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Social Security can provide a one-time, $255 benefit, officially called a “lump-sum death payment,” to the widow, widower or child of a late beneficiary.
In 2023, the most recent data available, the Social Security Administration (SSA) paid about $215 million in lump-sum benefits for about 842,000 deaths, according to an October 2024 report from the Congressional Research Service.
Priority goes to a surviving spouse if any of the following apply:
- The widow or widower was living with the deceased at the time of death.
- He or she was living separately but collecting spousal benefits on the deceased’s earnings record.
- He or she was living separately but is eligible for survivor benefits on the deceased’s record.
In the absence of a qualifying widow or widower, the lump-sum payment can go to a son or daughter who is eligible for benefits on the deceased’s work record. That means the child must be unmarried and either a minor, an 18- or (in some cases) 19-year-old who is still in high school, or an adult offspring who has a disability.
If the spouse or child was already receiving family benefits on the deceased’s record, the death benefit will typically be paid to them automatically once the death is reported to Social Security. If that is not the case, the survivor must apply for the death benefit within two years of the death.
You can apply by calling the Social Security Administration at 800-772-1213 or scheduling an appointment at your local Social Security office. You may need to provide the late worker’s birth and death certificates and other documents. You might also need to answer questions about the deceased’s family, financial and Social Security status, as enumerated in Social Security form SSA-8.
If there is no eligible spouse or child to collect it, no death benefit is paid.
Keep in mind
The death benefit is a one-time payment, not to be confused with survivor benefits, which are monthly payments made to the surviving spouse, ex-spouse, children or, in rare instances, the parents of the deceased.
Andy Markowitz is a writer and editor for AARP, covering Social Security and fraud. He is a former editor of The Prague Post and Baltimore City Paper.
Tracy Thompson is a journalist and editor who has worked for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the Washington Post. She is the author of three books and lives with her family in the Washington, D.C., suburbs.

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