AARP Hearing Center
Yes, if:
- The marriage lasted at least 10 years.
- You are at least 60 years old (50 if you have a disability) or caring for a child from the marriage who is under 16 or has a disability. (In the latter circumstance there is no minimum age for you to claim survivor benefits.)
- You are single or, if you have remarried, you did so after turning 60 (50 if you have a disability). If you remarried before that age and are still with that spouse, you cannot claim survivor benefits on the record of your late former spouse.
In general, when you are eligible for both retirement and survivor benefits, you have the option of collecting one benefit first and switching to the other when you are older and the monthly payment will be larger.
For example, you can claim your own retirement benefit as early as age 62 and switch to the survivor benefit when you reach full retirement age. (For survivor benefits, full retirement age is 66 and 4 months for people born in 1958 and rising by two months per birth year to 67 for those born in 1962 or later). At that point, you are eligible to collect 100 percent of your late ex-spouse’s Social Security payment.
Or you can file for survivor benefits on a late ex-spouse’s earnings record as early as age 60 and wait until as late as 70 to switch to your own retirement benefit, accruing delayed retirement credits that increase your eventual payment. Just remember, once you have claimed both benefits, you get whichever is bigger, not their sum total.
Keep in mind
Benefits you collect on a deceased former spouse’s record don’t affect the size of payments to their other survivors, such as widows, widowers or children.
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