Who is eligible for Social Security survivor benefits?

Who is eligible for Social Security survivor benefits?

A widow or widower age 60 or older (age 50 or older if disabled) is eligible for Social Security survivor benefits provided the couple was married at least nine months. There is no age limit for a widow or widower caring for dependent children under age 16.

How long do you receive survivors benefits?

Generally, spouses and ex-spouses become eligible for survivor benefits at age 60 — 50 if they are disabled — provided they do not remarry before that age. These benefits are payable for life unless the spouse begins collecting a retirement benefit that is greater than the survivor benefit.

How much does a spouse get for survivor benefits?

As noted above, if you have reached full retirement age, you get 100 percent of the benefit your spouse was (or would have been) collecting. If you claim survivor benefits between age 60 (50 if disabled) and your full retirement age, you will receive between 71.5 percent and 99 percent of the deceased’s benefit.

What do you do after your husband dies?

Financial checklist: 13 things you need to do when your spouse…Call your attorney. Contact the Social Security Administration. Locate the will. Notify your spouse’s employer. Ask your spouse’s former employers. Check with the Veteran’s Administration. Notify all insurance companies, including life and health. Change all property titles.