She is 63, widowed in her late fifties, and remarried at 62. For months she assumed that remarrying meant losing the roughly $2,300 monthly survivor benefit fromShe is 63, widowed in her late fifties, and remarried at 62. For months she assumed that remarrying meant losing the roughly $2,300 monthly survivor benefit from

She Remarried at 62 and Assumed She Lost Her Late Husband’s Survivor Benefit. The Age-60 Rule Says Otherwise.

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The post She Remarried at 62 and Assumed She Lost Her Late Husband’s Survivor Benefit. The Age-60 Rule Says Otherwise. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

  • Remarrying at 60 or later does not block widow survivor benefits: she can still claim the roughly $2,300 monthly benefit on her late husband's record.
  • Before claiming anything, request all three benefit estimates from Social Security so you can compare the survivor benefit, your own retirement benefit at different ages.
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She is 63, widowed in her late fifties, and remarried at 62. For months she assumed that remarrying meant losing the roughly $2,300 monthly survivor benefit from her late husband’s Social Security record. In fact, she can still claim it.

The rule is straightforward: remarrying at age 60 or later does not block a widow from collecting survivor benefits on a deceased spouse’s record. Remarrying before 60 generally does. If a widow is disabled, the cutoff shifts to age 50. She remarried at 62, so the door remains open.

This misunderstanding costs widows real money. In online forums, the same question surfaces repeatedly from women in their early sixties: I remarried, did I lose his benefit? For anyone who waited until 60 or later, the answer is no.

Why the Age-60 Line Exists

Survivor benefits are paid on the earnings record of a deceased spouse. Congress drew the line at 60 to protect older widows and widowers from financial penalties for finding companionship later in life. As long as the first marriage lasted at least nine months before death, the survivor qualifies. A later marriage at 60 or beyond does not undo that qualification.

The $2,300 threshold raises the stakes. If her late husband’s record supports a survivor benefit in that range, the question shifts from whether she can claim it to when, and whether it beats what she could get on her own record or as a spouse on her current husband’s record. Social Security pays the highest single benefit she qualifies for, not a combination.

Timing matters. A survivor benefit claimed at her survivor full retirement age (FRA) is unreduced. Claimed earlier, starting at age 60, it shrinks permanently. At 63, she sits in the middle of that range, and the choice between claiming now and waiting can shift the monthly check meaningfully. With the 2026 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) set at 2.8%, whatever amount she locks in will grow with inflation annually.

Survivor Benefits vs. Divorced-Spouse Benefits

One distinction trips people up. The after-60 exception applies to survivor benefits, meaning the worker on whose record she is claiming has died. A different rule governs divorced-spouse benefits on a living ex-spouse’s record: to collect those, the claimant must be currently unmarried, and remarriage ends eligibility at any age.

The survivor rule also extends to divorced widows. If a former marriage to a now-deceased ex-spouse lasted at least 10 years, a divorced survivor can claim on that record under the same after-60 remarriage logic.

Three Buckets to Compare

She has three potential benefits: the survivor benefit on her late husband’s record, her own retirement benefit based on her work history, and a spousal benefit on her current husband’s record once he files. Social Security lets her take one now and switch later if another grows larger. A common sequence is claiming the survivor benefit first while letting her own retirement benefit keep growing by roughly 8% a year up to age 70, then switching if her own ends up higher.

That sequencing only works when she knows all three numbers. Many widows do not, because they never asked.

What She Should Do

  1. Request the survivor estimate directly from Social Security. The figure on her late husband’s record is not visible in her own online account. A call or in-person appointment will produce it.
  2. Compare all three benefits side by side. Survivor, her own at 63 versus waiting, and a future spousal benefit on her current husband. The highest one she qualifies for at each age is what she should plan around.
  3. Decide which to start first. If the survivor benefit is strong and her own benefit is still growing, starting with the survivor and switching later is often optimal. The order is reversible only in specific ways, so it deserves careful consideration before she files.

The hardest mistake to undo is assuming the door closed when it did not. She remarried at 62, exactly where she needed to be. The check she thought she had forfeited is likely still hers, and a phone call to Social Security is usually all it takes to find out.

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The post She Remarried at 62 and Assumed She Lost Her Late Husband’s Survivor Benefit. The Age-60 Rule Says Otherwise. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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