SSA Hearing Office

Montgomery, ALSSA Hearing Office

Hearings in Montgomery are currently scheduled in 6 months, which is faster than the national average.

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Who decides cases at this office

The 9 judges at this office show a moderate spread in their allowance rates, which range from 50% to 90%. While the median rate is 69%, each judge weighs medical evidence and vocational testimony differently. Because cases are assigned randomly, you cannot choose your judge, making it essential that your file is strong enough to stand on its own regardless of who presides.

Approval Rate
78%
Total Decisions
26,250
Approval Rate
74%
Total Decisions
11,282
Approval Rate
71%
Total Decisions
32,549
Approval Rate
70%
Total Decisions
25,988
Approval Rate
69%
Total Decisions
17,772
Approval Rate
68%
Total Decisions
30,340
Approval Rate
67%
Total Decisions
17,092
Approval Rate
65%
Total Decisions
7,706
Approval Rate
63%
Total Decisions
18,080
Approval Rate
61%
Total Decisions
3,399
Approval Rate
54%
Total Decisions
6,201
Approval Rate
53%
Total Decisions
26,139
Approval Rate
53%
Total Decisions
27,213
Approval Rate
53%
Total Decisions
5,899
Approval Rate
37%
Total Decisions
24,800
Approval Rate
23%
Total Decisions
3,058
Rank Judge Approval Rate Total Decisions
1Claire R. Strong 78% 26,250
2Charles A. Thigpen 74% 11,282
3Vincent P. Intoccia 71% 32,549
4Amy H. Naylor 70% 25,988
5Frank M. Klinger 69% 17,772
6Ricky V. South 68% 30,340
7Michael D. Anderson 67% 17,092
8Maria N. Kusznir 65% 7,706
9Paul W. Johnson 63% 18,080
10George M. Akins 61% 3,399
11Rolesia Dancy 54% 6,201
12John B. Langland 53% 26,139
13Reni F. Barnett-Jefferson 53% 27,213
14Brian A. Oakes 53% 5,899
15Carol L. Latham 37% 24,800
16Walter V. Lassiter Jr. 23% 3,058

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How long you'll wait

At Montgomery, the average wait from hearing request to written decision is 6 months— versus a national average of 8 months. Here's how it's tracked month by month over the past 16 months.

Wait (months)
02468Jun '24Sep '25

Your odds change dramatically with a lawyer

SSDI hearing approval rates — represented vs. on your own

WITHOUT A LAWYER
baseline approval rate
Unrepresented claimants
WITH A LAWYER
~3×
higher approval rate
Represented claimants
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Source: U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO-18-37. The 3× gap is a population-wide average across all judges; individual outcomes vary.

Going to your hearing

Hearings at this office move faster than the national norm, so you must prioritize your evidence submission immediately. You will typically spend time before an ALJ, who will often rely on a vocational expert to determine if jobs exist that accommodate your specific physical or mental limitations. Bring your updated medical records, a detailed log of your daily activities, and a list of your current medications including their side effects. If you have witness statements from former coworkers or family members, these should be submitted well before the deadline. Because the hearing is your primary opportunity to present evidence that was missed during the initial denial, every document must be organized to clearly support your claim.

Hearings in Montgomery move quickly, leaving little room for error once your date is set. Even with a high office-wide allowance rate, cases often fail if you cannot effectively counter the vocational expert's testimony. Preparing your medical record thoroughly before you walk into the hearing room is the most effective way to address these challenges.

Field offices that route cases here

If your hearing is at Montgomery, your case originated at one of the SSA field offices below — the local intake counter where you (or a representative) filed the initial application. Field offices don't decide hearings, but they hold your file, issue benefit-payment notices, and field the day-to-day questions during your wait.

Frequently asked questions