What Is an ABLE Account? Save Money Without Losing SSI or Medicaid

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July 14, 2025
Learn how ABLE accounts let people with disabilities save money tax-free for housing, healthcare, and daily needs—without risking SSI or Medicaid benefits. Find out who qualifies, contribution limits, and how to open an account today.

What Is an ABLE Account?

How to Save Money Without Losing Disability Benefits

If you receive SSI or Medicaid, you may have been told to keep your savings below $2,000—or risk losing essential benefits.

That’s where an ABLE account comes in.

ABLE accounts (Achieving a Better Life Experience) were created to help people with disabilities save money tax-free for qualified expenses, without disqualifying them from critical programs like SSI, SSDI, or Medicaid.

In this guide, we’ll cover:

  • What ABLE accounts are
  • Who is eligible
  • Pros and cons
  • Contribution limits and rules
  • Key takeaways to decide if it’s right for you

What Is an ABLE Account?

An ABLE account is a tax-advantaged savings account for people with disabilities. You can use it to save money for disability-related expenses without impacting your eligibility for means-tested government programs like SSI and Medicaid.

It works a lot like a 529 college savings account—but with broader uses.

You can use ABLE funds for:

  • Housing and rent
  • Transportation or accessible vehicles
  • Education or job training
  • Assistive technology
  • Healthcare, therapy, or caregiving
  • Basic living expenses like groceries or utility bills

Money in your ABLE account grows tax-free and can be spent any time, without penalty, as long as it’s for qualified expenses.

Who Is Eligible for an ABLE Account?

You’re eligible if:

  • You were diagnosed with a qualifying disability before age 26
  • You receive SSI or SSDI or can get a disability certification from a licensed doctor
  • You're a U.S. citizen or legal resident

🧠 Good to know:

You don’t have to be under 26 now—just have proof that your disability began before that age. That includes many people living with chronic illness, mental health disorders, or intellectual/developmental disabilities.

Pros and Cons of ABLE Accounts

Benefits

  • Save up to $100,000 without affecting SSI benefits
  • No limit on Medicaid eligibility, even with higher balances
  • Tax-free earnings and withdrawals
  • Funds can be used flexibly for daily needs
  • Can be managed by the person with the disability or a guardian

Drawbacks

  • Must have disability onset before age 26
  • Annual contribution cap of $18,000 (as of 2024)
  • Some states charge monthly fees or investment fees
  • Misuse of funds (on non-qualified expenses) could create tax issues or impact benefits

How Much Can You Contribute?

As of 2024:

  • Anyone (you, family, friends) can contribute up to $18,000 per year
  • If you work and don’t have an employer-sponsored retirement plan, you may contribute an additional amount up to the federal poverty line (about $14,580 in most states)
  • The total account balance can grow beyond $100,000, but SSI will be suspended (not terminated) until the balance drops below that threshold again

📝 Note: Medicaid eligibility continues regardless of account balance.

Things to Watch Out For

You can lose some protections if:

  • You use the money for non-qualified expenses (which may be taxed and penalized)
  • Your ABLE account exceeds $100,000 and you rely on SSI (benefits will pause temporarily)
  • You live in a state that charges high fees—compare plans before opening

You can open an ABLE account in any state that accepts out-of-state residents, so shop around for low fees and good investment options at www.ablenrc.org.

Key Takeaways

  • ABLE accounts let people with disabilities save and grow money without losing access to SSI or Medicaid
  • Funds are tax-free when used for disability-related expenses
  • You must have a qualifying disability that began before age 26
  • They’re one of the best tools for long-term financial freedom and independence

Ready to Open an ABLE Account?

  1. Check eligibility: SSA Disability Listing
  2. Compare plans at: www.ablenrc.org
  3. Set financial goals: Housing? Medical needs? A future safety net?

You deserve the right to save without punishment.

ABLE accounts were designed to give you the dignity of choice and the freedom to plan.

Meet Debbie 💚

Debbie is your partner in financial freedom. We guide, motivate, and reward you for taking control of your money—whether that means crushing debt or building savings. Our users pay off 3x more debt and save around $100/month on average. Ready to join the movement? Sign up at joindebbie.com and start earning rewards for hitting your money goals.

Rachel Lauren
COO & co-founder

Previous financial analyst and investor turned fintech entrepreneur. I Rachel’s experience spans consumer marketing, business development/sales, day-to-day operations, financial modeling/analysis. Rachel started Debbie, an app that uses behavioral psychology and prizes to help you pay off debt for good

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