The Albany office serves 60,200 total beneficiaries across 31 ZIP codes. Of those, 6,005 receive SSDI, representing 10% of the total caseload. When visiting, bring complete medical documentation and your work history to avoid processing delays. An attorney can help you organize your evidence correctly for the disability determination stage. This office manages a monthly payout of $108 million to local residents.
Your local SSA service center
As your local Social Security service center, the Albany office manages benefits for 60,200 individuals. While the catchment area is retirement-heavy with 83% of beneficiaries aged 65 or older, the office remains a vital resource for the 6,005 disabled workers in the region. Every month, this office facilitates the distribution of $108 million in benefits. Because this location handles 7% of all beneficiaries in Oregon, arrive prepared for your scheduled appointment.
You can visit the Albany office for initial SSDI applications, document drop-offs, and in-person identity verification. This office does not make final disability decisions, which are handled by the state DDS, nor does it conduct hearings. If you require a hearing, your case will be routed to a separate location. An attorney can help you navigate these jurisdictional steps.
Who this office serves
Beneficiaries in this service area receive an estimated $107,728k in Social Security benefits each month.
Albany SSA Field Office
1390 Waverly Drive Se
Albany, OR
97322
Mon–Fri · 9:00 AM-4:00 PM
View on SSA.gov →Before you visit
To prepare for your appointment, bring a government-issued photo ID and your work history. You should also provide a comprehensive list of all treating physicians with their contact information and copies of your most recent medical records. Be prepared to discuss your current medications and any previous denial letters if you are reapplying. An attorney can help you ensure your documentation is complete before you arrive.
Many applicants delay their claims by failing to provide a complete work history or missing recent medical records from their primary care providers. Another frequent error is neglecting to mention all relevant health conditions. Avoid signing any forms without reading them thoroughly to ensure all information is accurate. Providing incomplete or inconsistent data often leads to unnecessary follow-up requests. An attorney can help you avoid these common filing errors.
Filing an SSDI claim?
Should you bring an attorney?
The application stage is the foundation of your entire disability claim, yet many people navigate it without professional guidance. An attorney can help you identify the specific medical evidence required to meet the strict criteria for SSDI. By ensuring your initial application is robust, you may avoid common pitfalls that lead to early denials. A free case review can help you understand your options before you submit your paperwork.
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 Albany. The Albany field office holds your file at every appeal stage, but the substantive decisions happen further up the chain.
