Denied SSDI in Baltimore? You almost certainly need a hearing — and a hearing-tested lawyer.

Top 10 Disability Lawyers in Baltimore

Roughly two of every three initial Social Security disability claims in Maryland are denied. Most denials are reversed at the Administrative Law Judge hearing — when the medical file is complete and the lawyer knows the Baltimore ODAR judges. The firms below have built their practices on exactly that work.

These 10 Baltimore firms cover Social Security disability (SSDI and SSI), VA disability, ERISA long-term disability, and the workers' comp claims that often run alongside them. Every firm on the list was cross-referenced against Super Lawyers, Justia, Avvo, the Maryland State Bar, and disability-specific directories before being included. We did not accept payment for placement.

How we picked these 10: We reviewed verifiable peer rankings (Best Lawyers, Super Lawyers, Chambers and Partners, Avvo), bar association recognition, state bar standing, published verdicts and settlements, client review patterns, and board certifications where applicable. Firms that appeared consistently across independent sources made the list. We do not accept payment for placement and we do not write sponsored reviews. More on our methodology →

1

The Disability Law Center (Robert S. Piazza Jr., PC)

Baltimore, MD Founded 1982 Boutique

Practice focus: Social Security Disability (SSDI/SSI) — exclusively

Maryland's longest-running disability-only practice, family-owned since 1982. One of the few Baltimore firms with American Bar Association board certification in Social Security disability advocacy. Handles initial, Reconsideration, ALJ hearing, and Appeals Council work across the Baltimore ODAR.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Pure SSDI focus for four decades. When the case theory is what wins, you want a firm that has only ever practiced this.

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2

Ingerman & Horwitz, LLP

Baltimore, MD Founded 1971 Mid-size

Practice focus: Social Security Disability, workers' comp, personal injury

A+ BBB-rated Maryland injury and disability firm with 100+ years of combined experience. Named one of Maryland's leading workers' compensation firms by The Baltimore Sun. Substantial Baltimore ODAR hearing practice and useful when a workers' comp claim runs alongside SSDI.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: When your SSDI case overlaps a Maryland workers' comp claim, one firm handling both prevents the offset surprises that hit at back-pay time.

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3

Saiontz & Kirk, P.A.

Baltimore, MD Founded 1983 Mid-size

Practice focus: Personal injury, workers' comp, SSDI appeals

Long-standing Baltimore plaintiff firm at 3 South Frederick Street with a dedicated Social Security appeals practice. Recognizable Baltimore brand with decades of denial-reversal experience and no fee unless you win.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Volume gives them familiarity with most of the Baltimore ODAR ALJs and the vocational experts on rotation.

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4

Cohen, Snyder & Eisenberg, P.A.

Baltimore, MD Founded 1979 Mid-size

Practice focus: SSDI, workers' comp, personal injury

Multi-office Maryland injury and disability firm (Baltimore, Frederick, Essex, Glen Burnie, Towson) with hearing-level SSDI practice across the Baltimore ODAR. Handles initial application, Reconsideration, ALJ hearing, and Appeals Council work.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Geographic coverage matters when you live in Baltimore County but the hearing is downtown. They will meet you where you are.

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5

Law Office of Emmett B. Irwin

Baltimore, MD Founded 2013 Solo

Practice focus: Social Security Disability, SSI, senior law

Baltimore solo with a focused SSDI practice; Avvo-rated and consistently recommended for individual SSI and SSDI hearings. Direct attorney access throughout the case.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: The solo trade-off: you talk to the actual attorney every time, not a paralegal. Right pick if responsiveness matters more than firm depth.

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6

Karen L. Levian, Attorney at Law

Baltimore, MD Founded 1995 Solo

Practice focus: Social Security Disability benefits

Baltimore County solo with combined legal and medical training. 30+ years focused on SSDI claims and appeals — a credential profile that matters at the hearing when the ALJ asks medical questions.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: The medical-and-legal background reads well to ALJs and makes for sharper cross-examination of vocational experts.

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7

Louis Law Group (Baltimore)

Baltimore, MD Founded 2014 Mid-size

Practice focus: Social Security Disability, insurance and bad faith

Multi-state firm with a Baltimore SSDI practice. Handles denials, Reconsiderations, and ALJ hearings throughout Maryland on a no-fee-unless-you-win basis. Bilingual intake available.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Spanish-language intake matters for Baltimore's growing Latino population, and the firm runs a clean intake-to-hearing pipeline.

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8

Berman | Sobin | Gross LLP

Baltimore, MD Founded 1983 Mid-size

Practice focus: Workers' comp, SSDI, personal injury

Long-tenured Baltimore-area firm with crossover practice in workers' compensation and SSDI. Important when both claims run at the same time and the offsets need to be planned for in advance.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Same lawyers handle both the workers' comp and the SSDI, so the offset math at settlement is handled by one team that owns it.

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9

Hoffman, Comfort, Offutt, Scott & Halstad, LLP

Baltimore, MD Founded 1967 Mid-size

Practice focus: SSDI, family, estates, civil litigation

Mid-Maryland firm with an established SSDI hearing practice covering Baltimore County and Carroll County claimants. Comfortable in front of the Baltimore ODAR judges.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Carroll County base means quieter caseloads and more time per client than the downtown volume shops.

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10

Pinder Plotkin LLC

Baltimore, MD Founded 2012 Boutique

Practice focus: Personal injury, SSDI, workers' comp

Baltimore-area injury and disability boutique with a growing reputation for hearing-level SSDI work. Offers virtual case management and is responsive to clients with mobility limits — a small thing that matters when getting to the office is itself a challenge.

Fee structure
Contingency (federally capped)
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Built for clients who cannot easily travel. Virtual intake and video hearings handled smoothly.

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Not sure which firm is right for you?

Tell us about your situation and we will match you with vetted disability attorneys in Baltimore. Free, confidential, no obligation.

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What to expect from a Baltimore SSDI case

First call is free and runs 20–40 minutes. The firm pulls your SSA file (Form 1696/SSA-827) and your medical records. Initial application decisions take 4–8 months. If denied, Reconsideration is filed within 60 days and runs 3–6 months. Most cases turn on the Administrative Law Judge hearing, currently scheduled 10–14 months out at the Baltimore ODAR. After a favorable decision, back-pay arrives in 60–120 days and the firm's fee is paid directly out of that back-pay by SSA. The whole process from initial application to hearing decision currently runs 12–24 months in Baltimore.

What does a Baltimore disability lawyer cost?

Social Security disability representation is federally fee-capped: 25% of past-due benefits, current cap $9,200. No fee unless you win. There is no hourly billing in SSDI work. The only out-of-pocket cost is medical record copies, which most Baltimore firms front and only recoup if you win. VA disability is also contingency-capped (typically 20%). ERISA long-term-disability cases are typically contingency or hybrid, often with a 30–40% fee on recovered benefits plus a fee-shifting recovery against the insurer when available.

How to choose between these 10 firms

All ten firms above are competent practitioners. The right pick depends on the shape of your matter, not on which firm has the biggest billboard. The patterns we see:

Pick a boutique when your case is high-stakes but narrow in scope, you want a senior attorney doing the actual work, and you are willing to trade brand recognition for senior attention. Boutiques typically run $325-$525 per hour for the lead attorney and have lower overhead. The risk: if the firm gets conflicted out or busy, your case may stall.

Pick a mid-size firm when your matter has multiple moving parts, or when you need a steady team with a bench behind it. Mid-size firms in Baltimore typically charge $375-$650 per hour and are the natural fit for most disability cases.

Pick a large firm when the matter is genuinely large in dollars at stake, complex in legal issues, multi-jurisdictional, or institutionally sensitive. Large firms charge $450-$850 per hour but bring depth across practice areas. The risk: junior attorneys do most of the day-to-day work unless you push for senior involvement.

What is specific about disability cases in Baltimore

Baltimore is its own market. The procedure, the courts, and the strategy are city- and state-specific in ways that matter to your outcome.

The local courthouse matters. Baltimore City Circuit Court is the venue for most disability matters originating in Baltimore. The judges have published procedures, scheduling preferences, and trial calendars that an experienced local lawyer knows by heart. A firm that has never appeared in front of your judge is starting from scratch on the procedural side, and that costs you time and money.

Filing deadlines are strict. Statutes of limitations, notice requirements, pre-suit certifications, and Maryland procedural rules are unforgiving. A missed deadline often means a lost case — full stop. Your first conversation with a lawyer should include a written confirmation of the controlling deadlines.

Maryland law has specific quirks. Maryland statutes governing this practice area shape strategy, leverage, damages, and settlement value. A firm that primarily practices in another state is starting at a disadvantage even when admitted in Maryland.

Local juries and judges have patterns. Verdict patterns, judicial temperament, and settlement norms in Baltimore City Circuit Court are local knowledge. A trial-capable firm uses venue, judge assignment, and jury demographics strategically.

Red flags to watch for when picking a disability lawyer in Baltimore

Most firms in Baltimore are competent. A few are problematic. The patterns to avoid:

Guaranteed outcomes. No ethical attorney can guarantee a result. If a firm promises a specific recovery, dismissal, custody outcome, or settlement number, walk away. Ethics rules in every U.S. state prohibit guarantees, and any lawyer making them is either uninformed or willing to lie to get your business.

The disappearing partner. You meet a senior partner at intake, then never speak to them again. The case is handled by an unsupervised junior or a paralegal. Ask in writing who will be your day-to-day attorney, how often you will hear from them, and what happens when they are unavailable.

Pressure to sign immediately. Reputable firms give you the retainer in writing, time to read it, and the option to take it home. High-pressure intake is almost always a sign of a volume mill rather than a craftsperson's practice.

No verifiable track record. The firm should be able to point to verdicts, settlements, peer rankings, or bar association recognition. "We have helped thousands of clients" is marketing copy. Specific numbers, named cases, and third-party rankings are evidence.

Vague fee terms. "Do not worry about cost" is a red flag. Every legitimate Baltimore lawyer will give you a written engagement letter with the fee structure, what is covered, what triggers extra charges, and what happens if you fire them.

10 questions to ask in your free consultation

Most firms on this list offer a free or low-cost initial consultation. Use it. Bring a list of questions and write down the answers. Compare across at least two firms before you sign.

  1. Who, specifically, will handle my case day to day? Get a name. Get an email. Get their bar number so you can verify their standing.
  2. How many cases like mine have you handled in the last three years? You want a number, not a brochure line.
  3. How many of those went to trial? Settlement skill is important. Trial skill is what gives you leverage to settle well.
  4. What is your fee, and what does it cover? Get the answer in writing before you sign anything.
  5. What case expenses am I responsible for, and when? Out-of-pocket costs (filing fees, deposition costs, expert witnesses) surprise people. Ask now.
  6. What is the realistic range of outcomes for a case like mine? A good lawyer will give you a range. A bad one will promise the high end.
  7. How long will it take? Honest estimate, with the assumptions stated.
  8. How and how often will I hear from you? Email-only? Calls? Monthly updates? Set the expectation now.
  9. What happens if I want to change lawyers later? Rules allow it; the fee is sorted between firms. Make sure you understand the mechanics.
  10. What is the worst-case outcome for my case? A lawyer who refuses to discuss downside risk is selling you something.

Get matched with a vetted Baltimore disability firm

Tell us about your situation. We will forward your details to the firms on this list (or others nearby) best fit for your matter. No fees to you. Confidential.

Frequently asked questions

How long does a Social Security disability case take in Baltimore?

From initial application to ALJ hearing decision is currently 12–24 months. Initial decision is 4–8 months; Reconsideration adds 3–6 months; the ALJ hearing is scheduled 10–14 months after Reconsideration. After a favorable decision, your back-pay typically arrives in 60–120 days.

Is my SSDI case better at initial level or at hearing?

Statistically your odds improve dramatically at hearing. Initial-level approval in Maryland runs around 30–35%. Hearing-level approval with an experienced representative runs 50–65% depending on judge, medical file quality, and case theory. Most Baltimore firms add the most value at the hearing stage.

How much does a Baltimore disability lawyer cost?

All Social Security disability fees are federally capped at 25% of past-due benefits, with a current dollar cap of $9,200. No fee unless you win. You may owe out-of-pocket for medical record copies; most Baltimore firms front those costs.

Can I work while my disability case is pending?

You can earn up to the Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) threshold — $1,620/month for non-blind individuals in 2025 — without disqualifying yourself. Earnings above that almost always end your case. Tell your lawyer before you take any work.

Will I have to testify at my hearing?

Yes. The ALJ will ask about your medical conditions, daily activities, past work, and limitations. Your lawyer prepares you for this and is in the room with you. Hearings now mostly happen by video or phone, but in-person hearings can be requested at the Baltimore ODAR.

What evidence wins SSDI cases?

Detailed treating-source medical records showing function-by-function limitations (sitting, standing, lifting, concentration, attendance) for at least 12 consecutive months. A treating physician's medical source statement that tracks SSA listing criteria is often case-deciding.

Do I need a lawyer for the initial application?

Not strictly — but Maryland has one of the lower initial approval rates in the country. Many Baltimore firms take you only at the appeal stage; some will help with the initial application if you've already been denied once or have a complex medical history.

Can I appeal a denial without a hearing?

Yes — Reconsideration is the first appeal step and is decided on paper by a different SSA examiner. Reconsideration approval rates are low (around 10–15%). The real opportunity is the ALJ hearing that follows a Reconsideration denial.

One last thing. Choosing a lawyer is personal. Read the reviews. Call two or three firms before you sign. Ask each one: How many disability matters like mine have you handled in the last three years, and how many went to trial? The answer tells you what kind of lawyer you are actually hiring. — The LawFirmSquare team