
Many applicants assume their diagnosis should be enough, or that a supportive doctor automatically leads to approval. CPP disability does not work that way.
A denial usually comes down to one issue: the evidence in the file did not clearly prove that the applicant met the legal test.
Decision-makers are reviewing whether the evidence shows that your condition prevents you from regularly pursuing any substantially gainful occupation and that the condition is prolonged.
They need clear answers about symptoms, frequency, practical limitations, work reliability, alternative work capacity, and likely prognosis.
The main denial drivers are medical evidence that is too general, failure to prove you cannot do any job, unclear functional limitations, inconsistent records, lack of evidence about failed work attempts, and insufficient proof that the condition is prolonged.
Many files focus heavily on symptoms but not enough on how those symptoms affect a work setting.
A diagnosis tells the decision-maker what condition exists. Functional evidence tells them what that condition prevents you from doing.
The stronger the connection between symptoms and work limitations, the stronger the case.
A stronger case usually involves updated medical reports, more detail on functional limitations, explanation of why alternative work is not realistic, documentation of treatment history and prognosis, and records of failed work attempts.
Consistency across all evidence submitted is critical.
What exact reason did Service Canada give? What important details were missing? Did the file explain why you cannot do any work, not just your old job? Was the long-term nature of the condition documented clearly?
A claimant with severe back pain was denied because the file showed pain and imaging results but did not explain why sedentary work was impossible. On appeal, the medical evidence was expanded to describe inability to sit for more than 15 minutes, medication side effects causing drowsiness, and failed attempts at modified work. Once the case focused on function rather than diagnosis, the claim was approved.
DCAC helps identify the real reason the claim failed, strengthen the medical evidence, and rebuild the case around the legal criteria that matter most.
If your CPP disability claim was denied, get a free case assessment with DCAC and find out what weaknesses in your file need to be fixed.
DCAC will assess your particular situation and provide prompt feedback on your chances of a positive outcome.