In many instances, we do not need to establish an exact EOD for DIB claims. After the first day of the month, all other days of that month have an equal effect on the claimant’s monthly benefit and waiting period. Onset on the first day of the month affects the date that the five-month waiting period starts. If we establish the EOD after the first day of the month, the five-month waiting period begins on the first day of the following month. Onset on the first day of the month can also affect the amount of the claimant’s monthly benefit (the primary insurance amount or PIA), the timeframe used to calculate the disability waiting period, or the Medicare eligibility period. Therefore, if we can determine the claimant did not become disabled on the first day of the month, any date within that month is a fully favorable onset date as long as:
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the claimant did not allege an onset date on the first day of the month, or
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the claimant did not first meet the medical or medical-vocational criteria on the first day of the month.
Sometimes we cannot pinpoint the exact day in a given month a claimant became disabled. If we can determine the claimant did not become disabled on the first day of the month, any date within the given month is a fully favorable onset date.
EXCEPTION: For Title II DIB claims with partially favorable onsets established at the beginning of a quarter (i.e., first day of the month). and the onset is not limited by attainment of age, the last day of SGA, or a traumatic onset, change the onset to the last day of the previous quarter (e.g., 03/31, 06/30, 09/30, or 12/31) to provide the most favorable onset, as this affects the freeze period.