Social Security Survivor Benefits Guide
Method used: SSA survivor-benefit eligibility rules, spouse and ex-spouse rules, age-based claiming rules, and household benefit coordination
Best for: Surviving spouses, surviving divorced spouses, children, and families trying to understand who may qualify for survivor benefits
Supports: Survivor-benefit eligibility checks, monthly-benefit expectations, claiming-age planning, and household income strategy
Comparison style: Plain-English explanation of who may qualify, how much survivor benefits may pay, and when claiming may affect the amount
Use case: Understanding Social Security survivor benefits after a worker’s death and deciding when survivor benefits may fit into a broader retirement or family-income plan
Important note: Educational guidance only. Actual survivor benefits depend on the deceased worker’s earnings record, your relationship to the worker, your age, disability status, remarriage status, and other eligibility rules. SSA says survivor benefits may be available to a spouse, ex-spouse, child, or dependent parent of someone who worked and paid Social Security taxes.
What This Survivor Benefits Guide Helps You Understand
Social Security survivor benefits can help replace part of the income lost when a worker dies. SSA says survivor benefits provide monthly payments to eligible family members of people who worked and paid Social Security taxes before they died.
This guide explains:
- who may qualify for survivor benefits
- when a surviving spouse may claim
- how survivor benefits for divorced spouses work
- how much a survivor may receive
- how children may qualify
- how work and remarriage may affect eligibility
- how survivor benefits interact with your own retirement benefits
For many readers, this page is closely connected to Social Security timing decisions. If you are also deciding when to claim retirement benefits on your own record, use our Social Security Break-Even Calculator to compare early versus delayed claiming strategies.
Quick Answer: Who Can Get Survivor Benefits?
SSA says you may qualify for survivor benefits if you are the:
- spouse
- divorced spouse
- child
- dependent parent
of someone who worked and paid Social Security taxes before they died. Surviving spouses may generally qualify at age 60 or older, or at age 50–59 if they have a disability. A surviving spouse may also qualify at any age in some cases if caring for the deceased worker’s child.
Who May Qualify for Social Security Survivor Benefits
Surviving spouses
SSA says a surviving spouse may be eligible if they:
- are age 60 or older, or age 50–59 if disabled
- were married for at least 9 months before the worker’s death
- did not remarry before age 60, or before age 50 if disabled
SSA also says you may be eligible regardless of age in some cases if you are caring for the child of the person who died.
Surviving divorced spouses
SSA says a surviving divorced spouse may qualify if:
- the marriage lasted at least 10 years
- the ex-spouse is age 60 or older, or age 50–59 if disabled
- the ex-spouse is unmarried, subject to survivor remarriage rules
SSA also says a surviving divorced spouse may qualify even if the worker remarried.
Children
SSA says children may qualify if they are unmarried and are:
- age 17 or younger
- age 18–19 and in full-time elementary or secondary school
- any age if they developed a disability at age 21 or younger
SSA also notes that under certain circumstances, stepchildren, adopted children, grandchildren, and stepgrandchildren may qualify.
Dependent parents
SSA says dependent parents may qualify if they are age 62 or older and were financially supported by the worker who died.
How Much Can Survivor Benefits Pay?
SSA says surviving spouses and ex-spouses may generally receive 71.5% to 100% of the deceased spouse’s benefit, depending on age at claim. SSA says the payment starts at 71.5% and rises the longer you wait, with up to 100% available at Full Retirement Age for survivor benefits.
SSA also says:
- children generally get 75% of the parent’s benefit
- there is a family maximum
- ex-spouses do not count toward the family maximum
SSA also notes that a spouse or some minor children may be eligible for a one-time lump-sum death payment of $255.
When Can a Surviving Spouse Claim?
SSA says a surviving spouse may claim:
- at age 60 or older
- at age 50–59 if disabled
- at any age in some cases if caring for the deceased spouse’s child who is under 16 or has a qualifying disability
The claiming age matters because monthly survivor benefits generally increase the longer a surviving spouse waits, up to Full Retirement Age for survivor benefits. SSA says you can receive up to 100% at that point.
Survivor Benefits vs Your Own Retirement Benefit
SSA says if you are eligible for both survivor benefits and another benefit, you generally receive the higher payment, not both added together. SSA also says you may switch later. For example, a person may start with survivor benefits and later switch to their own retirement benefit, or the other way around depending on what is higher.
This is one of the most important reasons survivor-benefit decisions should not be treated the same way as a basic retirement break-even comparison.
Remarriage Rules That Matter
SSA says remarriage before age 60 may prevent entitlement to survivor benefits, unless that later marriage ends or another exception applies. SSA also says remarriage after age 60 generally does not prevent entitlement on the prior deceased spouse’s earnings record. For disabled widow(er)s and surviving divorced spouses, remarriage after age 50 may not block entitlement under the disability rules.
Working While Receiving Survivor Benefits
SSA says you may be able to work and get survivor benefits, but earnings limits may apply if you are younger than Full Retirement Age. If that situation applies to you, read our Working While Claiming Social Security: 2026 Earnings Test Guide to understand how work income can temporarily reduce payments.
Why Survivor Benefits Matter in Household Planning
Survivor benefits are one of the biggest reasons married couples should not make claiming decisions based only on a simple break-even age.
A claiming strategy may affect:
- current retirement income
- survivor income after one spouse dies
- when a surviving spouse should switch benefits
- whether a higher monthly benefit later may protect the household better
If you are comparing retirement claiming ages for a worker’s own benefit, use our Social Security Break-Even Calculator alongside this guide.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Assuming survivor benefits are the same as spousal benefits
They are not the same. Survivor rules, ages, and percentages differ from normal spousal-benefit rules.
Mistake 2: Assuming you can receive both your full retirement benefit and a full survivor benefit
SSA says if you are eligible for survivor and another benefit, you receive the higher payment rather than both added together.
Mistake 3: Assuming divorced spouses cannot qualify
SSA says some surviving divorced spouses may qualify if the marriage lasted at least 10 years and the other conditions are met.
Mistake 4: Ignoring claiming age
SSA says monthly survivor payments increase the longer a spouse waits, up to Full Retirement Age for survivor benefits.
Mistake 5: Ignoring work rules
A surviving spouse under Full Retirement Age may still face earnings limits if working while receiving survivor benefits.
Step-by-Step: How to Check Whether You May Qualify
- Identify your relationship to the worker who died
- Check your age and whether disability rules apply
- Review whether remarriage rules affect eligibility
- Estimate whether you may qualify as a spouse, divorced spouse, child, or dependent parent
- Consider whether survivor benefits may be higher than your own retirement benefit
- If you are working, review earnings-limit rules before claiming
- Compare household claiming strategy with our Social Security Break-Even Calculator if you are also deciding when to claim retirement benefits
Who This Page Is Best For
This guide is especially useful for:
- widows and widowers
- surviving divorced spouses
- families with dependent children
- adults helping parents or relatives understand survivor options
- married couples who want to understand how survivor income fits into claiming strategy
Frequently Asked Questions
Who qualifies for Social Security survivor benefits?
SSA says survivor benefits may be available to a spouse, divorced spouse, child, or dependent parent of someone who worked and paid Social Security taxes before they died.
At what age can a widow or widower claim survivor benefits?
SSA says a surviving spouse may generally claim at age 60 or older, or age 50–59 if disabled. A spouse may also qualify at any age in some cases if caring for the deceased worker’s child.
How much can a surviving spouse receive?
SSA says a surviving spouse or ex-spouse may receive about 71.5% to 100% of the deceased spouse’s benefit, depending on age at claim, with up to 100% at Full Retirement Age for survivor benefits.
Can a surviving divorced spouse receive benefits?
Yes. SSA says a surviving divorced spouse may qualify if the marriage lasted at least 10 years and other survivor-benefit rules are met.
Can I receive both my own retirement benefit and a survivor benefit?
SSA says if you are eligible for survivor benefits and another benefit, you generally receive the higher payment rather than both payments added together.
Can I work and still receive survivor benefits?
Possibly. SSA says you may be able to work and receive survivor benefits, but earnings limits may apply if you are younger than Full Retirement Age.
Methodology and Sources
This guide is based primarily on SSA’s official survivor-benefit guidance, including:
- who may qualify
- spouse and surviving divorced spouse rules
- age-based claiming rules
- estimated survivor percentages
- child and dependent parent eligibility
- work and reporting considerations
Final Takeaway
Social Security survivor benefits can materially affect household financial security after a worker’s death. SSA says surviving spouses, divorced spouses, children, and dependent parents may qualify in some cases, and that a surviving spouse’s monthly payment may range from about 71.5% to 100% of the deceased worker’s benefit depending on age at claim. Survivor planning is one of the biggest reasons a household should not rely only on a simple retirement break-even number when making claiming decisions.
Author
Author: CalculatorGeek Editorial Team
Last reviewed: April 2026
The CalculatorGeek Editorial Team reviews this content for clarity, consistency, methodology, and usefulness. This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult the Social Security Administration or a qualified professional for personalised guidance.
References
- Social Security Administration: Receiving Benefits While Working
- Social Security Administration: 2026 COLA Fact Sheet
- Social Security Administration: Special Earnings Limit Rule
- Social Security Administration FAQ: What happens if I work and get Social Security retirement benefits?
