Social security survivor benefits: 10 things spouses need to know
Social security survivor benefits: 10 things spouses need to know"
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Social Security was conceived as a guaranteed retirement benefit for America’s workers, but it quickly grew to provide for their families as well. Four years after the program’s inception in
1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed legislation extending benefits to deceased workers’ wives (it was 1939, after all), minor children and, in rare instances, aged parents. Over
the years, survivor benefits became gender-neutral and expanded further to cover divorced spouses as well as widowers and widows. In March 2025 they accounted for 8.4 percent of Social
Security recipients, providing payments to more than 5.8 million people. These payments, calculated on the basis of the late loved one’s lifetime earnings, offer a crucial measure of
financial protection in the aftermath of loss. Here are 10 key things spouses should know about Social Security survivor benefits. 1. YOU BECOME ELIGIBLE AT AGE 60 … USUALLY. In most cases,
the widow or widower of a deceased worker can begin collecting a survivor benefit as early as age 60 (although the monthly payment increases if you wait — see number 4). There are
circumstances, however, in which you can start sooner. Surviving spouses may be able to begin drawing benefits at age 50 if they have a disability, and at any age if caring for a child of
the late beneficiary who is younger than 16 or has a disability and is entitled to childhood Social Security benefits on that basis. JOIN OUR FIGHT TO PROTECT SOCIAL SECURITY You’ve worked
hard and paid into Social Security with every paycheck. But recently, we've heard from thousands of Americans who want to know more about the future of Social Security. Here’s what you
can do: 2. THERE’S NO TIME LIMIT FOR SPOUSES TO CLAIM THEM. You don’t have to apply for survivor benefits within a set time after your partner’s passing or at your earliest eligibility age.
In most situations, you can decide when to claim them, or whether to claim them, in a way that best serves your financial situation. (If you have children, there is a time limit on their
eligibility; in most cases, they can only collect survivor benefits on a late parent's record until they turn 18.) But it's best to report a death to Social Security as soon as
possible. Often this can be done through a funeral home; you can also report it directly to Social Security by calling the agency’s national phone line (800-772-1213) or contacting your
local office. Reporting may also trigger a one-time, $255 death benefit for a surviving spouse, but that payment does not affect survivor benefits. [embedded content] 3. YOUR MATE DIDN’T
HAVE TO HAVE BEEN GETTING BENEFITS. You can collect survivor benefits even if your spouse hadn’t yet claimed Social Security at the time of death. In this case, survivor benefits will
typically be based on the late spouse’s full retirement benefit — the amount they would have been entitled to collect from Social Security had they filed at full retirement age, or FRA (66
and 8 months for people born in 1958, 66 and 10 months for those born in 1959 and 67 for those born in 1960 or later).
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