Thank you for sharing. I don't have SSI. I have retirement SS.
In case you didn't see it added at the bottom of my multi-quote post, this is what I wrote about SSDI:
To Everyone: A couple of years ago, I was talking to a customer svc rep at SS. At the end, he offered to sign me up for SSI, to change my SS to SSDI. He said I would get $5 a month more and that it was not much but every little bit helps. He seemed to be very nervous, as if he was afraid I would say no. Well, I didn't want to keep talking to him and I didn't want to be bothered. I asked him if I could do it myself online. I think I had seen the offer when I visited MySocialSecurity online.
He said yes I could but I felt that he did not want me to do that. But throughout the conversation, I thought he sounded pressured and stressed, like he was sweating. And I thought that it was bizarre that he was telling me, in order to get me to allow him to sign me up, that $5 more a month would help me. It was like he was trying to not appear pushy but was trying to coerce me all the same.
Well, I did look online and started to apply but did not like the questions that were being asked so I aborted. I was doing some research and accidentally discovered that when a person signs up for SSI, that they give the administration the right to look into their bank accounts more than with just SS. Why didn't he tell me that, give that disclaimer so I could make an informed decision? I thought it was deceit. I was so grateful that I did not do it.
And my question is, why does it matter to them what we have in the bank? And why would they be bribing people to sign up for SSI? The way that he was behaving makes me wonder if they are receiving bonuses for everyone they coerce to sign up for SSI?
If I eat very little meat, small meals, one meal a day, rarely have to buy medicine, don't eat out, live a simple life and my savings grow to $25,000 because of that, why should it matter to the SS Admin or to anyone else? Why would any organization want to stop helping you or reduce the help if you are able to save? Especially if you are saving towards a better life?
Yes, it's better to live in your own place, even a tiny house or shed-to-home. I'm glad for you. I am working on it.

It's just not easy having to first live in subsidized housing and then make the leap to your own place through saving. You could call where I live
HUD Housing. It is actually private housing subsidized through HUD. I make the distinction because these types of senior affordable housing properties are better than the properties managed by local housing authorities.