Social Security Compassionate Allowances: The Social Security Administration (SSA) made an important announcement on August 11, 2025. The agency added 13 new medical conditions to its Compassionate Allowances (CAL) program. This program helps people with serious illnesses get disability benefits faster. With this update, the total number of fast-track conditions has now reached 300. The SSA wants to make sure people facing severe, life-changing illnesses can get support quickly.
SSA Commissioner Frank J. Bisignano said, “By adding these 13 conditions to the Compassionate Allowances list, we are helping more people with devastating diagnoses to quickly receive the support they need.”
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Per the SSA‘s press release, these newly included diagnoses are: Au-Kline Syndrome, Bilateral Anophthalmia, Carey-Fineman-Ziter Syndrome, Harlequin Ichthyosis – Child, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, LMNA-related Congenital Muscular Dystrophy, Progressive Muscular Atrophy, Pulmonary Amyloidosis – AL Type, Rasmussen Encephalitis, Thymic Carcinoma, Turnpenny-Fry Syndrome, WHO Grade III Meningiomas, Zhu-Tokita-Takenouchi-Kim Syndrome.
How the Compassionate Allowances Program Works
The CAL program started in 2008. It identifies medical conditions that clearly meet SSA’s disability rules. This way, applications for people with certain serious illnesses can move through the system much faster than usual. Over 1.1 million people have already benefited from the program.
SSA disability claims go through many steps. First, they check the applicant’s work history, then they validate medical information at the state level, and finally SSA field offices review everything. Because of this process, waiting times can be long. In 2025 alone, almost 957,000 initial claims were still pending, with people waiting more than 230 days on average.
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To make things quicker, SSA is using its Health IT system to receive electronic medical records securely. This technology helps staff identify cases that qualify for CAL faster. By adding these 13 complex conditions and bringing the total to 300, the SSA is showing its goal: making sure people with the most serious health challenges can get the financial help they need quickly and fairly.