However, if you receive spousal benefits, your spouse’s earnings could affect the overall amount you get from Social Security. These are Social Security payments you can collect on the basis of your husband’s or wife’s earnings record.
Learn the rules of Social Security Spousal benefits and how to maximize your monthly payments based on your spouse's or ex-spouse’s earnings.
When a Social Security beneficiary dies, his or her spouse may be able to collect survivor benefits. Learn whether you qualify and how to apply.
Social Security When a Spouse Dies - Guide to Survivor Benefits - AARP
If you’re a surviving spouse or estate executor for someone who died in the last year, follow IRS rules to file a final income tax return and more.
Yes, you can collect Social Security on a spouse’s earnings record. You may be able to do this in the form of spousal benefits, or as survivor benefits if you are a widow or widower.
As you and your spouse near your 65th birthdays, think about your personal Tricare coverage as an individual policy, like Medicare is, not as a family plan. An older spouse — or a younger spouse who qualifies for early Medicare because of a disability — can receive Tricare for Life benefits after signing up for Medicare Parts A and B. A spouse younger than 65 remains in Tricare.
If your spouse is older and enrolls in Medicare instead of keeping the employer’s insurance, you as the younger spouse may lose private health insurance coverage.