Picture this. Someone has a degree and 20 years of solid experience. Their body doesn’t cooperate with a regular office setup — transportation is limited, adaptive equipment costs a fortune, and every day comes with its own set of challenges. Remote work sounds like the perfect fit: work from your own space, on your own schedule, when your brain and body allow.
But the small gigs quickly show why they’re not the answer. Four $200 contracts add up to $800 gross a month. After self-employment taxes, chasing payments, tracking hours across platforms, and filing the mandatory Social Security Administration report by the 10th of the next month, you’re lucky to clear $600–$650 net. And if the total hours across those gigs hit just 81 in one month? You get harshly punished by losing one of nine precious trial work periods — where you can earn any amount and still keep your full SSDI check. And after those 9 months are used up, buckle up because the rules get much stricter.
People in this spot say the same thing over and over: The small stuff isn’t worth it. And the bigger, better-paying remote roles? For people like me, those feel even scarier.
Those better-paying remote jobs actually exist right now
These are senior-level roles that match someone with two decades of experience. As of February 2026, the numbers look like this (sourced from current salary data on Built In):
- Senior Technical Writer (fully remote): average $108,000–$136,000 per year. Top listings show $135,895 average. https://builtin.com/salaries/us/remote/senior-technical-writer
- Senior Project Manager (remote): average $124,000–$141,000, with remote averages at $140,791. https://builtin.com/salaries/us/remote/senior-project-manager
- Senior Business Analyst or Process Consultant (remote): average $108,000–$122,000, often higher, with remote averages at $122,348. https://builtin.com/salaries/us/remote/senior-business-analyst
These are single-client contracts or W-2 roles — not four scattered gigs. One solid one at that level can actually cover the real costs of disability: a wheelchair at $20,000 retail, a modified vehicle at $70,000, all of it getting more expensive every year.
The scheduling reality that makes a traditional 9-to-5 impossible
Here’s where it gets real for a lot of people. Someone on Texas’ CLASS waiver program (the state’s in-home Medicaid waiver that pays for necessary daily therapies like massage and physical therapy) might need fixed appointments just to stay functional — massage therapy four times a week or two hours in a standing frame four days a week. These aren’t optional or fun; they’re necessary to manage pain, circulation, and mobility.
The problem isn’t just the person’s schedule. The massage therapist has her own life, her own clients, her own family. If she can only come at 10 a.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, a standard 9-to-5 office job (even remote but with fixed meetings) creates conflicts that no one can easily shift. The same goes for other in-home supports. The CLASS program is flexible in theory, but the providers’ availability isn’t.
A high-paying remote role with core hours that overlap those appointments can quickly turn into an impossible juggling act. If a job is lost, actual survival demands immediacy — reapplications, medical reviews, possible gaps in coverage.
Why the system makes this feel like a trap
The rules were written decades ago for people who were either totally unable to work or heading back to full-time factory jobs. They weren’t designed for 2026 remote knowledge work, where someone can deliver serious value on their good days and need real flexibility on the bad ones.
Social Security requires reporting every dollar of earnings every month because the agency is terrified of overpayments. In fiscal year 2025 they recorded approximately $9.3 billion in overpayments alone (see the official SSA FY 2025 Agency Financial Report: https://www.ssa.gov/finance/2025/Full%20FY%202025%20AFR.pdf). They want to know immediately so they don’t have to chase money back later. It protects the system, but it freezes capable people who could be earning real money from home.
Texas Medicaid adds its own layer. Cross certain income or asset lines without the right planning and coverage can drop until things get spent down. No automatic “good job for trying” safety net.
This hits home for a lot of people. In my own case, I genuinely love to work. I already have a small job that Social Security knows about, but because of how the rules are structured, it doesn’t pay much. To satisfy that workaholic part of me, I do a lot of volunteer work, run this blog, and host the Gaming Uncensored Podcast (with possibly another one coming) — none of which brings in any money. Like everyone else, I could really use the extra income for normal life stuff: the house, the vehicle, everyday bills, helping family, and trying to develop the next big idea that might actually change things.
The system is so complicated and convoluted that I couldn’t have put together a post like this even a year ago without spending dozens of dedicated hours researching everything (Thanks Grok.). My last several posts have all been about trying to figure out how to become a truly functional, independent member of society.
If it’s this hard for me, I can’t imagine how much harder it must be for people who have even less control over their bodies and daily circumstances. It would be far easier to just coast, take what the government says you’re worth, constantly struggle with caregivers because the base pay isn’t enough, and spend all your energy just trying to maintain a semi-comfortable life.
Bottom line
The current setup does not encourage someone with real skills to test high-paying remote work. It turns every decent opportunity into a potential minefield. Small gigs multiply the headache for pennies. Big remote roles exist, pay enough to matter, and could actually improve quality of life. But the unknown risk of losing the job and restarting the benefits circus keeps too many talented people on the sidelines.
Me? I’m rolling along the sidelines wanting to jump in the game — but the ref won’t stop blowing his whistle.
I have the mind, the education, and the drive — I just need a system that doesn’t punish me for trying.