The most common kind among adults, it wears away the cushion between bones, usually at the hips and knees.
- Pseudogout (CPPD): With this illness, calcium crystals gather in the joints, leading to sharp joint pain and swelling.
- Psoriatic Arthritis: People with psoriasis can develop this form, in which their skin gets scaly patches and their joints swell.
- Reactive Arthritis: occurs after an infection in another part of the body; it causes inflammation in the joints, eyes, or urinary tract.
- Rheumatoid Arthritis: An immune system disorder that attacks your own body tissues, including joints, leading to damage over time.


