The Georgetown, office serves 83,610 Social Security beneficiaries across 23 ZIP codes. Of those, 5,930 receive SSDI, representing 7% of the total caseload. Because this office handles a high volume of retirement-related services, scheduling an appointment is the most effective way to ensure your disability application is processed efficiently. An attorney can help you ensure your medical evidence is properly documented for the state disability determination team.
Your local SSA service center
Your local Social Security service center in Georgetown, manages 34.6% of the state's total beneficiary population. With $171 million in monthly benefits paid out, the office supports a diverse group, though it skews heavily toward retirement with 85% of beneficiaries being age 65 or older. While the SSDI recipient share is 7%, the office remains a vital point of contact for your initial disability applications and document verification.
You can visit this office to file your initial SSDI application, drop off required medical records, or verify your identity for benefit updates. Please note that this location does not make the final decision on your disability claim, as that responsibility lies with the state disability determination services. Additionally, this office does not conduct hearings, which are handled at a separate location. You should schedule an appointment in advance to minimize your wait time.
Who this office serves
Beneficiaries in this service area receive an estimated $170,624k in Social Security benefits each month.
Georgetown, SSA Field Office
17 Georgetown Plz
Georgetown, DE
19947
Mon–Fri · 9:00 AM-4:00 PM
View on SSA.gov →Before you visit
When you arrive, bring a valid government-issued photo ID and a comprehensive work history to ensure your application is accurate. You should also provide a complete list of your treating physicians with their contact information, recent medical records, and a list of all current medications. Be prepared for an interview with a claims representative. Having your prior denial paperwork ready, if applicable, will also help the staff process your visit more effectively.
You may delay your claim by submitting incomplete work histories or failing to provide the most recent medical records from all your treating providers. Forgetting to mention secondary physical impairments can also result in an incomplete application profile. Avoid signing any forms until you have read them thoroughly to ensure all information is accurate. An attorney can help you avoid these common administrative pitfalls.
Filing an SSDI claim?
Should you bring an attorney?
The application stage is the foundation of your entire disability case, and the evidence you provide now will define your appeal record later. Most people who apply without professional guidance face significant hurdles if their initial application is denied. An attorney can help you understand your options and ensure your application is as strong as possible from day one.
Your odds change dramatically with a lawyer
Source: U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO-18-37. The 3× gap is a population-wide average across all judges; individual outcomes vary.
If your SSDI claim moves to a hearing
About two-thirds of initial SSDI applications nationwide are denied. If yours is, your case moves to a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge at one of the regional hearing offices that handles appeals from Georgetown,. The Georgetown, field office holds your file at every appeal stage, but the substantive decisions happen further up the chain.
