I know this video is 2 yrs old. But i am a legal resident of the US. I worked and payed into all that i had too till i was disabled 11 years ago (give or take a year). I just started to look into moving to the Philipeans to live. And i was wondering if i would still get my SSD benefits if i moved and if there was a limit on how long i stayed there. or anything else i needed to know.
@@Linxs718thank you for the clarification. Me and my wife want to move to Mexico since it is alot cheaper than Wisconsin. Plus I have 97 acres I was inherited so yea. Thanks again guys
Hi i been working an paying tax and social security since i was 16 year old now 40 disable i want to move to Cambodia will receive my SSA benifit. People tell me that i can only stay up until 30 day on ssi but your video say has long i pay into social security i can live anywhere except the 2 countries so confuse
I’m a dual citizen of USA with an EU passport. I’m currently on SSDI and am considering working abroad Germany. How do foreign salaries impact my ability to draw SSDI? Do I have to report these earnings? I was also retired from the US military due to combat injuries
Thanks for the question. Reporting of income and income limits apply the same for out of country earnings as they do domestically. SSA has an online app you can use to report the US exchange for your foreign earnings.
If you live abroad and collect SSDI, you must return to the US every six months, stay 30 days, provide proof of stay to SSA. Wash, rinse, repeat, every 6 months. I am a US expat living in the Philippines, my bank account and mailing address is in the US, so I have no idea how they would know I am overseas unless I tell them. I am 62, returning to US in April and switching over to regular SS so I do not have to jump through this costly hoop. None of these videos mention the 6 month rule.
If you are a US citizen, you can continue to receive your SSDI benefit as long as you live in an eligible country. There are countries where Social Security (SSA) is not allowed to send benefits. You need to alert SSA that you are moving, where you are going, and how long you will be gone. If you are not a US citizen, but a citizen of another country or have other legal resident status, your benefits may stop if you are outside the US for more than six months. Citizens of certain countries will continue to receive payments no matter how long they stay outside of the US. The Philippines is an authorized country.
Excellent question Kenny. While I am uncertain if any international health providers take Medicare insurance (and may render it useless), Medicare should still be available to you.
I’m glad I found your channel
I know this video is 2 yrs old. But i am a legal resident of the US. I worked and payed into all that i had too till i was disabled 11 years ago (give or take a year). I just started to look into moving to the Philipeans to live. And i was wondering if i would still get my SSD benefits if i moved and if there was a limit on how long i stayed there. or anything else i needed to know.
This still works with VA Disability and Compensation if you move out of the USA?
Yes you can receive VA disability pension income. Many vets live in Thailand and Philippines.
Glad you asked this Devil Dog. I was about to ask the same question. Semper-Fi
@@Linxs718thank you for the clarification. Me and my wife want to move to Mexico since it is alot cheaper than Wisconsin. Plus I have 97 acres I was inherited so yea. Thanks again guys
@@TheMexicanU.S.Marine I live in Colombia with my family. Enjoy your new destination. Trust me, your dollars will go a longggggg way.
@@Linxs718 I appreciate it boss thanks.
Thanks for sharing this helpful video. Are you able to represent disabled clients nationwide?
Hi i been working an paying tax and social security since i was 16 year old now 40 disable i want to move to Cambodia will receive my SSA benifit. People tell me that i can only stay up until 30 day on ssi but your video say has long i pay into social security i can live anywhere except the 2 countries so confuse
Does this work if i get SSDI survivor benefits
Is there a list of countries that are banned from Americans receiving SSDI ?
I’m a dual citizen of USA with an EU passport. I’m currently on SSDI and am considering working abroad Germany. How do foreign salaries impact my ability to draw SSDI? Do I have to report these earnings? I was also retired from the US military due to combat injuries
Thanks for the question. Reporting of income and income limits apply the same for out of country earnings as they do domestically. SSA has an online app you can use to report the US exchange for your foreign earnings.
@@MichaelLiner thank you. It’s my understanding that only earning more than SGA must be reported. Is this correct?
@@terraGaliciaXXIV you would be wise to report all earnings, to avoid any issues later that may trigger an overpayment
Hello
What if you move to cuba???
Or Russia
Or Israel ?😬
I get ssi and ssdi can I still move to another country?
If you live abroad and collect SSDI, you must return to the US every six months, stay 30 days, provide proof of stay to SSA. Wash, rinse, repeat, every 6 months. I am a US expat living in the Philippines, my bank account and mailing address is in the US, so I have no idea how they would know I am overseas unless I tell them. I am 62, returning to US in April and switching over to regular SS so I do not have to jump through this costly hoop. None of these videos mention the 6 month rule.
Immigrant. You are an immigrant.
do they have something that checks you were out the country? - i thought you have tp be 65 years old to switch to SS
I am in Australia . I was questing the same years ago. Here ,Ss know straight away once I depart from the airport .
Isn't early ss less than ssdi unless ur 65
If you are a US citizen, you can continue to receive your SSDI benefit as long as you live in an eligible country. There are countries where Social Security (SSA) is not allowed to send benefits. You need to alert SSA that you are moving, where you are going, and how long you will be gone. If you are not a US citizen, but a citizen of another country or have other legal resident status, your benefits may stop if you are outside the US for more than six months. Citizens of certain countries will continue to receive payments no matter how long they stay outside of the US. The Philippines is an authorized country.
What about Cuba?
Why on earth would anyone move to Cuba you can't even get a simple chicken there 😂😂😂😂it's the worst place on earth
TUNISIA NORTH AFRICA WORK?
What about health care benefits? Will it still work outside the US?
Excellent question Kenny. While I am uncertain if any international health providers take Medicare insurance (and may render it useless), Medicare should still be available to you.
@@LinerLegalLLCCleveland thank you for your answer.
@@TomDBombed Mexico does