Can I Collect Social Security From My Ex Spouse?
Can I Collect Social Security From My Ex-Spouse?
If you are already receiving retirement benefits on your own work record, you can also claim any ex-spousal benefits you are eligible for, but Social Security will not pay you both combined. You’ll receive whichever amount is higher and no more. Any benefits you receive as a divorced spouse do not affect Social Security benefits paid to your ex, or to their current spouse if they have remarried. If your ex-spouse is deceased, you may be entitled to survivor benefits, under . Updated April 7, 2022
Am I entitled to my ex-spouse' s Social Security
Am I Entitled To My Ex-Spouse' s Social Security
Yes. You are eligible to collect spousal benefits on a living former wife’s or husband’s earnings record as long as: The marriage lasted at least 10 years. You have not remarried. You are at least 62 years of age. Your ex-spouse is entitled to collect Social Security retirement or .How to Get More Out of Your Medicare & Social Security
AARP’s free event on Medicare and Social Security benefits is now available on demand! Get answers to many of your questions on Medicare enrollment and coverage, Social Security claiming strategies and much more. Highlights include: Keynote by AARP Financial Ambassador Jean Chatzky 16 recorded breakout sessions Webinars, resource guides and more Your former spouse doesn't have to be collecting his or her retirement benefits yet for you to claim ex-spousal benefits. However, if this is the case, the divorce must be at least two years old. (There is no such requirement if your ex is already receiving benefits.) The most you can collect in divorced-spouse benefits is 50 percent of your former mate's primary insurance amount — the monthly payment he or she is entitled to at , which is 66 and 4 months for people born in 1956 and is rising incrementally to 67 over the next several years. You can get that maximum if you file for ex-spouse benefits when you reach full retirement age. If you claim earlier, the benefit amount is reduced, to as low as 32.5 percent of your ex's full benefit if you file at 62. The earliest you can apply for divorced-spouse benefits is three months before your 62nd birthday. You can do so online (via an or your ); by phone at 800-772-1213; or by making an appointment at your . You may need to provide documents to show eligibility, including proof of U.S. citizenship or legal immigration status, a marriage certificate, and a divorce decree. Keep in mindIf you are already receiving retirement benefits on your own work record, you can also claim any ex-spousal benefits you are eligible for, but Social Security will not pay you both combined. You’ll receive whichever amount is higher and no more. Any benefits you receive as a divorced spouse do not affect Social Security benefits paid to your ex, or to their current spouse if they have remarried. If your ex-spouse is deceased, you may be entitled to survivor benefits, under . Updated April 7, 2022