The 49% allowance rate at Atlanta North is typical for a hearing office, meaning your outcome depends on the strength of your medical file. While the 8-month wait is consistent with the national average, it has recently trended upward. Use this time to organize your records and prepare for potential vocational expert testimony, as a well-documented file is the most effective way to navigate the panel's moderate judge-to-judge variation. An attorney can help you prepare your case for the hearing.
Who decides cases at this office
The panel at this office shows a moderate spread in allowance rates, which range from 29% to 66% among active judges. Because cases are assigned randomly, you cannot choose your judge, and each one weighs evidence differently. This variation means your file must be robust enough to stand on its own merits regardless of which judge is assigned to your hearing.
| Rank | Judge | Approval Rate | Total Decisions | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ollie Garmon | 95% | 7,119 | |
| 2 | Larry A. Auerbach | 86% | 1,937 | |
| 3 | Richard P. McCully | 84% | 4,788 | |
| 4 | Calvin Washington | 76% | 10,267 | |
| 5 | O. Lisa Dabreu | 75% | 1,868 | |
| 6 | Verley J. Spivey | 68% | 6,387 | |
| 7 | Barry L. Williams | 67% | 3,873 | |
| 8 | James Conlon | 65% | 19,165 | |
| 9 | Laurie A. Bedell | 62% | 27,777 | |
| 10 | Steve Lamb | 61% | 5,201 | |
| 11 | Frederick R. Waitsman | 60% | 5,851 | |
| 12 | John S. Lamb | 60% | 2,723 | |
| 13 | Robin R. Palenske | 57% | 10,998 | |
| 14 | Todd S. Colarusso | 56% | 31,850 | |
| 15 | McArthur Allen | 55% | 2,738 | |
| 16 | Joan E. Parks Saunders | 55% | 681 | |
| 17 | Curtis R. Boren | 53% | 17,266 | |
| 18 | Gregory Fons | 47% | 21,571 | |
| 19 | Steven J. Ehlenbeck | 45% | 9,068 | |
| 20 | Tracy Henry | 40% | 6,643 | |
| 21 | Loranzo Fleming | 39% | 5,242 | |
| 22 | William Callahan | 32% | 21,463 | |
| 23 | Cynthia G. Weaver | 22% | 20,861 |
Heading to an ALJ hearing? See if you qualify for representation before your hearing date.
Free Benefits ReviewHow long you'll wait
At Atlanta North, the average wait from hearing request to written decision is 8 months— versus a national average of 8 months. Here's how it's tracked month by month over the past 16 months.
Your odds change dramatically with a lawyer
SSDI hearing approval rates — represented vs. on your own
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
Your hearing at the Atlanta North office involves an ALJ reviewing your claim and hearing testimony. You should arrive with updated medical records that capture any changes in your condition since your initial denial, as this is the most important evidence you can provide. A vocational expert will often testify about whether jobs exist that fit your specific physical or mental limitations, and you will have the opportunity to question them. Be prepared to discuss your daily activities and how your symptoms impact your ability to work. Once the hearing concludes, you will receive a written decision by mail.
With a panel allowance rate that spans from 29% to 66%, the judge assigned to your case can influence the hearing process. Preparing a record that addresses potential vocational hurdles early helps you move your case toward a more predictable presentation regardless of the specific judge presiding.
Atlanta North SSA Hearing Office
2nd Floor, 4100 Old Milton Parkway
Alpharetta, GA
30005
8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
View on SSA.gov →Field offices that route cases here
If your hearing is at Atlanta North, 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.
