Gary Allord applied for disability benefits from the Social Security Administration in 1996. His application has since languished in a cycle of administrative review and litigation. Prior to this appeal, it was considered by three Administrative Law Judges (ALJs), three federal district courts, and this court. After our initial remand of Allord’s case to the Social Security Administration in 2006, a new ALJ determined that Allord was ineligible for disability benefits, and the agency adopted his determination as its final decision. Al-lord again sought relief in the district court, and the district court remanded the case for further proceedings. It found that aspects of the final decision did not comport with this court’s earlier opinion, but that the record did not support a judicial award of benefits. Allord then appealed, asking this court instead to order the Commissioner to award him benefits. Because the record does not compel a finding that Allord was disabled as of the date he was last insured, we affirm.
I. Background
Allord currently suffers from severe post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Allord retired as a field-grade officer from the United States Marine Corps (USMC) in 1987. As a junior officer, he served as a reconnaissance platoon leader and then as a company commander during consecutive tours of duty in Vietnam. During those tours, Allord endured gruesome and traumatic events that gave rise to the disability he now suffers.
Allord applied for disability insurance benefits from the Social Security Administration on October 1, 1996, claiming to have been disabled by PTSD since the date of his USMC retirement. The parties agree that his history of Social Security contributions made Allord last eligible for disability insurance benefits on December 31, 1992 (his “date last insured”). Accordingly, Allord had to show that he was disabled under the Social Security Act and its implementing regulations as of that date in order to begin receiving disability benefits.
A. Procedural History
Rather than detail the seemingly interminable procedural history of Allord’s case, we will summarize the steps leading to this appeal. After a local disability agency denied his claim, Allord received a hearing before ALJ Christine Benagh, who denied his claim. Allord sought review in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, and the Commissioner of the Social Security Administration stipulated to a remand for further proceedings, including the consideration of new medical evidence and expert testimony. ALJ Guy Arthur next considered and denied Allord’s application. Allord again sought federal court review, and the District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin granted the Commissioner’s motion for summary judgment. Allord appealed that judgment to this court in 2006. We reversed the judgment and remanded the case to the Social Security Administration for further proceedings consistent with our opinion.
Allord v. Barnhart,
Allord’s application was next considered by ALJ John Pleuss, who denied it once again. As in each previous iteration, the Social Security Administration’s Appeals Council declined to review the ALJ’s determination, thus making it the Social Security Administration’s final decision. Al-lord again sought review in the Western District of Wisconsin, asking the court to *414 reverse the administrative decision and order the Commissioner to award him disability benefits. On March 25, 2010' — 4,923 days after Allord initially applied for benefits — the district court remanded the case to the Social Security Administration, declining to instruct the Commissioner to calculate and award benefits based on the record before it. It is that judgment we consider in this appeal.
B. Most Recent Proceedings Below
In his 2008 decision, ALJ Pleuss acknowledged the infirmities that our 2006 opinion identified in ALJ Arthur’s decision. He noted that ALJ Arthur had erred by improperly discrediting the testimony of Allord’s acquaintance, Melissa ChappellWhite. He also noted that the law did not require contemporaneous medical evidence for an award of benefits and that Chappell-White’s testimony could nevertheless have supplemented the opinion of Dr. Aphrodite Matsakis, who treated Allord shortly after his date last insured. He also gave some weight to the finding of the Department of Veterans Affairs that Al-lord was wholly disabled as of 1996. ALJ Pleuss then adopted the findings and conclusions of ALJ Arthur’s decision, though ostensibly only to the extent they were consistent with our 2006 opinion.
ALJ Pleuss found that Allord was severely impaired by depression and PTSD as of his date last insured, but that neither condition met or equaled impairments listed in Social Security Administration regulations such that Allord would qualify as disabled at that stage. So ALJ Pleuss proceeded to determine whether Allord was capable of performing past relevant work or other work for which jobs existed in significant numbers in Wisconsin. He described Allord’s residual functional capacity and vocational factors as of his date last insured to a vocational expert, William Dingess. He then asked Dingess hypothetical questions incorporating Allord’s work capacities. Dingess testified that such an individual would be able to perform several thousand jobs in the Wisconsin area, including working as a janitor, hand packer, assembler, or industrial inspector. ALJ Pleuss decided that a conclusion of “not disabled” was required under the law because Allord was capable of performing other work that existed in significant numbers in the regional and national economies as of his date last insured.
Allord appealed the decision under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), and the district court reviewed the Social Security Administration’s reasoning to determine whether substantial evidence supported the denial. The district court found two infirmities in the Social Security Administration’s final decision. First, ALJ Pleuss had failed to follow this court’s instructions on remand regarding the assessment of ChappellWhite’s credibility. Second, ALJ Pleuss failed to explain convincingly why he had discounted Dr. Matsakis’s opinion and testimony while adopting the opinion of another physician, Dr. Allen Hauer, who had not treated Allord and who was not an expert in PTSD. These infirmities led the district court to reverse the administrative decision and remand the case for further proceedings. Although the district court recognized that “the ease has been pending far too long,” it declined to enter a judgment instructing the Commissioner to calculate and award benefits to Allord. It noted that some factual issues needed resolution, such that the record did not exclusively support a finding of disability as of Allord’s date last insured.
Allord timely appealed the district court’s decision.
*415 II. Analysis
Allord asks this court to reverse the district court’s judgment (remanding the case to the Social Security Administration for further proceedings) and then remand this case to the Social Security Administration ourselves with an order to the Commissioner directing him to award Allord disability benefits. The Commissioner, in turn, does not dispute the propriety of the district court’s remand order. 1 The Commissioner instead argues that a judicially ordered award of benefits would be inappropriate given the record in this case and that the district court’s order should be affirmed. The only issue we consider, therefore, is whether the record compelled a finding that Allord was disabled at the time his insured status expired in December 1992.
Judicial review of Administration decisions under the Social Security Act is governed by 42 U.S.C. § 405(g).
Jones v. Astrue,
We ordinarily review the district court’s judgment
de novo,
meaning we review the Administration’s final decision denying Social Security benefits directly to determine if the decision was supported by substantial evidence.
O’Connor-Spinner v. Astrue,
In order to secure the relief he seeks in this appeal, Allord must have established that he was disabled on or before his date last insured. 42 U.S.C. § 423(a)(1)(A), (c)(1);
Briscoe,
On appeal, Allord does not directly challenge the district court’s finding, but rather focuses on the infirmities of the ALJ’s decision. While those arguments are convincing, none of them persuades us that the district court erred in its assessment of whether the record compelled a finding of disability as of Allord’s date last insured. We have previously held that “we owe no deference to the district court in the social security context, and that [an appellant] is not necessarily obliged to address its analysis,”
White v. Barnhart,
The bottom line is that Allord provided no arguments tending to undermine the district court’s conclusions regarding the record. He only contends that three considerations support a judicial award of benefits. He first argues that the opinion of his treating physician, Dr. Matsakis, should be given controlling effect and that it shows him to have been disabled as of his date last insured. Second, he argues that the Administration’s obduracy in these proceedings entitles him to a judicial award. Third, he argues that it would be futile to remand for further proceedings when the Administration will only continue to reach the same denial decision. Each lacks merit.
Allord argues that Dr. Matsakis’s opinion should be given controlling weight. He bases this contention on the following factors: she was his treating physician, her opinion was supported by substantial evidence, she was found to be an expert in PTSD, and her testimony was not rebutted by any other expert in PTSD. Dr. Matsakis opined that it would be highly improbable that Allord was not totally disabled as of his date last insured, given the nature and progression of PTSD. She based this opinion on her evaluations and treatment of Allord after his date last insured, as well as on Chappell-White’s descriptions of Allord’s earlier behavior.
Allord is correct that the Social Security Administration is bound to give a treating physician’s opinion controlling weight if her “opinion on the issue(s) of the nature and severity of [the applicant’s] impairments) is well-supported by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory diagnostic techniques and is not inconsistent with
*417
the other substantial evidence in [the applicant’s] ease record.” 20 C.F.R. § 404.1527(d)(2). If an ALJ does not afford controlling weight to such an opinion, he or she must articulate sufficient reasons for not doing so.
Larson v. Astrue,
Instead, Allord turns to his second contention. He argues that the Social Security Administration has been obdurate in its repeated consideration of his application, refusing to follow controlling regulations and the law of our earlier opinion and controlling regulations. He cites
Wilder v. Apfel
as an example of this court’s willingness to directly award benefits when the Administration refuses to apply controlling law and drags out the appeals process.
Allord finally argues that any remand for further consideration would be futile. He suggests that the Social Security Administration is determined to deny his claim even if it must disregard evidence and this court’s opinions to do so. He presents no legal authority supporting the idea that futility alone warrants an award of benefits, and such a line of reasoning would suffer from the same fatal flaw as an award based on obduracy alone. “It remains true that an award of benefits is appropriate only if all factual issues have been resolved and the record supports a finding of disability. This is so because a court does not have the authority to award disability benefits on grounds other than those provided under 42 U.S.C. § 423.”
Briscoe,
*418 Given Allord’s current condition and what experts now know about PTSD— especially its potential for delayed onset followed by inexorable progression — it is both possible and reasonable to infer that Allord was disabled on his date last insured. But the record evidence is not such that a reasonable person could reach no conclusion other than finding Allord was disabled before December 31, 1992. It remains to be determined by the Administration — with, we expect, promptness and an attention to detail lacking in previous iterations — whether the available evidence indicates that an award of benefits is appropriate for Allord. For purposes of this appeal, however, reasonable persons could easily agree with the district court’s judgment. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in remanding Allord’s case to the Social Security Administration for further proceedings instead of remanding with instructions for the Commissioner to calculate and award benefits.
III. Conclusion
Although we are loath to extend this litigation even further, the record before the district court did not necessitate a finding that Allord was disabled as of his date last insured. Accordingly, we Affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Commissioner acknowledges that the Administration's final decision was not supported by substantial evidence. Because the Commissioner has not cross-appealed the remand for further proceedings, we do not reach the sufficiency of the ALJ’s decision-making or his adherence to the law of our previous case. The district court's finding that the ALJ's decision was not supported by substantial evidence is not at issue in this appeal.
. The Supreme Court has held that "a Social Security disability claimant seeking court reversal of an agency decision denying benefits may appeal a district court order remanding the case to the agency for further proceedings.”
Forney v. Apfel,
. We note that at least one other Court of Appeals has imposed a time limit on the Administration when remanding a case.
Butts v. Barnhart,
