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Spousal myth-busters

Does my marriage have to be 10 years for Social Security spousal benefits?

The 10-year rule is real — but it only applies if you're divorced. If you're currently married, one year is enough. I've watched this single misconception talk people out of benefits they had every right to claim, so let me set it straight.

Dr. Ed Weir
Dr. Ed Weir 20 years inside Social Security. Plain-English help, no sign-up required.
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The marriage durations that matter

1 year Current spouse — marriage duration
10 years Divorced spouse — marriage duration
Yes — separation doesn't count Divorce must be final
Parent of worker's child Exception for current spouse

Here's what to do, in 4 steps.

This is the most-asked spousal question I get, and the answer depends on one fact: are you currently married, or are you divorced? Confirm which track applies, gather the marriage and divorce documents that prove your duration, then file. Most people find the paperwork is already in a drawer at home.

  1. Confirm marriage duration with your marriage certificate

    Pull out your marriage certificate and note the date. If you're currently married, the rule is 1 year. If you're divorced, you'll also need the divorce decree to confirm the marriage lasted at least 10 years before it became final.

    Time: Few minutes Cost: Free

  2. If divorced, locate the divorce decree showing 10+ years

    The decree is the document SSA wants to see. Confirm the date the divorce became final and count back to your marriage date — the gap must be 10 years or more. If you can't find the decree, the county courthouse where it was filed can issue a certified copy.

    Time: Few minutes Cost: Free or small fee for certified copy

  3. Sign in to my Social Security and check your estimate

    Your spousal benefit at full retirement age is up to half of the worker's primary insurance amount. The my Social Security portal lets you see your own estimate and run the comparison side by side.

    Time: 15 minutes Cost: Free my Social Security portal

  4. File online or by appointment

    Once you've confirmed which track applies and you have your documents, file online through iClaim or call 1-800-772-1213 to set up a phone appointment. Have the marriage certificate and (if applicable) divorce decree in front of you.

    Time: 15-30 minutes Cost: Free SSA iClaim portal

Dr. Ed explains the 10-year marriage rule

Video coming soon

I'm filming a short walk-through that shows the two-track answer with a real-world example. Drop your email below and I'll send it the moment it's live.

Which of these sounds more like you?

Pick the row that matches your situation. Currently married is one track; divorced is another. The duration rule that applies to you depends on which you are today.

I heard I need 10 years of marriageCurrently married, asking for myself

This is the most common mix-up I see, and it's worth clearing up first. The 10-year rule applies only to divorced spouses filing on an ex's record. If you're currently married to the worker, the duration rule is 1 year of marriage — not 10.

You'll also need to be at least 62 (or have a qualifying child in your care) and the worker has to be receiving retirement or disability benefits before you can claim spousal.

We were married 10+ years before divorceNow divorced, ex is still living

You may qualify as a divorced spouse on your ex's record if you were married at least 10 years before the divorce became final, you're currently unmarried, and you're at least 62. Your ex doesn't need to know you're filing, doesn't need to approve it, and your claim does not reduce their benefit or their current spouse's benefit.

If your ex hasn't filed yet but is at least 62 and the divorce was finalized at least 2 years ago, you can still file as an independently entitled divorced spouse.

Divorced after 9 years and 11 monthsThe painful near-miss

This is the hardest call I have to make. The 10-year rule is a hard line. Nine years and eleven months means no divorced-spouse benefits on that ex's record — there's no rounding up, no judicial discretion, no 'close enough.'

The one wrinkle worth checking: if you remarried the same ex and the second divorce was after the 10-year combined mark, POMS RS 00202.005A allows credit if the remarriage happened in the calendar year right after the first divorce. That's narrow, but worth checking your dates against.

Married less than a yearApproaching the one-year mark

The general rule is one continuous year of marriage immediately before you file. There are two narrow exceptions in POMS RS 00202.001B.5: (b) you're the natural parent of the worker's biological child, or (c) you were entitled to (or could have been entitled to) certain auxiliary benefits in the month before you married — widow's, divorced spouse's, or parent's benefits, for example.

If neither exception applies, the cleanest fix is to file in the month after your one-year anniversary. SSA can also use an application filed shortly before the anniversary if the anniversary occurs before they adjudicate.

I've been married twice — both 10+ yearsComparing two ex-spouses' records

If you have more than one marriage that lasted 10+ years and ended in divorce, you can file on whichever ex-spouse's record produces the higher benefit — not both at once. SSA will pay the larger amount.

The key qualifier: you must be currently unmarried to claim as a divorced spouse. If you remarried after a qualifying divorce and that new marriage is intact, the divorced-spouse rule on either ex generally does not apply. Survivor rules treat remarriage differently — see the survivor FAQ below.

We were common-law marriedOr in a state that recognized us as married

SSA generally recognizes common-law marriage if the state where you lived recognized it. POMS GN 00305.060 walks claims reps through how to evaluate this. The duration counts from the date the common-law marriage began under that state's law.

You'll need stronger documentation than a typical marriage certificate — affidavits from family or friends, joint tax returns, joint property deeds, beneficiary designations naming each other as spouse. The more contemporaneous, the better.

I'm helping a parent confirm datesAdult child or family helper

This is the most common bystander scenario for this page. Your parent thinks they don't qualify because their marriage 'wasn't long enough,' but they're confusing the current-spouse and divorced-spouse rules.

Four documents to track down: the marriage certificate, the divorce decree (if applicable), any prior-marriage decrees if there were earlier marriages, and the death certificate if a former spouse has passed. Most of these are in a file at home or available from the county clerk where the events occurred.

Not the helper? Take me back to the rule itself → Back to the marriage-rule answer

We're separated, not legally divorcedNone of the standard tracks fits

Separation — even decades-long separation — does not count as divorce for SSA. POMS RS 00202.005A is explicit: the marriage must have ended in a final divorce. If you're separated but not legally divorced, you're treated as a current spouse for filing purposes, which means the worker has to be receiving retirement or disability benefits before you can claim a spousal benefit.

If you can't reach your spouse to coordinate filings, or if formal divorce isn't an option for personal reasons, talk with SSA directly. There are also rules for spouses where the worker has not yet filed but you have been separated; an SSA claims specialist can walk you through the specific circumstances.

Want me to walk you through other situations? → See all spousal-benefit options

Everything people ask me

Does my marriage have to be 10 years for spousal benefits?

Not if you're currently married. The current-spouse rule is one continuous year of marriage immediately before you file (POMS RS 00202.001B.5.a), with two narrow exceptions for parents of the worker's child or those entitled to certain auxiliary benefits at the time they married. The 10-year rule applies only when you're divorced and filing on an ex-spouse's record (POMS RS 00202.005A).

What if we were married 9 years before the divorce?

The 10-year rule is a hard line. Nine years means you don't qualify for divorced-spouse benefits on that ex's record — SSA does not round up. The marriage must have lasted at least 10 years immediately before the divorce became final (POMS RS 00202.005A). One narrow exception: if you remarried the same ex and the second divorce came after a 10-year combined mark, credit may apply if the remarriage occurred in the calendar year right after the first divorce.

Does separation count toward the 10 years?

Yes — the 10-year clock runs from the marriage date to the date the divorce became final, regardless of when you physically separated. Years of separation while still legally married count. What does not count is separation alone: if you never legally divorced, the divorced-spouse rule does not apply.

What if we got divorced and remarried each other?

POMS RS 00202.005A allows the periods to combine, but only under a specific condition: the remarriage must have happened no later than the calendar year immediately following the calendar year of the divorce. The marriage also has to be in existence in each of the 10 years before the final divorce. If there's a longer gap, you generally cannot stack the durations.

Does an annulment count as a 10-year marriage?

Generally no. An annulment treats the marriage as if it never legally existed, so the duration usually does not count toward the 10-year divorced-spouse rule. Putative-marriage and deemed-marriage rules can occasionally help — SSA evaluates these case by case under POMS GN 00305.055 and GN 00305.085. If your situation involves an annulment, raise it specifically with the SSA claims rep when you file.

If I remarry, do I lose divorced-spouse benefits?

Generally yes. To claim as a divorced spouse, you must be currently unmarried (POMS RS 00202.005B.1.d). If you remarry, your divorced-spouse benefit on the ex's record stops. Survivor rules are different: a surviving divorced spouse who remarries after age 60 (50 if disabled) generally keeps survivor benefits.

What's the exception to the 1-year rule for current spouses?

POMS RS 00202.001B.5 lists two main exceptions: (b) you're the natural mother or father of the worker's biological child, in which case the duration requirement does not apply, or (c) in the month before you married the worker, you were entitled to (or could have qualified for) certain auxiliary benefits like widow's, divorced spouse's, parent's, or disabled child's benefits, including comparable Railroad Retirement annuities.

Does common-law marriage count for the duration?

Yes, if your state recognized the common-law marriage. SSA accepts common-law marriages where they're valid under state law (POMS GN 00305.060). The duration counts from the date the common-law marriage was established under state rules. You'll need stronger documentation than a typical claimant — affidavits, joint tax returns, joint property records.

Are survivor benefits subject to the same 10-year rule?

No — survivor rules are different. For a current widow or widower, the duration is 9 months of marriage immediately before the worker's death (with exceptions for accidental death and military service). For a surviving divorced spouse, the marriage must have lasted at least 10 years before the divorce was final, similar to the divorced-spouse rule but with a survivor twist on remarriage and age.

What documents do I need to prove the marriage duration?

For a current spouse: your marriage certificate. For a divorced spouse: the marriage certificate and the divorce decree showing the date the divorce became final. If you've had multiple marriages, SSA may also ask for prior-marriage decrees or death certificates to confirm any earlier marriages ended. Certified copies are available from the county clerk where the events were filed.

Filing for spousal benefits often opens doors.

If you may qualify on a spouse's record, you're often eligible for help across other programs too. Most readers may qualify for at least one of these — many don't realize it until someone walks them through it.

Spousal Benefits

If you're currently married to a worker entitled to retirement or disability benefits, you may qualify for up to half of their primary insurance amount once you reach full retirement age (less if you file earlier).

Divorced Spouse Benefits

If your marriage lasted at least 10 years before the divorce was final and you're currently unmarried, you may qualify on your ex's record at age 62 — with no impact on their benefit or their current spouse's benefit.

Survivor Benefits

If your spouse or qualifying ex-spouse has passed away, you may qualify for survivor benefits at age 60 (50 if disabled). Duration rules differ — 9 months for current widow, 10 years for surviving divorced spouse.

Spousal If Spouse Hasn't Filed

Currently married and your spouse hasn't filed yet? You generally cannot start spousal benefits until they do. Independently entitled divorced spouse rules give divorced filers a workaround — currently married filers don't have one.

Independently Entitled Divorced Spouse

Divorced 2+ years and your ex hasn't filed yet? You may qualify as an independently entitled divorced spouse if your ex is at least 62 and fully insured — you don't have to wait for them to file.

Medicare at 65

You may qualify for Medicare at 65 (or earlier with a qualifying disability), regardless of which spousal track applies. Filing for Social Security and Medicare are separate decisions — you can file for one without the other.

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