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Spousal benefits — when can you file?

Can I get spousal benefits if my spouse hasn't filed yet?

If you're currently married and your spouse hasn't filed yet, you have to wait — there's no way around it since file-and-suspend was closed in 2016. But if you're divorced after a 10-year marriage, there's an exception that catches a lot of people by surprise: you can file independently after two years of being divorced, even if your ex never filed a thing. Twenty years inside Social Security taught me that this one rule helps more people than almost any other.

Dr. Ed Weir
Dr. Ed Weir 20 years inside Social Security. Plain-English help, no sign-up required.
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The rules that decide who can file when

Worker must have filed Current spouse rule
2 years divorced Divorced spouse — independent rule
Must be 62 or older Ex's age requirement
10 years Marriage duration (divorced)

Here's what to do, in 4 steps.

Two tracks. If you're currently married, the action plan is about coordination — when does your spouse plan to file, and how does that affect your timing? If you're divorced 10+ years and 2+ years past final decree, the action plan is much simpler: you can move on your own schedule. Here's how to figure out which track you're on, then act.

  1. Identify which track applies to you

    Are you currently married, or divorced 10+ years? The rules are completely different. Currently married = you wait for your spouse to file. Divorced 10+ years and 2+ years past final decree = you can file independently. Pick the right track before you do anything else.

    Time: 5 minutes Cost: Free

  2. If divorced — confirm the 2-year clock and your ex's age

    Two checks: (1) has the divorce decree been final for at least 2 continuous years? (2) is your ex 62 or older? If both yes, you may qualify as an independently entitled divorced spouse — you don't have to wait for them to file.

    Time: Few minutes Cost: Free POMS RS 00202.005

  3. Sign in to my Social Security to estimate your spousal amount

    Pull your account at ssa.gov/myaccount. The estimate compares what you'd get on your own record versus as a spouse (or divorced spouse). Deemed filing rules mean you generally take the higher of the two automatically — but you still want to see the numbers.

    Time: 15-20 minutes Cost: Free my Social Security

  4. File online or schedule an appointment — bring your decree if divorced

    iClaim is the fastest path. If you're a divorced spouse, you'll need a certified divorce decree showing the date the divorce was final. Marriage certificate too. Don't get caught by this — if you file early (before your full retirement age), the spousal amount is permanently reduced. Same for divorced spouse.

    Time: 15-30 minutes Cost: Free iClaim online filing

Dr. Ed explains the spousal-benefit two-track

Video coming soon

I'm recording the walk-through that explains why current spouses have to wait but divorced spouses don't — and the one POMS rule that makes it possible.

Which of these sounds more like you?

Two tracks here, and the one that applies depends on your marital status today. Find your situation below.

We're married and my spouse hasn't filed yetCurrently married, working spouse hasn't started benefits

If you're currently married, here's the hard truth: you cannot collect spousal benefits until your spouse files for their own retirement. Period. File-and-suspend was the workaround that closed in 2016, and there's no replacement.

The play now is coordination. If your spouse plans to keep working past their full retirement age to build delayed retirement credits, you might wait too — their delay grows their PIA, which grows your spousal amount (capped at 50% of their PIA at their FRA). If money's tight before they file, your only options are filing on your own record (if you have enough credits) or waiting it out.

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We've been divorced more than 2 years10+ year marriage, divorce final 2+ years, ex is 62+

This is the rule the page is built around. POMS RS 00202.005B.2 calls you an 'independently entitled divorced spouse,' and it means exactly what it sounds like: you can file on your ex's record without waiting for them to file anything. They might never file. Doesn't matter.

Four boxes have to check: (1) marriage lasted at least 10 years, (2) divorce has been final for at least 2 continuous years, (3) your ex is at least 62, (4) you're not currently remarried. If all four, you may qualify — and you don't have to tell your ex you're filing. The SSA won't notify them.

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We divorced less than 2 years agoRecent divorce, ex hasn't filed

You're in the gap. The independently-entitled rule only kicks in after 2 continuous years from the date the divorce was final. Until then, you're treated like a current spouse — meaning you have to wait until your ex files for their own retirement before you can claim a divorced-spouse benefit.

Two paths forward. Path A: wait out the 2-year clock and file as independently entitled. Path B: if your ex files first, you can claim immediately even before the 2-year mark. So if you know your ex is about to file, the wait could be shorter than you think.

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My spouse is still working past FRAWorking spouse delaying for DRCs

Your spouse is past full retirement age, still working, and not filing because every month they wait grows their benefit by two-thirds of one percent (8% per year, up to age 70). Smart move for them. Tough for you if you wanted to file as a spouse.

The math: their PIA at FRA sets your spousal cap at 50% of that number. Their delayed retirement credits grow their own check, but they don't grow your spousal benefit. So you're waiting for a payment that won't get bigger because of their delay. If you have your own work record, file on it. If you don't, you're stuck waiting for them to file — or until they hit 70 and have to.

Separated but not legally divorcedLegal separation, divorce decree not yet final

Separation — even legal separation — is not divorce. The divorced-spouse rules require a final divorce decree from a court. If you're separated but the divorce isn't final, you're still treated as a current spouse for Social Security purposes. That means you wait for your spouse to file.

This trips people up because state law might call legal separation 'as good as divorced' for some purposes (insurance, taxes). For SSA, it isn't. The 2-year clock for independently-entitled status starts the day the divorce becomes final, not the day you stopped living together.

My ex-spouse passed awayEx deceased — switch to survivor benefits

Different rule, much better deal. If your ex passed away and you were married to them at least 10 years, you may qualify for surviving divorced spouse benefits — up to 100% of what they would have received, not the 50% cap that applies while they're alive.

Surviving divorced spouse rules: marriage 10+ years, you're at least 60 (50 if disabled), and not remarried before age 60 (remarriage after 60 doesn't disqualify for survivor purposes). The 2-year independent-entitlement rule doesn't apply to survivors — different statute, different math. If both rules could apply (recent loss, recent divorce), file as a surviving divorced spouse; the benefit is bigger.

I'm helping a parent navigate thisAdult child or caregiver

Adult kids: the divorced-spouse rule trips up parents constantly. A parent who divorced 15 years ago, marriage was 22 years, ex-spouse turned 62 last year and hasn't filed — the parent often assumes they have to wait. They don't. POMS RS 00202.005 lets them file independently right now.

What you'll need to help: pull their my Social Security account at ssa.gov/myaccount to see the spousal estimate. If you'll be doing the filing, submit SSA-1696 to be appointed as their representative — it lets you talk to SSA on their behalf. Get a certified copy of the divorce decree from the issuing court (online from many counties; usually a small fee). Bring marriage certificate too.

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Married less than 1 yearNewly married, 1-year duration not yet met

There's a duration rule for current spouses too — you generally have to be married at least 1 year before your spouse's filing date to qualify for spousal benefits on their record. (Exception: if you were a parent of their natural child, or you were already entitled to certain other benefits before the marriage.)

If you're under that 1-year mark, the answer to 'can I file as a spouse' is no — not because of timing on their filing, but because the marriage isn't long enough. The clock starts on the date of marriage. Once you cross 1 year and they've filed, you may qualify on their record. Until then, your only path is your own work record.

If none of the above sounds like you, see all retirement options → See all retirement options

Everything people ask me

Can I file for spousal benefits if my spouse hasn't filed?

Two answers depending on marital status. If you're currently married: no, you can't file for spousal benefits until your spouse files for their own retirement. File-and-suspend was closed by Congress in 2016. If you're divorced from a marriage that lasted 10+ years and the divorce has been final for at least 2 years: yes, you may qualify to file independently as long as your ex is 62 or older — even if they haven't filed.

What if I'm divorced — does the same rule apply?

No, divorced spouses get a different rule. Under POMS RS 00202.005, an 'independently entitled divorced spouse' may file on their ex's record without waiting for the ex to file. Requirements: marriage lasted at least 10 years, divorce has been final at least 2 continuous years, ex is at least 62, and you're not currently remarried. This is the single most-missed rule in the spousal-benefits universe.

What does 'independently entitled' mean?

It's the SSA's term for a divorced spouse who can collect on the worker's record without the worker having filed for benefits. POMS RS 00202.005B.2 lays out the criteria. The worker (your ex) only needs to be fully insured and at least 62 throughout the first month of your entitlement — they don't have to file a claim themselves. Once you've been divorced 2 continuous years, you're eligible to file on your own.

Do I have to wait for my ex to file?

No — not if you've been divorced for 2 or more continuous years and meet the other criteria (10-year marriage, ex is 62+, you're not remarried). That's the whole point of the 'independently entitled' rule. Your ex never has to file. They might never file. Doesn't affect your eligibility.

What if my ex hasn't reached 62 yet?

You wait. The independently-entitled rule requires the worker to be at least 62 throughout the first month of your entitlement. If your ex turns 62 in May, the earliest you can be entitled is the month after — and the rest of the conditions (2-year divorce, 10-year marriage, you're 62+, not remarried) all still have to be met.

Can I file for spousal benefits at 62 even if I haven't filed for my own?

Generally no. For anyone born after January 1, 1954, deemed filing applies at any age — when you file for one benefit, SSA treats you as filing for both, and pays you the higher amount. The strategy of taking spousal first and switching to your own later (or vice versa) was closed by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015. There's a narrow exception for survivor benefits, which are not subject to deemed filing.

What if we file-and-suspend?

You can't — that strategy was closed. Section 831 of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 (Public Law 114-74) eliminated 'voluntary suspension' for the purpose of allowing a spouse to claim on a suspended record. Effective for suspensions that took effect after April 30, 2016. If your spouse suspends their benefits today, no one else can collect on their record during the suspension.

Does separation count as divorce for this rule?

No. The independently-entitled divorced spouse rule requires a final divorce decree from a court. Legal separation — even with a separation agreement and entirely separate finances — doesn't trigger the 2-year clock. The day the divorce becomes final is day one. Until then, you're still treated as a current spouse, meaning you can't file until your spouse does.

If I file early as a divorced spouse, do I get less?

Yes. The early-filing reduction applies the same way it does for current spouses. At your full retirement age, the maximum spousal or divorced-spouse benefit is 50% of the worker's PIA. File at 62 and that drops to roughly 32.5% (the exact percentage depends on your FRA). The reduction is permanent.

What if I remarry?

Remarriage generally ends your divorced-spouse benefit on the prior ex's record. Exception: if the new marriage ends (death, divorce, annulment), you can be reinstated. Survivor benefits work differently — if you remarry after age 60 (50 if disabled), surviving divorced spouse benefits continue. Don't conflate the two; the rules are separate statutes with separate carve-outs.

Filing for spousal benefits unlocks more than you might think.

When you file for any Social Security benefit, you may qualify for adjacent programs you didn't know about — Medicare timing, survivor benefits later, even SNAP or LIS if income is tight. These are the programs people most often miss.

Divorced Spouse Two-Year Rule

If you've been divorced 2+ years from a 10+ year marriage and your ex is 62 or older, you may qualify to file independently — even if your ex never files. This is the single most-missed rule on the page.

Spousal Benefits

If your spouse has filed for retirement, you may qualify for up to 50% of their PIA at your full retirement age. The amount drops if you file before your FRA.

Survivor Benefits

If your spouse — or ex-spouse from a 10+ year marriage — passes away, you may qualify for survivor benefits at up to 100% of what they would have received. Different rules and a different filing.

When Can I Claim Spousal Benefits

Spousal benefits can start as early as age 62 — but the amount is permanently reduced if you file before your full retirement age. Many people file at 62 and don't realize the reduction sticks for life.

Independently Entitled Divorced Spouse

The technical name for the divorced-spouse 2-year rule. POMS RS 00202.005 spells it out: marriage 10+ years, divorce final 2+ years, ex is 62+, you're not remarried. You may qualify even if your ex never filed.

Medicare at 65

You may qualify for Medicare at 65 regardless of your Social Security filing status. Filing for Social Security usually triggers automatic Part A enrollment; if you delay Social Security, you'll need to enroll in Medicare separately.

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