SSDI in Connecticut

Every Connecticut SSDI application is medically reviewed by the Connecticut DDS in Windsor. Here's what to expect.

State DDS: Connecticut DDS
DDS location: Windsor
Federal appeals circuit: 2nd Circuit
SSA regional office: New York/Boston
Initial decision wait: Moderate
Reconsideration wait: Moderate
ALJ hearing wait: High

What's different about filing in Connecticut?

The federal SSDI program is national — your eligibility doesn't depend on where you live. But three things do vary by state:

  1. Your DDS's backlog. The Connecticut DDS processes every Connecticut claim. Current wait patterns for Connecticut: Moderate at the initial decision, Moderate at reconsideration, and High at the ALJ hearing stage.
  2. Your appeals circuit. Connecticut is in the 2nd Circuit. If your case goes to federal court, that's the court that hears it, and its precedent controls interpretation of SSA regulations.
  3. State supplement programs. Some states add a supplement to federal SSI (not SSDI), or offer additional help for disability applicants (Medicaid, state disability, housing). SSA itself doesn't administer these — contact your state's Department of Health and Human Services.

How to file in Connecticut

You have the same three options as everywhere in the US:

If you're denied in Connecticut

Your appeal goes first to the same DDS that denied you (reconsideration), then to an Administrative Law Judge hearing, then potentially to the Appeals Council, and finally to the federal district court covering your part of Connecticut — which sits within the 2nd Circuit.

See our full appeals guide for deadlines (60 days at each level), strategy, and attorney-fee rules.

High hearing wait in Connecticut. Hearing waits in Connecticut run longer than the national median. Prepare for 8–12+ months after your hearing request.