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Does a common-law marriage qualify for Social Security spousal benefits?

Here's the deal: if your common-law marriage was valid in the state where you established it, Social Security will treat you as a spouse — with all the spousal, divorced-spouse, and survivor benefit eligibility that comes with it. Most people don't know this. The trick is documenting the relationship before SSA asks.

Dr. Ed Weir
Dr. Ed Weir 20 years inside Social Security. Plain-English help, no sign-up required.
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2026 common-law key numbers

~8 states States currently recognizing NEW common-law marriages
50% of PIA Spousal benefit (% of worker's PIA at FRA)
100% Survivor benefit at FRA (% of worker's PIA)
$255 Lump-sum death payment

Here's what to do.

Common-law claims need careful documentation. Run through these in order before you call SSA.

  1. Confirm your common-law marriage was valid in the state where it was established

    SSA recognizes common-law marriages that were valid under state law where formed. The currently recognizing states for new common-law marriages are Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, New Hampshire (for inheritance only), Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina (no new ones since 2019 with limits), Texas, and Utah. Many other states recognize prior common-law marriages established before they changed their laws. Confirm your state's rules.

    Time: 30 minutes Cost: Free POMS GN 00305.075 (Common-Law Marriage)

  2. Gather documentation of the relationship

    Common-law claims succeed or fail on documentation. Gather: joint bank accounts, deeds or leases held jointly, jointly filed tax returns, beneficiary designations naming each other, life insurance beneficiary forms, mutual wills, household bills with both names, photos and correspondence using each other's last name. The more contemporaneous evidence, the better.

    Time: 1-2 hours Cost: Free SSA Statement of Marital Relationship (SSA-754)

  3. Get sworn statements from disinterested parties

    SSA strongly weighs sworn statements from people who knew you as a couple but have nothing to gain. Friends, neighbors, coworkers, religious community members. Use Form SSA-753 (Statement Regarding Marriage) for relatives and SSA-754 (Statement of Marital Relationship) for the claimant and spouse. Two or three statements typically suffice if they're substantive.

    Time: 1 week to gather Cost: Free Form SSA-753 (Statement Regarding Marriage)

  4. Apply by phone or in person — the appointment will go deep

    There is no online application for common-law marriage SSA claims. Plan for a longer appointment than a typical retirement claim — SSA will go through the documentation in detail. If your spouse has died and you're claiming survivor benefits, the same forms apply. Don't omit a state — SSA needs to know where you established the relationship to determine validity.

    Time: 1-2 hour appointment Cost: Free SSA Common-Law Resources

Which of these sounds more like you?

Common-law cases vary by state, year, and documentation. Find the situation closest to yours.

We established the relationship in a state that recognizes common-law marriageThe standard path

If you and your partner held yourselves out as married in a state that recognizes new common-law marriages (such as Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Texas, or Utah, with state-specific rules), SSA will recognize the marriage. Document the start date, the state, and the elements your state requires (mutual agreement to be married, cohabitation, public representation as married).

We moved to a state that doesn't recognize common-law marriageMarriage typically follows you

If you established a valid common-law marriage in a recognizing state, most other states will continue to honor that marriage — even if those states don't recognize new common-law marriages within their borders. The marriage doesn't dissolve when you move. SSA looks at where the relationship was established, not where you live now.

Keep documentation showing where and when you held yourselves out as married. The state of establishment is the controlling fact.

My common-law spouse died and we never had a ceremonySurvivor claim with documentation

If your common-law spouse died, you can claim survivor benefits the same as a formally married spouse — if the marriage meets your state's rules. The challenge is documentation. Without a marriage certificate, SSA needs other evidence: joint property, joint bank accounts, beneficiary designations, sworn statements from people who knew you as a couple.

Apply by phone or in person. Plan for a longer appointment than a typical claim. The lump-sum $255 death payment also applies if you lived in the same household.

We only ever lived in a state that doesn't recognize common-law marriageNo SSA recognition without a formal marriage

If you and your partner only lived in states that do not recognize new common-law marriages, SSA cannot recognize you as married for benefit purposes. The relationship may have been deeply committed, but without a marriage license or recognition under state law, SSA does not have authority to extend spousal benefits.

Domestic partnerships and civil unions are also generally NOT recognized by SSA — only marriages.

Our common-law marriage lasted 10+ years and we splitDivorced-spouse and divorced-survivor benefits available

If your common-law marriage was valid (recognized by a recognizing state), lasted at least 10 years, and ended in a formal divorce decree, you may qualify for divorced-spouse benefits on the living ex's record — or divorced-survivor benefits if the ex has died.

Note: ending a common-law marriage typically requires a formal divorce in most jurisdictions, even though no marriage license was filed at the start. Don't assume separation alone ends the relationship.

How do I prove the relationship?Strong documentation is the whole game

SSA accepts: joint tax returns filed as 'married filing jointly,' joint bank accounts, jointly held real estate or vehicles, life insurance and retirement beneficiary designations, mutual wills, mortgages or leases naming both parties, photos and correspondence treating each other as spouses, sworn statements from disinterested parties.

Three to five strong items typically suffice. The closer they are to your stated start date, the more weight SSA gives.

We're a same-sex couple in a common-law-recognizing stateRecognized since Obergefell (2015)

Since the 2015 Obergefell decision, same-sex marriages are recognized by SSA on the same terms as opposite-sex marriages — including common-law marriages. If your common-law marriage was valid in a recognizing state, SSA will treat it as a marriage for spousal, divorced-spouse, and survivor benefits.

The documentation requirements are the same. SSA does not impose any extra burden on same-sex common-law claims.

I'm helping a relative document a common-law claimBystander — the documentation playbook

If you're helping a relative document a common-law marriage for SSA, the playbook is: (1) confirm the state where the relationship was established and that state's rules; (2) gather joint financial documents (bank accounts, tax returns, deeds); (3) collect 2-3 sworn statements from disinterested parties (not relatives) using Form SSA-753; (4) prepare Form SSA-754 (Statement of Marital Relationship) carefully.

Apply by phone or in person. Plan for a longer appointment than a standard retirement claim. If denied, appeal — many initial denials get reversed with stronger documentation at reconsideration.

Everything people ask me

Does Social Security recognize common-law marriage?

Yes, if the marriage was valid in the state where it was established. SSA looks to state law to determine whether a common-law marriage existed. About 8 states currently recognize new common-law marriages; many more recognize ones formed before they changed their laws.

Which states recognize common-law marriage?

States that currently recognize new common-law marriages include Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Texas, and Utah. New Hampshire recognizes for inheritance only. South Carolina ended new common-law marriages in 2019 with limits. Many states recognize older common-law marriages even if they don't allow new ones.

What if we moved to a state that doesn't recognize common-law marriage?

If your common-law marriage was validly established in a recognizing state, most other states will honor it under interstate-recognition principles. The marriage doesn't dissolve when you move. SSA looks at where it was established, not where you live now.

How do I prove a common-law marriage to SSA?

Document mutual agreement, cohabitation, and public representation. Joint tax returns, joint bank accounts, deeds, beneficiary designations, mutual wills, and sworn statements from disinterested parties (Form SSA-753) all help. The more contemporaneous evidence, the stronger the claim.

Can I get spousal benefits on a common-law spouse's record?

Yes, if the marriage is recognized. The benefit amount and rules are identical to formal marriages: 50% of the worker's PIA at your FRA, with reductions for early filing.

What about survivor benefits?

Yes. If your common-law spouse has died and the marriage is recognized, you qualify for survivor benefits up to 100% of the deceased's PIA at your survivor FRA. The lump-sum $255 death payment also applies.

Do domestic partnerships count?

Generally no. SSA recognizes marriages — formal or common-law where state-recognized — but not domestic partnerships or civil unions. If a formal marriage is possible while both partners are alive, doing so preserves spousal and survivor eligibility.

How long do we have to have lived together?

There is no specific minimum cohabitation duration. State law governs the elements of a valid common-law marriage — typically mutual agreement, cohabitation, and public representation as married. Some states allow common-law marriage to be established almost immediately if the elements are met; others require a more sustained relationship.

What if SSA denies the claim?

Appeal. File Form SSA-561 (Request for Reconsideration) within 60 days. Many common-law denials are reversed at reconsideration with stronger documentation — additional sworn statements, more financial evidence, clearer state-law analysis. If reconsideration also denies, you can request an Administrative Law Judge hearing.

Are same-sex common-law marriages recognized?

Yes. Since the 2015 Obergefell decision, SSA recognizes same-sex marriages on the same terms as opposite-sex marriages — including common-law marriages valid under state law.

Other programs worth checking

If your common-law claim establishes spousal eligibility, your overall income picture may now qualify you for additional help. Worth a five-minute look.

Medicare Savings Program (MSP)

If your common-law spouse claim establishes a new income picture, MSP may pay your $202.90/month Part B premium plus deductibles and copays. Worth a fresh check after the SSA decision.

Extra Help (Low Income Subsidy)

Extra Help reduces Medicare Part D drug costs to near zero. SSA administers it directly. Re-screen if your income picture changes after a common-law claim.

Medicaid

Medicaid uses household income; common-law marriages are recognized for Medicaid in states that recognize them for SSA. Re-screen after marital-status determinations.

SNAP

Food assistance for low-income households. SNAP household composition treats common-law spouses as spouses in recognizing states. Re-screen if your status is now established.

LIHEAP

Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program looks at household income. Common-law households apply as one for LIHEAP in recognizing states.

Property Tax Relief

Some states offer surviving-spouse property tax exemptions that include common-law widow(er)s. Ask your county assessor about widow/widower options if you've established the relationship.

I'll let you know when the rules change.

Common-law recognition rules are stable but state-specific. The Fairness Act repeal in January 2025 also helped many common-law spouses with non-covered government pensions. Drop your email and I'll send a plain-English note when something moves.

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