In March 2022, Gloria had $47 in her checking account. In May 2022, she had $1,891, and she hadn’t changed a single thing about her life except making one phone call to the Social Security Administration.
Three women. Three different states. Three different versions of the same story: a husband dies, and nobody tells the wife she may be entitled to his Social Security benefits. What follows are their accounts of what they learned, when they learned it, and what the SSA office actually said to them.
Gloria, 64, Columbus, Ohio: The $47 Account That Became $1,891 a Month
Gloria’s husband Raymond died in January 2022 at age 71, after 38 years of working in manufacturing. He had collected his own Social Security since age 67. Gloria, who had worked part-time for most of their marriage and raised three children, had her own small benefit of $610 a month. She assumed that was all she was entitled to.
For two months after Raymond’s death, she paid rent, utilities, and groceries on $610. By March, she had $47 left before her next deposit. A neighbor who worked as a hospital social worker mentioned, almost in passing, that Gloria might be able to collect on Raymond’s record instead of her own.
“I called the 800 number on a Tuesday morning. The representative asked for Raymond’s Social Security number, the date he died, and our marriage certificate information. She told me I could receive his benefit amount instead of mine because his was higher. I didn’t even know that was a thing.”
— Gloria, 64, Columbus, Ohio
Gloria visited her local SSA office in Columbus to complete the application in person, bringing Raymond’s Social Security number, their marriage certificate, his death certificate, and her own ID. The SSA representative walked her through the process and explained that because she was 64 and not yet at full retirement age, she would receive approximately 94% of Raymond’s benefit rather than the full 100%.
Her first survivor benefit payment of $1,891 arrived in May 2022. Her own $610 benefit stopped; SSA pays whichever is higher, not both. She also received the one-time lump-sum death payment of $255, which she says she didn’t know existed either.
Gloria now lives in the same Columbus apartment. The math still requires careful budgeting, but the $1,281 monthly difference is what keeps her there.
Renata, 68, Albuquerque, New Mexico: Two Years of Missed Payments She Could Have Had
Renata’s husband Hector died in 2020 at 71. She was 66 at the time, already past her full retirement age, and collecting her own Social Security benefit of $980 a month. Hector had been a civil engineer for 34 years and his benefit was $2,240 a month. Renata had no idea she could switch to his amount.
For two years, she collected $980 a month. She supplemented her income by selling handmade jewelry at a local market in Albuquerque and renting out a spare bedroom for $600 a month. In 2022, a friend who had recently gone through the same process told her to call SSA immediately.
“The woman at the SSA office was very kind. She explained I had been eligible since the month Hector died. But she also told me they don’t pay retroactive benefits going all the way back, there are limits on how far back they can go. I had left money on the table for two years and I couldn’t get most of it back.”
— Renata, 68, Albuquerque, New Mexico
Renata’s case illustrates a critical timing issue. SSA’s survivor benefit rules allow retroactive payments in limited circumstances, but they do not automatically back-pay two years of missed benefits. Renata applied in late 2022 and began receiving $2,240 a month from that point forward.
Her renter moved out. She kept selling jewelry, but now by choice rather than necessity.
The SSA representative also told Renata something she hadn’t considered: because Hector had delayed claiming his own benefit until age 70, his monthly amount had grown substantially through delayed retirement credits. That higher number was the one Renata was now entitled to collect. Applying sooner after a spouse’s death, the representative said, is almost always better than waiting.
Diane, 62, Portland, Oregon: The Rule That Disqualified Her: and What She Did Instead
Diane’s story is the outlier. Her first husband, Martin, died at 71 in 2018 after a 30-year career in finance. His Social Security benefit had been $2,600 a month.
Diane was 58 when he died. She grieved, rebuilt, and in 2019 remarried a man named Carl.
In 2023, a coworker mentioned survivor benefits. Diane called SSA and visited the Portland field office expecting to claim Martin’s record. The representative looked up her information and delivered news she hadn’t anticipated.
“She told me that because I remarried before I turned 60, I am not eligible for Martin’s survivor benefits. I remarried at 59. If I had waited one more year, I would have been fine. Nobody told me that when Martin died. Nobody.”
— Diane, 62, Portland, Oregon
This is a real and specific SSA rule. According to SSA’s survivor benefit guidelines, a surviving spouse who remarries before age 60 generally cannot collect on the deceased spouse’s record unless that later marriage ends. Diane’s marriage to Carl is ongoing, so Martin’s $2,600 benefit is inaccessible to her.
What the SSA representative did tell Diane: she can collect on Carl’s record when the time comes, assuming his benefit is higher than her own. She can also collect her own retirement benefit starting at 62, though at a reduced rate. The representative encouraged her to use SSA’s my Social Security online account to compare projected benefit amounts before deciding when to claim.
Diane left the Portland office without the benefit she came for. She describes the experience not as a failure of the system, but as information she wishes someone had given her in 2018, when the decision about remarrying might have been made differently; or at least with full knowledge of the financial stakes.
What These Three Stories Reveal About How Survivor Benefits Actually Work
Taken together, Gloria, Renata, and Diane’s experiences point to one consistent gap: SSA does not proactively notify surviving spouses of their eligibility. According to SSA’s own guidance, survivor benefits provide monthly payments to eligible family members of people who worked and paid Social Security taxes, but the burden of applying falls entirely on the survivor.
SSA only accepts reports of death and survivor benefit applications by phone or in person. There is no online application for survivor benefits. The national toll-free number is 1-800-772-1213 (TTY: 1-800-325-0778). Local SSA offices can be found through the SSA office locator.
- A surviving spouse at full retirement age can receive up to 100% of the deceased spouse’s benefit amount.
- A surviving spouse who claims at age 60 receives approximately 71.5% of that amount.
- Remarrying before age 60 generally ends eligibility for a prior spouse’s survivor benefit.
- There is a one-time lump-sum death payment of $255, separate from monthly survivor benefits.
- SSA pays the higher of the survivor’s own benefit or the survivor benefit; not both.
- Delayed claiming by the deceased spouse (up to age 70) increases the survivor benefit amount.
All three women said the same thing in different words: the SSA representative they spoke with was helpful and clear once they made contact. The barrier wasn’t the system’s complexity once you’re in it, it was not knowing to call in the first place.
What Is the Family Maximum Benefit?
When multiple family members are eligible to collect on one worker’s record; for example, a surviving spouse and dependent children — SSA applies what’s called the family maximum benefit. This cap limits the total monthly amount all family members combined can receive based on one worker’s earnings record.
The family maximum is generally between 150% and 180% of the deceased worker’s full retirement benefit, depending on the benefit amount. If the combined benefits of all eligible family members exceed this cap, each person’s benefit is reduced proportionally. A surviving spouse collecting alone is not affected by the family maximum — it only applies when multiple people claim on the same record simultaneously.
For most widows collecting alone on a deceased spouse’s record, the family maximum is not a practical concern. It becomes relevant primarily in cases involving dependent children or other eligible family members also receiving benefits on the same earnings record.
Social Security survivor benefits are currently active with no pending legislative changes affecting eligibility. Official SSA Survivors page
How Survivor Benefits Work: The Mechanics the SSA Rep Will Walk You Through
When you call or visit SSA to report a death and apply for survivor benefits, the representative will ask for specific information. Having it ready shortens the process considerably.
- The deceased spouse’s Social Security number
- Your own Social Security number
- The date and place of death
- Your marriage certificate
- The death certificate (SSA can often obtain this directly, but having it speeds things up)
- Your birth certificate
- Most recent W-2 or federal self-employment tax return for both you and your spouse
- Your bank account information for direct deposit
SSA will then calculate whether your survivor benefit exceeds your own retirement benefit. If it does, you receive the survivor amount. Your own benefit stops.
If your own benefit is higher, you keep your own and receive no survivor benefit. The representative will show you both numbers before you make any decisions.
One detail worth knowing: you can sometimes claim a reduced survivor benefit early (at 60) while letting your own retirement benefit grow until age 70, then switch to your own higher benefit later. This strategy doesn’t apply to everyone, but it’s worth asking the SSA representative to run the numbers for your specific situation.
Frequently Asked Questions