USA TODAY US Edition

Social Security benefits you might not know about

- Dan Caplinger

Social Security provides a key financial lifeline for the majority of U.S. retirees, but it’s not always easy to navigate all its rules and requiremen­ts. With many obscure provisions that aren’t easy to find, it can be easy to leave little-known benefits on the table unclaimed.

Below are three often-neglected provisions that many Social Security participan­ts are surprised to discover.

❚ Benefits for ex-spouses: One of the most confusing sets of rules in the Social Security world deals with divorced couples and Social Security benefits. In general, if you were married for 10 years or more and then divorced, then you can collect spousal or survivor benefits on an ex-spouse’s work history. But if you cut the knot before hitting your 10th anniversar­y, then you’re out of luck.

Where things get complicate­d is when it comes to remarriage. If your ex is still living, then ex-spousal benefits are only available if you haven’t remarried. Note that you can still get benefits if you’re single, even if your ex remarried. But there’s an even bigger wrinkle here: If you remarry, but that subsequent marriage ends due to death or divorce, then you once again become eligible to claim benefits based on your first ex-spouse’s work history.

If your ex has passed away, then survivor benefits have even more complicate­d rules. If you remarried before turning 60, then remarriage again takes away the right to survivor benefits on an ex’s work history. But those who wait until 60 or older before remarrying don’t lose their rights to survivor benefits.

❚ The lump-sum death benefit:

Social Security’s most attractive quality is that it makes monthly payments that in most cases extend for the rest of your lifetime. That ensures that even if your retirement savings run out, your Social Security benefits won’t.

It’s probably because of this that most people don’t really think very

much about one small lump-sum benefit that Social Security pays. Upon a person’s death, Social Security makes a one-time payment of $255 if there’s an eligible person to receive it. Surviving spouses are almost always eligible, and children can also receive the payment if the child gets Social Security benefits or qualifies for benefits due to the death of the parent. That’s most often the case when the child is younger than 18 or still in high school, although disabled children of any age are typically eligible as well.

❚ Early survivor benefits you can take independen­t of your own retire

ment benefit: Another benefit that comes up when a spouse passes away is the survivor benefit. Like regular retirement benefits, survivor benefits are monthly payments that can last the rest of your life. Unlike most benefits, however, you’re allowed to claim survivor benefits without being deemed to have claimed your own retirement benefits at the same time, or vice versa. That makes for some interestin­g planning opportunit­ies that in some cases let you get some money now and more later than you’d otherwise be able to get.

One feature of survivor benefits for spouses is that you’re allowed to claim them as early as age 60, with an even younger 50-year-old limit if you’re disabled. Social Security might not even be on your radar screen at that age, and if you’re not aware of the survivor provisions, then you can inadverten­tly miss out on years of monthly payments.

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