WisePH.Net
  • Home
  • PRC News
  • Investment
    • Pag-IBIG
    • SSS
    • PhilHealth
  • Lotto Result
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • PRC News
  • Investment
    • Pag-IBIG
    • SSS
    • PhilHealth
  • Lotto Result
No Result
View All Result
WisePH.Net
No Result
View All Result
Home Investment SSS

How to claim the SSS death benefit: requirements and process (2026)

Liz by Liz
May 13, 2026
in SSS
0
14
SHARES
5.7k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
TL;DR: The SSS death benefit pays a monthly survivorship pension to families of members with at least 36 contributions, or a lump sum for those with fewer. The surviving legal spouse and dependent children are primary beneficiaries. Parents and other secondary beneficiaries only qualify when no primary beneficiaries exist. Surviving spouses with a My.SSS account can file online, but claims that include dependent children still require an in-person branch visit.

What is the SSS death benefit?

When an SSS member dies, their family files a death benefit claim. Whether they get a monthly pension or a single lump sum depends on one number: how many monthly contributions the member paid before death.

It is separate from the SSS funeral benefit, which is a cash grant for whoever paid the burial costs. The same person can claim both, but each requires a separate application and a separate form.

Who qualifies as a primary beneficiary?

Primary beneficiaries have the first claim to the death benefit. If they exist, secondary beneficiaries receive nothing.

Republic Act 11199 defines primary beneficiaries as the dependent legal spouse (until remarriage or cohabitation with a new partner) and dependent children who are unmarried, not gainfully employed, and under 21 years old, or permanently incapacitated regardless of age. Legitimate, legitimated, legally adopted, and illegitimate children all qualify.

Each eligible child receives a dependent’s pension on top of the spouse’s survivorship pension. The amount is 10% of the monthly pension or ₱250 per child, whichever is higher, for up to five children.

The spouse loses the pension the moment she remarries. SSS goes further than most people expect: entering a live-in or cohabitation arrangement also stops the pension. The online filing portal screens for this specifically.

Beneficiary typeBenefit received
Surviving legal spouseMonthly survivorship pension until remarriage or cohabitation
Each dependent child (max 5)10% of monthly pension or ₱250, whichever is higher
Spouse with dependent childrenBoth pension and dependent allowance paid at the same time
SSS Death Benefit: Who Gets What Surviving Spouse Monthly pension (lifetime, if 36+ contributions) Dependent Children 10% of pension or ₱250 per child, max 5 children Parents / Legal Heirs Lump sum only (no spouse or kids exist) PRIMARY PRIMARY SECONDARY If primary beneficiaries exist, secondary beneficiaries receive nothing from the death benefit Outstanding SSS loans are deducted from the benefit before any payment is released
SSS death benefit beneficiary hierarchy and key payment rules

Who qualifies as a secondary beneficiary?

Secondary beneficiaries step in when the deceased left no dependent spouse and no eligible children. The order: dependent parents first, then any designated beneficiary listed in the member’s SSS records, then legal heirs under the Family Code.

Secondary beneficiaries receive a lump sum, not a monthly pension. If the deceased had at least 36 monthly contributions, that lump sum equals 36 times the computed monthly pension.

Monthly pension or lump sum: which one does your family get?

One number determines this: how many monthly contributions the deceased paid before the semester of death.

Contributions paidWhat the family receives
36 or moreMonthly survivorship pension (lifetime)
Fewer than 36One-time lump sum

The monthly pension is the highest of three computed figures:

  1. ₱300 + (20% x AMSC) + (2% x AMSC x [CYS – 10])
  2. 40% x AMSC
  3. Minimum: ₱1,000 (under 10 credited years), ₱1,200 (10+ years), ₱2,400 (20+ years)

AMSC = Average Monthly Salary Credit; CYS = Credited Years of Service

Pensioners also receive a 13th-month pension every December, plus a ₱1,000 monthly supplemental allowance that took effect in January 2017.

Understanding how contributions affect benefit sizes is worth reading in full. Our guide on how SSS contributions are computed breaks this down, and the SSS retirement pension calculator can give you a concrete estimate.

Monthly Pension vs. Lump Sum Monthly Pension 36+ contributions Paid for life to spouse + 13th month pension + ₱1,000 supplemental Stops on remarriage/cohabitation Lump Sum Fewer than 36 contributions One-time payment only No ongoing monthly benefit Also applies to secondary beneficiaries Threshold: 36 monthly contributions paid before the semester of death
Monthly pension vs. lump sum: what determines which one your family gets

Complete document checklist for the surviving spouse

My neighbor’s wife arrived at the SSS branch with a folder full of papers. The teller still sent her home. A name written slightly differently on one ID than it appeared on the marriage certificate was enough to stop the entire claim. Getting everything right before your first visit matters.

Always required:

  • Death Claim Application Form (available at any SSS branch or sss.gov.ph)
  • PSA-certified or LCR-registered death certificate of the deceased
  • Claimant’s valid photo ID with signature and biometric data
  • Proof of disbursement account in the claimant’s own name: UMID card enrolled as ATM, bank passbook or ATM card, bank certificate issued within 3 months, or verified e-wallet account

Required if not in the member’s SSS records:

  • PSA-issued marriage certificate
  • PSA-issued birth certificate of each dependent child

For specific situations:

SituationAdditional document needed
Marriage happened abroadReport of Marriage from PH Embassy, or foreign marriage cert with English translation
Child born abroadReport of Birth, or foreign birth cert with English translation
Separated in factCLD-1.3 Joint Affidavit of two persons attesting to the spouse’s dependency
Missing death certificatePSA/LCR Certificate of Non-Availability plus church burial or cremation records
Missing marriage certificateNon-availability cert plus church marriage proof or affidavits
Missing birth certificateNon-availability cert plus baptismal or school/employment records

The claim form is the Death Claim Application Form. If the deceased had contributions under multiple social security systems (SSS plus GSIS), use the Death Claim Application Under Portability Law instead. The supporting affidavit, if needed, is the CLD-1.3 Joint Affidavit.

How to file: online vs. over-the-counter

Online filing exists, but the eligibility window is narrow. Most families with children will still end up at a branch.

You can file online if all of these are true:

  • You are the surviving legal spouse with your own SSS number and a My.SSS account
  • You have a bank account or e-wallet enrolled in the DAEM (Disbursement Account Enrollment Module) under My.SSS
  • You have not remarried or entered a live-in relationship
  • Your claim does not include dependent children (if kids are involved, you must go OTC)

Over-the-counter filing is required for:

  • Claims that include dependent children
  • Work-related death requiring EC (Employees’ Compensation) evaluation
  • Member’s date of death does not match an existing settled funeral claim
  • Irregular or invalid SSS membership coverage of the deceased

Online steps (surviving spouse, no dependent children in claim):

  1. Log in to My.SSS at sss.gov.ph
  2. Open the death benefit claim service under E-Services
  3. Fill in the required details and upload your documents (most people hit a wall here if they haven’t enrolled a disbursement account yet)
  4. Submit and save your transaction reference number

SSS funeral benefit vs. death benefit: can you claim both?

Yes. They are separate benefits with separate forms. The funeral benefit reimburses whoever paid for the burial, not necessarily the spouse. Amounts depend on the member’s contribution count:

Contributions paidFuneral benefit amount
36 or more₱20,000 to ₱60,000 (variable)
1 to 35₱12,000 (fixed)

The death benefit is the survivorship pension or lump sum for primary beneficiaries.

The funeral benefit requires that the official receipt from the funeral parlor is in the claimant’s name. If a sibling or adult child paid and the receipt is under their name, the spouse cannot claim the funeral benefit directly. The claimant needs alternative documentation from the funeral home in that case.

SSS member-claimants can file the funeral benefit online with DAEM enrollment. Non-SSS member claimants must go to a branch.

Four mistakes families make at the SSS branch

My neighbor’s wife made two trips to the SSS branch in the worst week of her life. The second trip was preventable.

1. Name mismatch on documents

Her valid ID had a name slightly different from the name on her marriage certificate. A middle name abbreviated on one document and written in full on another. That was enough. SSS could not process the claim until she returned with matching papers. Check that names are identical across your marriage certificate, valid IDs, and all supporting documents before you walk in.

2. No disbursement account in the claimant’s name

SSS cannot release a benefit without an account registered in the claimant’s own name. If the surviving spouse has no DAEM-enrolled account, the teller sends her home first. Bank verification takes 3 to 5 business days. The deceased’s ATM card cannot be used. Setting up a MySSS RCBC DiskarTech card in advance is one way to avoid this entirely.

The money problems (mistakes 3 and 4)

3. Outstanding loan deductions

SSS deducts any unpaid loan balance from the death benefit before releasing anything. This applies to the SSS Salary Loan, the SSS Calamity Loan, or any other SSS loan the member had open. Principal, accumulated interest, and penalties all count. Families expecting a large payout have walked out with a fraction of it because of an old forgotten loan. The beneficiaries are not personally required to pay the loan; SSS nets it out from the benefit amount. Check the loan balance on My.SSS before assuming you know the payout figure.

4. Official receipt in the wrong name

The funeral benefit follows the receipt. If a relative handled the arrangements and the funeral parlor receipt is in their name, the spouse cannot claim the funeral benefit directly. When handling funeral arrangements for a family member, make sure the receipts are issued in the name of the person who will be filing the claim.

4 Mistakes Families Make at the SSS Branch 1. Name mismatch IDs must match the marriage certificate exactly Even abbreviations can block the claim 2. No DAEM account Must have a disbursement account in claimant’s own name Deceased’s ATM card is not accepted 3. Loan deduction shock Outstanding SSS loans are deducted before payout Check loan balance on My.SSS first 4. Wrong name on receipt Funeral benefit follows the name on the official receipt Claimant must be on the receipt
Common reasons SSS death benefit claims are delayed or sent back at the branch

Update your SSS beneficiary records now

This is the one step active members should take today, not after someone passes away.

If your spouse and children are not listed in your SSS records, your family faces exactly what my neighbor’s wife faced: extra trips, extra paperwork, and delays at the worst possible time. SSS does not assume you are married just because you are. The system only knows what you have formally filed.

The form is SSS Form E-4 (Member Data Change Request). Submit it with PSA-certified supporting documents.

Online via My.SSS:

  1. Log in at sss.gov.ph
  2. Go to Member Info and select Update Information, then Dependents/Beneficiaries
  3. Upload scanned PSA documents and submit
  4. Save your transaction reference number

In person at any SSS branch:

  1. Download and print two copies of Form E-4
  2. Fill in your personal details in Section I and your beneficiary information in Section III
  3. Bring original and photocopied PSA documents plus a valid government ID
  4. Submit over the counter and keep your stamped copy
Update SSS Beneficiary Records: Form E-4 Step 1 Log in to My.SSS sss.gov.ph Step 2 Member Info Update Info Dependents/Beneficiaries Step 3 Upload PSA documents Marriage cert + birth certs Step 4 Submit and save reference Keep transaction number
How to update SSS beneficiary records online using Form E-4

Ten minutes on My.SSS today can prevent months of stress for your family later. For a full picture of what your contributions protect across all benefit types, read our guide on why SSS matters. And if you want to understand how contribution records affect every benefit (not just death claims), the SSS sickness benefit guide shows the same pattern.

Check all your SSS benefits and contributions guides in one place to make sure your family is covered for every scenario.

Frequently asked questions

Can the SSS death benefit be claimed if the member had an outstanding loan?

Yes, but the outstanding balance comes out first. SSS deducts principal, interest, and accumulated penalties from the benefit before releasing anything. The family is not personally required to pay the loan. SSS simply reduces the payout by that amount.

What happens to the pension if the surviving spouse remarries?

The monthly survivorship pension stops. Entering a live-in or cohabitation arrangement ends it too, not just a legal remarriage. The dependent children’s allowance continues as long as each child is still under 21, unmarried, and not gainfully employed.

What if the deceased member had no spouse and no children?

Benefits go to secondary beneficiaries: dependent parents first, then any designated beneficiary in the member’s SSS records, then legal heirs. They receive a lump sum, not a monthly pension. At 36+ contributions, that lump sum equals 36 times the computed monthly pension.

How long does it take to receive the benefit after filing?

SSS’ 2025 data: an average of 8.78 days from filing to LOI release. From a complete submission to actual first payment, expect roughly two weeks. Incomplete documents and missing DAEM enrollment are the two most common delays.

Do children need to be listed in the member’s SSS records to claim the dependent’s pension?

No, but having them listed prevents delays. If children are not in the member’s records, the claimant brings PSA birth certificates to prove the relationship. SSS asks for additional documents before processing when records are incomplete.

Tags: SSS Death Benefit: Requirements and How to Claim
Previous Post

Hito Farming Guide for Beginners in the Philippines (2026)

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Young Filipino woman registering for PhilHealth online at home using a laptop

How to register for PhilHealth online: complete 2026 guide

May 10, 2026
PRC LET result March 2026

PRC LET result March 2026: official release date, how to check, and what to do next

May 12, 2026
latest oil price update philippines

Latest Oil Price Update Philippines

April 24, 2026
How to File 1701/1701A Annual Income Tax Return (ITR) Online

Mastering the 2026 Tax Season: A Step-by-Step Guide to Filing BIR Form 1701/1701A Online

April 17, 2026
Real-Time Update PCSO Lotto Results

PCSO Lotto Result History: All Winning Numbers for 2D, 3D, 4D, 6D, 6/42, 6/45 6/49, 6/55 and 6/58, Updated After Every Draw

April 23, 2026
Filipino man filing his Pag-IBIG MP2 savings claim online using a laptop at home

How to Claim Your Pag-IBIG MP2 Savings: Step-by-Step Guide for 2026

April 18, 2026
Filipino man at SSS branch comparing two contribution history printouts during SSS number consolidation process

How to merge multiple SSS numbers: the complete consolidation guide

May 4, 2026

Can I pay SSS contributions for past months? The retroactive payment rules explained

May 3, 2026

Onok Island Palawan: a first-hand guide to the 4D3N Balabac package (2026)

May 2, 2026

Best PCSO lotto strategies and tips: hot numbers, system bets, and smart playing habits

May 2, 2026

Can I withdraw my Pag-IBIG MP2 savings before the 5-year maturity?

May 3, 2026

Meralco generation charge 2026: why one line item is eating more than half your bill

April 30, 2026

How to claim PCSO lotto winnings: step-by-step guide for every prize tier

April 30, 2026

How to compute your SSS retirement pension in 2026 (with calculator)

April 29, 2026

What documents do you need to file a PhilHealth claim?

April 29, 2026

SSS MySSS Pension Booster vs. Pag-IBIG MP2: which is the better investment in 2026?

April 28, 2026

www.wiseph.net

WisePH is your daily source for PRC board exam results, PCSO lotto draws, investment guides, business tips, tech how-tos, and current events in the Philippines. Fresh content, no filler. Built for Filipinos.

  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA

Recent News

How to claim the SSS death benefit: requirements and process (2026)

How to claim the SSS death benefit: requirements and process (2026)

May 13, 2026
A Filipino backyard hito farmer scooping live catfish from a black 200-liter drum tank, illustrating a beginner hito farming setup in the Philippines.

Hito Farming Guide for Beginners in the Philippines (2026)

May 12, 2026

© 2026 WisePH - News, results, and guides for Filipinos.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • PRC News
  • Investment
    • SSS
    • Pag-IBIG
  • Lotto Result

© 2026 WisePH - News, results, and guides for Filipinos.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?