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SSS maternity benefit 2026: how much, requirements, and how to apply online

Liz by Liz
June 5, 2026
in SSS
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Pregnant Filipino woman checking SSS maternity benefit requirements on her phone at home, preparing to file her claim online
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TL;DR: The SSS maternity benefit pays 100% of your Average Daily Salary Credit for 105 days (normal delivery), 120 days (solo parent), or 60 days (miscarriage or ETP). To qualify, you need at least 3 posted contributions in the 12-month window before your semester of delivery. The full process is 100% online: notify SSS first through My.SSS, then file your actual claim after giving birth. OFWs, self-employed, and voluntary members apply directly with no employer needed.

Most first-time SSS members assume claiming their maternity benefit is one step. It is two steps, and the order matters. Miss the first one and you risk delaying your entire payout. This guide walks through both, explains how the money is computed, and covers everything that is different if you are an OFW, self-employed, or had a miscarriage.

For context on why posting contributions on time is critical, especially for this benefit, see why SSS matters for every Filipino worker.

Step 1: Maternity Notification File as soon as you have your ultrasound / EDD → Baby is born Delivery or miscarriage → Step 2: Maternity Claim File after delivery to receive your cash benefit
Two steps, in this order: Notification before birth, Claim after. Skipping Step 1 or swapping the order delays your payout.

How much is the SSS maternity benefit in 2026?

Your benefit depends on one number: your Average Daily Salary Credit (ADSC). SSS takes the 6 highest Monthly Salary Credits from the 12 months before your semester of delivery, adds them up, and divides by 180. That daily amount multiplied by your leave days is your total payout.

How ADSC is computed

SSS does not use all 12 months, and it does not use your actual salary. It uses the top 6 MSC months from the qualifying window. So one or two low months will not drag your benefit down much, as long as the other six are strong.

How SSS computes your ADSC 12 months before semester Look at all your MSCs in the 12 months before your semester of delivery (check in My.SSS) → Pick the 6 highest MSCs Add them together: ₱25,000 × 6 = ₱150,000 (example at steady MSC) → Divide by 180 ₱150,000 ÷ 180 = ₱833/day ADSC × 105 days = ₱87,465 benefit
SSS picks your 6 best MSC months, not all 12. One or two low months won’t hurt you as long as the rest are strong.

What members at different MSC levels can expect

For a full breakdown of how MSC brackets are computed, read how SSS contributions are calculated in 2026.

Monthly MSCADSC (approx)Normal delivery (105 days)Miscarriage (60 days)
₱15,000₱500/day₱52,500₱30,000
₱20,000₱667/day₱70,000₱40,000
₱25,000₱833/day₱87,500₱50,000
₱30,000₱1,000/day₱105,000₱60,000

Who qualifies for the SSS maternity benefit?

You qualify if you have at least 3 posted SSS contributions in the 12-month period immediately before the semester of your delivery or miscarriage. All membership types are covered: employed, self-employed, voluntary, and OFW. Before filing, check your SSS contribution history in My.SSS to confirm your qualifying months are posted.

  • At least 3 posted contributions in the qualifying 12-month window
  • SSS member in good standing (any type: employed, self-employed, voluntary, OFW)
  • First to fourth delivery or miscarriage only (the fifth is not covered)
  • Maternity Notification must be filed (before or shortly after birth)
SSS Maternity Benefit by Delivery Type At ADSC ₱833/day (MSC ₱25,000) Normal delivery 105 days ₱87,500 Solo parent 120 days ₱100,000 Miscarriage / ETP 60 days ₱50,000
Solo parents get the highest payout. Miscarriage and ETP are also covered, at 60 days. All amounts scale with your MSC.

Step 1: file your maternity notification before you give birth

This is the step most guides skip explaining. The Maternity Notification is not the benefit claim itself. It is simply telling SSS you are pregnant and when you expect to deliver. Do this as soon as you have an ultrasound with an Estimated Date of Delivery (EDD). Late notification is still accepted, but early notification speeds everything up.

For employed members

You give your pregnancy proof (ultrasound, Beta HCG test, or OB certificate) to your HR department. Your employer then submits the Maternity Notification through their company’s My.SSS Employer portal. Confirm with HR that it was actually submitted and that you receive a reference number.

For OFW, self-employed, and voluntary members

  1. Log in to My.SSS on desktop or the MySSS mobile app.
  2. Go to Benefits tab, then click Maternity Notification.
  3. Fill in your expected delivery date and type of contingency (normal, C-section, miscarriage, ETP).
  4. Upload your proof of pregnancy: ultrasound report showing EDD, Beta HCG blood test, or a signed certificate from your OB-Gyne.
  5. Click Submit. A confirmation with a reference number appears immediately. Screenshot it.

Step 2: file the maternity benefit claim after delivery

This is the actual application for your cash benefit. File this after you give birth, ideally within 6 months of delivery for the smoothest processing. The same My.SSS portal handles everything.

  1. Log back into My.SSS and go to Benefits, then Apply for Maternity Benefit.
  2. Complete the online application form. Link it to your earlier Maternity Notification reference number.
  3. Upload your supporting documents (covered in detail in the next section).
  4. Select your enrolled disbursement account. If you haven’t enrolled a Philippine bank account or e-wallet in My.SSS yet, do this before submitting.
  5. Submit. SSS will send a reference number and you can track the status in real time under Inquiry.

SSS typically approves and deposits the benefit within 2 to 4 weeks after submission. Self-employed and OFW members often receive it faster because there is no employer reimbursement step involved.

Documents and requirements for the SSS maternity claim

SSS needs different documents depending on your delivery type. All submissions are online in 2026. Physical forms like the old MAT-1 and MAT-2 paper forms are no longer needed for most members.

DocumentNormal deliveryMiscarriage / ETP
Proof of pregnancy (ultrasound, Beta HCG, OB certificate)For notificationFor notification / claim
Child’s Certificate of Live Birth (PSA/LCR) + Official ReceiptRequiredNot applicable
Medical certificate of miscarriage/ETP from attending physicianNot applicableRequired
Histopathological report (if D&C or raspa was performed)Not applicableStrongly recommended
Valid government IDRequiredRequired
Certificate of separation or affidavit (if employer did not advance)If applicableIf applicable

All documents must be clear scanned colored copies or certified true copies. Plain photocopies and low-resolution scans are the second most common reason for rejections, after contribution issues.

OFW guide: how to claim SSS maternity benefit from abroad

Yes, you can claim the full SSS maternity benefit from abroad. The process is actually simpler for OFWs than for employed members because there is no employer to wait on. SSS pays you directly. The benefit amount, qualifying rules, and 105-day coverage are identical to those for local members.

Foreign birth certificates and document authentication

A foreign-issued birth certificate is accepted. If your host country’s birth certificate is not in English, have it translated by a certified translator. For UAE, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, and Hong Kong, authentication through the nearest Philippine Embassy or Consulate is usually required. Consulates in major OFW cities are experienced with this and process it quickly, often within the same week.

Logging in to My.SSS from abroad

The biggest access issue for OFWs is the SMS-OTP. If your registered Philippine SIM is inactive abroad, you will get locked out at the login screen. Set up TOTP (Google Authenticator) before you leave the Philippines so your login works from anywhere, no SIM card needed. If you need to recover your account while abroad, the My.SSS password reset guide covers the exact steps.

I saw this play out firsthand with Anna, a nurse friend working at a private hospital here in Dubai. She filed her Maternity Notification at 2 a.m. Dubai time on her phone, uploaded the Dubai hospital ultrasound, and got her confirmation number within minutes. After her baby was born in January 2026, she had the birth certificate authenticated at the Philippine Consulate in one weekend, uploaded everything in My.SSS, and received her ₱92,400 benefit in 11 working days directly into her BPI account in the Philippines. No branch visit. No fixer. She had no employer to chase.

She almost did not file at all because she assumed being an OFW would complicate everything. Anna’s words: “I thought being OFW would make it harder, but it was actually smoother than my friends who gave birth in the Philippines and had to fight with their employers.”

OFW vs Employed: key differences in filing OFW / Self-employed / Voluntary You file Notification directly in My.SSS SSS pays you directly (no employer advance) Foreign birth cert is accepted with authentication Use TOTP login from anywhere in the world Simpler: no employer reimbursement step Employed Member Employer submits Notification via company portal Employer advances full benefit within 30 days PSA birth certificate required SMS-OTP or TOTP works fine locally SSS reimburses employer after payout
OFW and self-employed members deal directly with SSS. No employer in the middle means faster, simpler processing in most cases.

What if your employer refuses to advance the payment?

Under Republic Act 11210 (the Expanded Maternity Leave Law), your employer is required to advance the full maternity benefit within 30 days of your leave application. They cannot legally refuse. SSS will later reimburse them 100%. If your employer delays or refuses, you do not lose your benefit. SSS will pay you directly.

What to do when HR refuses or ignores the 30-day rule

  1. Document everything. Screenshot your Maternity Notification confirmation and note the exact date you filed your leave application. That date starts the 30-day legal clock.
  2. Send a written demand to HR citing RA 11210, Section 5(2). Email works. Give them a 5 to 7-day deadline. Most companies resolve it here once they see you know the law.
  3. File a direct maternity benefit claim in My.SSS immediately. When the system asks about advance payment, indicate that no advance was given and upload your demand letter as proof.
  4. Submit a ticket on the uSSSap Tayo portal under “Maternity Benefit, Employer Non-Advancement.” SSS will investigate and, once verified, deposit your benefit directly.
  5. File a labor complaint with DOLE if the employer continues to ignore the demand. DOLE can issue compliance orders and fines for RA 11210 violations.

One reader I guided through this process was a teacher at a small private school. Her principal said the school had no budget for the advance. She sent the demand letter, filed via uSSSap Tayo, and received her ₱98,000 benefit directly from SSS in 18 days. The school later received a formal SSS demand letter and eventually reimbursed the fund. No benefit was lost.

SSS maternity benefit for miscarriage and ETP: what is different

SSS fully covers miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, hydatidiform mole, and other emergency terminations of pregnancy (ETP) under the same law. The benefit duration is 60 days instead of 105. Everything else, including eligibility rules, ADSC computation, and the online filing process, works the same way.

AspectNormal / C-section deliveryMiscarriage / ETP
Benefit duration105 days (120 for solo parent)60 days
Prior notification requiredRecommended before birthCan be filed after the event
Key documentChild’s Certificate of Live BirthMedical certificate of termination
Additional verificationStandard processingSSS Medical Evaluation Center reviews more carefully
Counts toward lifetime limitYesYes

The single most important document for miscarriage claims is the histopathological report if a D&C or raspa procedure was performed. Without it, SSS’s Medical Evaluation Center will almost always request additional verification or delay the claim. One reader (MSC ₱20,000) had her claim rejected twice before adding this one document. On the third submission, she received ₱40,000 approved in 5 days.

Many members never file for miscarriage because they assume it is not covered. At MSC ₱25,000, the 60-day benefit is ₱50,000. That money is yours. File for it.

Why SSS maternity claims get rejected and how to fix each one

  1. Insufficient or unposted contributions. You need 3 posted months in the qualifying 12-month window. If they are deducted but not posted by the time SSS evaluates, your claim is denied. Fix: file an uSSSap Tayo ticket immediately if you see unposted months, and time your claim submission after they appear.
  2. Incomplete or blurry documents. Low-resolution scans, plain photocopies, or missing official receipts on the birth certificate cause immediate flags. Fix: re-scan all documents clearly and use certified true copies.
  3. Name or date mismatch. A single character difference between your SSS record and the birth certificate triggers a rejection. Fix: file a Form E-4 Member Data Amendment in My.SSS first, then re-submit the claim.
  4. Missing proof of termination for miscarriage/ETP. A positive pregnancy test alone is not enough. You need the medical certificate, discharge summary, or histopathological report. Fix: request these from your hospital and re-upload.
  5. Fifth delivery or miscarriage. SSS stops coverage at the fourth event. No appeal will change this.
  6. Filing after 6 months without good reason. You technically have up to 10 years, but SSS processes claims filed within 6 months much faster and with fewer questions. Fix: file as soon as possible after delivery.

If you see a rejection notice in My.SSS, read the exact reason code, fix that specific issue, and re-submit online. Most claims are approved on the second or third attempt. You do not need to start from scratch each time. Before any of this, make sure your contribution history is clean by reviewing your SSS contribution record on My.SSS at least 3 to 4 months before your due date. That one step prevents the most common rejection category entirely.

For more step-by-step guides on SSS benefits, loans, and pension planning, browse the complete SSS guide collection on WisePH.

Frequently asked questions about the SSS maternity benefit

How much is the SSS maternity benefit in 2026?

The benefit is 100% of your ADSC multiplied by your leave days: 105 (normal delivery), 120 (solo parent), or 60 (miscarriage/ETP). At a steady MSC of ₱25,000, expect around ₱87,500 for a normal delivery. Higher MSC means a higher daily rate and a larger total payout.

What are the requirements for SSS maternity benefit in the Philippines?

At least 3 posted contributions in the qualifying 12-month window, a submitted Maternity Notification via My.SSS, and the required documents after delivery: child’s PSA birth certificate with Official Receipt for normal delivery, or medical certificate and histopathological report for miscarriage.

Can an OFW claim SSS maternity benefit for a birth abroad?

Yes. OFWs file directly through My.SSS with no employer involved. A foreign birth certificate authenticated by the Philippine Embassy or Consulate is accepted. SSS deposits the benefit into your enrolled Philippine bank account. The amount and rules are the same as for local members.

How long does SSS take to release the maternity benefit?

Typically 2 to 4 weeks after claim approval. OFW and self-employed members often receive it faster since there is no employer reimbursement step. Enroll your disbursement account in My.SSS before you file the claim to avoid any additional delay.

Is SSS maternity benefit available for miscarriage?

Yes. Miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, and hydatidiform mole are all covered under the same law. The benefit is 60 days of your ADSC. You will need a medical certificate from your doctor and, if a D&C or raspa was performed, a histopathological report. File as soon as you recover. Many members lose this benefit simply by not knowing it exists.

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