To get benefits from your ex-husband's Social Security, you must apply to the Social Security Administration (SSA) as a divorced spouse, meeting requirements like being unmarried and married for 10+ years; you apply online, by phone, or in person, providing your marriage certificate, divorce decree, and your own SSN, and while his SSN helps, the SSA can find it, as benefits are confidential and don't affect his payments.
Yes, a divorced wife can get her ex-husband's Social Security benefits if their marriage lasted at least 10 years, she is unmarried, is at least 62, and her ex-spouse is eligible for benefits, with payments not reducing the ex-spouse's or their current spouse's benefits. Benefits are paid on the ex-spouse's record, up to half their benefit, and the ex-spouse's remarriage doesn't affect eligibility.
You can receive up to 50% of your ex-husband's full Social Security benefit, but the actual percentage depends on when you start claiming; claiming early (as young as age 62) permanently reduces the amount to as low as 32.5% of his benefit, while waiting until your own Full Retirement Age (FRA) grants the full 50%. Your own work record benefit is always paid first, with an extra amount added from your ex's record if it's higher, and this doesn't affect his benefits or his current spouse's.
How can I find out if a former spouse is collecting Social Security benefits on my record? You ask the Social Security Administration. It can tell you the name of any “auxiliary beneficiary,” including an ex-husband or ex-wife who is drawing or has drawn benefits on your earnings record.
Social Security benefits for a divorced spouse are calculated based on the ex-spouse's earnings record or their own earnings record, depending on which one is higher. You're entitled to half of your ex's benefits if you start collecting once you reach your full retirement age (FRA).
To collect your spouse's Social Security, you generally must be at least 62 (or any age caring for a child under 16/disabled), married at least one year, and your spouse must be receiving their own benefits; you'll get the higher of your own benefit or up to 50% of your spouse's benefit, with reduced amounts for claiming early, but you can't get both or combine them. Divorced spouses have similar rules but must have been married at least 10 years and be unmarried.
Form SSA-2 | Information You Need to Apply for Spouse's or Divorced Spouse's Benefits. You can apply: Online, if you are within 3 months of age 62 or older, or. By calling our national toll-free service at 1-800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325-0778) or visiting your local Social Security office.
The biggest recent change is the Social Security Fairness Act (SSFA) of 2023, effective January 2024, which eliminated the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO), meaning your spouse's or survivor's benefits won't be reduced by your non-Social Security government pension anymore, making it much fairer. Also, the "file and suspend" strategy for spousal benefits ended for most, but the core rules remain: you get the higher of your own or your spousal benefit (up to 50% of your partner's), and you can generally switch from spousal to your own higher retirement benefit at full retirement age.
You are eligible to receive one-half (50%) of your ex-spouse's retirement benefit. If your ex-spouse should die before you, you can receive their full retirement benefit. The benefit does not include any delayed retirement credits your ex-spouse may receive.
In your divorce agreement you may have given up the right to his retirement account from his work, but you can never give up the right to draw Social Security. Remember, drawing a Spousal benefit won't reduce the amount your ex spouse can get! It doesn't hurt your ex or his current spouse at all.
The Social Security spousal benefits loophole, primarily the "File and Suspend" and "Restricted Application" strategies, allowed a higher-earning spouse to delay their own benefits (earning delayed retirement credits) while the lower-earning spouse collected a spousal benefit based on the higher earner's record; however, a 2015 law closed these loopholes for most new applicants, meaning if one spouse claims spousal benefits, their own benefits are also considered claimed, and benefits can't be suspended to let spousal benefits accrue. A separate, less-known exception allows a spouse caring for a disabled adult child (under 22) to receive benefits even if they haven't reached retirement age, as noted by Special Needs Answers.
Yes, both you and your spouse can collect Social Security benefits, either on your own earnings records if you've both worked, or a spouse can claim a spousal benefit on the other's record, usually up to 50% of the primary earner's benefit, with the Social Security Administration (SSA) always paying the higher of the two amounts. You each get your own earned benefit if it's higher, or a combination/spousal benefit if that's greater, ensuring you get the maximum possible from your combined records.
The maximum spousal benefit is 50% of the amount that the spouse is eligible to receive at full retirement age. Survivors may receive up to 100% of the deceased spouse's Social Security benefit.
Yes, a divorced wife can get her ex-husband's Social Security benefits if their marriage lasted at least 10 years, she is unmarried, is at least 62, and her ex-spouse is eligible for benefits, with payments not reducing the ex-spouse's or their current spouse's benefits. Benefits are paid on the ex-spouse's record, up to half their benefit, and the ex-spouse's remarriage doesn't affect eligibility.
You can get up to 50% of your ex-husband's full retirement benefit as a divorced spouse if you wait until your own Full Retirement Age (FRA) to claim, but you can start as early as age 62 for a reduced amount (around 32.5% if you claim at 62). The benefit is based on his work record and won't affect his benefit or his new spouse's, and you'll get a higher amount (up to 100%) if he passes away.
People are only eligible for a spousal benefit when their own benefit is less than half of their retired spouse's benefit, or when they seek to delay their own application for Social Security benefits based on their own work record.
Although there's no direct “$16,728 check,” here are proven strategies to increase your benefits and get closer to that number:
Yes. If you qualify for your own retirement and spouse's benefits, we will always pay your own benefits first. If your benefit amount as a spouse is higher than your own retirement benefit, you will get a combination of the two benefits that equals the higher amount.
Ideally, an individual who obtained a green card through marriage should wait at least 5 years before getting remarried to a foreign national.
And it is possible for multiple ex-spouses of a marriage to the same person to qualify for benefits from those unions, if each marriage lasted at least 10 years. But each ex-spouse can only qualify for one benefit payment – either their own earned SS benefit, or their benefit as an ex-spouse.
You can start collecting benefits on your ex-husband's Social Security record as early as age 62, provided your marriage lasted at least 10 years, you are unmarried, and he is eligible for benefits. To get the maximum benefit (up to 50% of his full retirement amount), you should wait until your own full retirement age (FRA); claiming early at 62 results in a permanently reduced amount, similar to claiming your own benefit early.
To collect your spouse's Social Security, you generally must have been married for at least one continuous year, be at least age 62 (unless caring for a qualifying child), and your spouse must already be receiving retirement or disability benefits, with a key exception being if you are the parent of the worker's child, the age/length rule can be waived. For divorced spouses, the marriage must have lasted at least 10 years, and you must be unmarried when applying.
So we can observe that for men, for example, almost 54% of the them could expect to live to age 65 if they survived to age 21, and men who attained age 65 could expect to collect Social Security benefits for almost 13 years (and the numbers are even higher for women).