KEY POINTS
  • Supplemental Security Income, or SSI, benefits provide monthly income to low-income disabled, elderly and blind Americans.
  • The program currently provides monthly checks to about 7.7 million Americans, but excludes residents of certain U.S. territories.
  • The Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that residents of Puerto Rico should not be eligible for SSI benefits, reinforcing a gap in federal benefits for people who would otherwise qualify.
The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C.

Efforts to expand a federal program for disabled, elderly and blind Americans suffered a setback on Thursday when the Supreme Court ruled that Puerto Rico residents should be excluded from receiving those benefits.

The program, called Supplemental Security Income, or SSI, currently provides monthly checks to about 7.7 million Americans who qualify. But because it is aimed at people with low income and few resources, the program comes with strict income and asset limit rules.