SSA Hearing Offices in Massachusetts
- Boston
- Springfield
Hearings are typically conducted by phone or video — you do not need to travel to a hearing office in person. Your case is assigned to the office that covers your zip code.
What the 11.2-Month Wait Means for Your Back Pay
The wait is frustrating — but here's the silver lining: back pay accumulates from the moment you applied. Every month the SSA takes to process your appeal is another month of benefits that owe to you when you win.
With a 11.2-month average wait for a hearing in Massachusetts, and the time from application to hearing often spanning 15+ months, a successful appeal can result in a lump-sum back pay award of $15,680 or more depending on your monthly benefit amount.
Use our SSDI Back Pay Calculator to estimate what you may be owed.
How to Improve Your Odds in Massachusetts
- Start immediately. With a 11.2-month average wait in Massachusetts, every day you delay costs you back pay. File your appeal the day you get your denial letter.
- Documentation is everything in Massachusetts. With a 70% initial denial rate — above the national average — the DDS office here applies tough scrutiny. Get an RFC from your treating doctor before you file.
- Get a representative before your hearing. Massachusetts ALJ hearings approve 42% of represented claimants — significantly more than those who go unrepresented. Advocates work on contingency: no win, no fee.
- Submit updated medical records before your hearing. Any new treatment, hospitalization, or doctor's note since your denial should be submitted as additional evidence. The ALJ considers everything up to the hearing date.