Mail forwarding services. I do not know about SSI but South Dakota, Nevada, Texas, and Florida seem to be the best states to reside in if u wish to travel full time. Mail forwards are prevalent in these sates. I think being free and with nature can heal both body and mind. Best Wishes!Scorpio64 said:I would like to travel the country and have health issues. I am hoping to do this with a friend. Just don't know how to do it and keep my income and insurance. Plus I h ave to be able to receive mail.
Magda Wise said:I'm on SSI, took 8 really long years to get it. My worker has told me that if I leave my state (physical address) for more than 30 consecutive days that I will lose my benefits. That I would have to reapply and hope for the best.
This is something you must check in depth. I believe you can easily keep your SSI and travel longer. I fear you are being told wrong info on this part. You need to find out the real truth about your benefits and travel.
I also have my states medicaid and that is only good in my state but they 'may' pay for ER visits in another state.
And I am on HUD's low income housing which states I will lose my apartment if I'm gone for more than 30 consecutive days. Again, I would make sure this is in truth and how it applies to longer travel. Again this feels like you have been told sketchy information.
And last but not least, on all of these programs I'm not allowed to have over $2000 or I obviously don't need help and will lose it. (so much for an emergency fund in case I break down....) Money in a bank that can be traced and seen. You can easily save money in a cookie jar or under the mattress : I know I would LOL and no one would be the wiser of what I had.
I'm in Iowa, which has no free camping, it's too hot in the summer and too cold in the winter. And it's a long long way to the RTR, but I plan to go and do some other exploring. There is free camping in Iowa. Free dispersed campsites. I checked freecamping.com and Iowa shows a few dispersed campgrounds and many very cheap campsites. In your area and places you wish to travel? No idea but there are some you can take advantage of if wanted.
Be sure to talk to your SS worker and find out the rules so you don't accidentally break them and end up in a bad situation. SSI has different rules than SSDI. SSI is way more restrictive.
If anyone knows how to work around the 30 day rule I'd really like to know about it so I can spend a little extra time out west this winter.
Question on the 30 day window-Moxadox said:receives services out of state past her 30 day window, not only will those services not be covered, but she will very suddenly lose all of her benefits and possibly be evicted from her public housing.
Yup, you got it. 'Caid is a state based system. They receive federal money but it is administered by each state, which makes for a quilt with 50+ patches (+ for PR and all the other colonies). This is why we need Medicare For All!crofter said:Question on the 30 day window-
This also applies to food stamp cards? I think the transactions can be tracked (and are tracked) so if you are buying all your groceries out of state the agency could pull your benefits. This happened to me when I traveled from Montana to Washington looking for work. Montana unemployment continued to pay until I was working, but food stamps stopped after I started buying groceries there.
Also my medicaid was cancelled after I received my first paycheck in another state (different move). That is how I wound up with no medical insurance while camp hosting - even though the job was seasonal. Due to job location being in another state and I was living at the job site, a requirement of camp hosting jobs, that disqualified me for benefits. Though Medicaid is a Federal benefit, it doesn't seem to travel from one state to another.
I think there should be an exception for migrants like us who travel. You should be able to base your benefits off a home state address, not a temporary physical address.
~crofter
No. The rules are incredibly strict, and they know how to monitor things like prescriptions filled out of state, and other tell-tale signs that you've been gone too long. They figure that if you can afford to travel, you must not need the services. This is really hard on people who must travel to care for a sick loved one, for instance.Riverman said:I had no idea the rules were so strict... can even take an extended vacation?
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