April 14, 2026 Update: Survivor benefits unchanged by 2.8% COLA (applied to the deceased worker’s record). $255 lump-sum death payment still in effect. Report deaths promptly to avoid overpayments.
Important: You cannot apply for survivor benefits online. Call 1-800-772-1213 or visit your local office. Have the deceased’s SSN ready.
Social Security Survivor Benefits 2026 – Complete Guide
Financial support for widows, widowers, children, divorced spouses, and dependent parents after a covered worker dies. Real-world examples, step-by-step process, lump-sum payment, Medicare timeline & more.
✓ Who Qualifies for Survivor Benefits in 2026?
Widow(er)
Age 60+ (50+ if disabled), married 9+ months, or caring for child under 16.
Divorced Spouse
Married 10+ years, unmarried, age 60+ (50+ if disabled).
Children
Under 18 (or 19 if full-time student) or disabled before age 22, unmarried.
Dependent Parents
Age 62+, received at least 50% support from the deceased.
How Much Can You Receive? (2026 Rates)
| Survivor Type | Monthly Benefit % | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Widow(er) at Full Retirement Age | 100% | Of deceased’s benefit |
| Widow(er) age 60–66 | 71.5%–99% | Increases monthly until FRA |
| Child or caring spouse | 75% | Per eligible child |
| Divorced spouse at FRA | 100% | Independent of remarriage after 60 |
| Dependent parent (one) | 82.5% | 75% each if two parents |
5 Real-World Survivor Benefit Examples (2026)
1. Young Widow with Child
Emily (age 34) loses her husband who had $2,800/month benefit. She cares for their 4-year-old son. Emily receives 75% ($2,100) + child gets 75% ($2,100) until child turns 16.
2. Divorced Spouse
Robert (age 62) was married 12 years to his ex-wife who died at 58. He qualifies for 100% of her $2,200 benefit ($2,200/month) even though remarried.
3. Adult Disabled Child
Sarah’s 24-year-old daughter (disabled since age 19) receives 75% of Sarah’s $2,400 benefit for life ($1,800/month).
4. Dependent Parent
John’s 68-year-old mother received 50%+ support from him. She qualifies for 82.5% of John’s $2,100 benefit ($1,732/month).
5. Remarriage Scenario
Maria (age 58) remarries at 59 → her widow benefit stops. At age 60 she can switch back to widow benefits or keep new spouse’s record.
Join the Survivor Benefits Community
r/socialsecurityanswers – Real Stories, Questions & SupportThousands of families share experiences applying for widow, child, and divorced-spouse benefits.
Auxiliary Benefit: Lump-Sum Death Payment ($255)
One-time payment to help with funeral costs:
- Spouse living with deceased at time of death, OR
- Eligible child if no spouse qualifies
Deadline: Apply within 2 years of death using Form SSA-8.
Download SSA-8 & ApplyHow to Report a Death to SSA
Funeral Home
Most report automatically if given SSN.
You Report
Call 1-800-772-1213 with name, SSN, DOB & date of death.
Documents
Death certificate helps but not always required.
How to Apply for Survivor Benefits (2026)
Gather Records
Death certificate, marriage/birth certificates, deceased’s tax returns, SSN.
Call or Visit
1-800-772-1213 or local office (locator: ssa.gov/locator).
Track Status
Use your free my Social Security account.
Receive Benefits
Usually starts the month after death; paid monthly.
Medicare Timeline for Survivor Beneficiaries
Months 1–24
Survivor benefits only (no Medicare).
Month 25
Automatic Medicare Part A & B (if under 65).
Special Cases
ALS or ESRD: Medicare from month 1.
Official SSA video: Understanding Survivor Benefits (2026 update)
Important: Report Life Changes to SSA
- Remarriage (before age 60 may stop benefits)
- Child turns 18 or leaves school
- Work & earnings (limits apply before FRA)
- Change of address or bank info
How: Call 1-800-772-1213 or use Form SSA-795.