SSA Hearing Office

Boston, MASSA Hearing Office

The current average wait for a hearing at this office is 9 months.

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Who decides cases at this office

The 7 judges at the Boston office show a moderate spread in their allowance rates, which range from 35% to 66%. This variation means that while the office average is 53%, your specific outcome can be influenced by the judge assigned to your case. Because cases are assigned randomly, you cannot choose your judge, making it essential to ensure your medical documentation is robust enough to meet the standards of any member of the panel.

Approval Rate
75%
Total Decisions
13,868
Approval Rate
69%
Total Decisions
11,043
Approval Rate
68%
Total Decisions
13,768
Approval Rate
65%
Total Decisions
21,104
Approval Rate
64%
Total Decisions
3,523
Approval Rate
63%
Total Decisions
1,143
Approval Rate
57%
Total Decisions
20,605
Approval Rate
56%
Total Decisions
21,757
Approval Rate
53%
Total Decisions
16,053
Approval Rate
50%
Total Decisions
16,365
Approval Rate
47%
Total Decisions
15,916
Approval Rate
47%
Total Decisions
18,117
Approval Rate
38%
Total Decisions
21,510
Approval Rate
37%
Total Decisions
26,328
Rank Judge Approval Rate Total Decisions
1Carol A. Sax 75% 13,868
2Robert J. Kelly 69% 11,043
3James H. Packer 68% 13,768
4Francis Hurley 65% 21,104
5Noran J. Camp 64% 3,523
6Joel F. Gardiner 63% 1,143
7Alexander Klibaner 57% 20,605
8William T. Ross 56% 21,757
9William Ramsey 53% 16,053
10Daniel J. Driscoll 50% 16,365
11Stephen C. Fulton 47% 15,916
12Henry J. Hogan 47% 18,117
13Sean Teehan 38% 21,510
14Sujata Rodgers 37% 26,328

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How long you'll wait

At Boston, the average wait from hearing request to written decision is 9 months— versus a national average of 8 months. Here's how it's tracked month by month over the past 16 months.

Wait (months)
024681012Jun '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

With a 9-month wait, you have a critical window to strengthen your file before you face an Administrative Law Judge. Your hearing will typically last about an hour, during which the judge may call a Vocational Expert to testify about your ability to perform work in the national economy. You must submit all updated medical records, a detailed medication list including side effects, and a daily-activity log well before the deadline. Because hearings at this office move through a panel of 7 judges, your evidence must be clear enough to stand on its own regardless of which judge is assigned. A decision is rarely issued on the spot; you will receive a written notice by mail after your appearance.

A 9-month wait is time you can use to pressure-test your medical record against the specific questions a Vocational Expert will likely raise. When a panel's allowance rates span over 30 points, your file must be strong enough that no judge can dismiss it on weak documentation. You can evaluate your current evidence and identify the gaps that often lead to denials at the hearing stage.

Field offices that route cases here

If your hearing is at Boston, 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