SSA Hearing Office

Dayton, OHSSA Hearing Office

The current average wait for a hearing at this office is 9 months, giving you time to build a robust medical record.

Hearing scheduled in Dayton?

Free Benefits Review →
Free
2 minutes
Confidential

Who decides cases at this office

The panel of 6 judges at this office shows a moderate spread in their allowance rates, which range from 51% to 80%. Because cases are assigned randomly, you cannot choose your judge, and each one weighs evidence differently. This variation means your file must be strong enough to stand on its own merits regardless of which judge is assigned to your case.

Approval Rate
68%
Total Decisions
20,292
Approval Rate
67%
Total Decisions
28,024
Approval Rate
60%
Total Decisions
3,850
Approval Rate
55%
Total Decisions
18,645
Approval Rate
52%
Total Decisions
23,370
Approval Rate
48%
Total Decisions
29,856
Approval Rate
44%
Total Decisions
6,974
Rank Judge Approval Rate Total Decisions
1Heidi Southern 68% 20,292
2Kevin R. Barnes 67% 28,024
3Laura S. Twilley 60% 3,850
4Stuart Adkins 55% 18,645
5Mark Hockensmith 52% 23,370
6Gregory G. Kenyon 48% 29,856
7Elizabeth A. Motta 44% 6,974

Heading to an ALJ hearing? See if you qualify for representation before your hearing.

Free Benefits Review
Free 2 minutes Confidential

How long you'll wait

At Dayton, 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
Free Benefits Review

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 significant window to ensure your medical records are complete and up to date. The most critical step is submitting all new evidence well before the hearing, as last-minute additions are restricted. During your hearing, an ALJ will preside, and a vocational expert will likely testify about available jobs. You must be prepared to answer questions about your daily activities and how your symptoms prevent you from working. Because the panel at this office shows meaningful variation in how they weigh evidence, your testimony must be consistent with your medical records. A decision will arrive by mail after the proceedings conclude.

Hearings at this office move at a pace that allows for thorough preparation, yet the moderate variation across the panel means you cannot afford to leave gaps in your documentation. When a judge has the discretion to interpret your limitations, the difference between a denial and an approval often comes down to how clearly your medical records align with the vocational expert's criteria. You can focus on ensuring your evidence is ready for the hearing room.

Field offices that route cases here

If your hearing is at Dayton, 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