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If you need to report a death or apply for survivor benefits, call 1-800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325-0778) between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. You’ll need to provide the deceased person ...
Finally, a surviving spouse may be eligible to receive benefits at any age if they take care of the deceased’s child who is under the age of 16 or has a disability and receives child benefits.
As with retirement benefits, the Social Security Administration (SSA) relies on a complex set of factors (such as your age, years of work, lifetime income) in determining a surviving spouse’s ...
Technically called RIB-LIM (which stands for retirement insurance benefit limit), the provision allows surviving spouses to collect up to 82.5% of the deceased’s full-retirement-age benefit.
Surviving spouse of any age who is caring for the deceased’s child who is younger than 16 or disabled and receiving child’s benefits. An unmarried child of the deceased who is either younger ...
You can collect up to 50% of your partner's full benefit amount in spousal benefits, and the average spouse of a retired worker collects just over $900 per month, according to 2024 data from the ...
A spouse may be eligible for survivor benefits if they're at least age 60 (or, if they have a disability, at least 50), were married for at least nine months before their spouse died and didn't ...
The Social Security Administration sends survivor benefits to about 6 million Americans every month. A widow, widower, child or other dependent might receive survivor benefits. The claim for ...