Death Benefits FAQs
- 1. How can I determine who I have listed as my beneficiaries?
- 2. Can I call your office and request that a portion of my contributions designated to a deceased beneficiary go to the children of the deceased beneficiary?
- 3. At the time of my death, how long will my eligible survivor receive monthly benefits?
- 4. If my spouse is working at the time of my death and is qualified to receive a survivor benefit, could he/she receive the monthly benefit and continue working regardless of where the employment is?
- 5. At the time of my death, if my spouse qualifies for a survivor's benefit, who should he/she contact to apply?
- 6. If my wife and I both receive a state pension from SERS and one of us dies, will the surviving spouse continue to receive their pension and also be entitled to receive survivor benefits?
- 7. Is there a way for me to eliminate the survivor benefit offset so my spouse can receive my full survivor benefit?
A verification letter can be sent to your address with a list of your beneficiaries from our database.
No. This can only be done by submitting a new beneficiary form to our office.
A survivor remains eligible to receive benefits until death. A child remains eligible until age 18 (22 if attending school full-time), or the child marries. Disabled adults may continue to receive benefits as long as their disability continues and they aren't gainfully employed.
Yes, your spouse may work and qualify for survivor benefits.
In the event of your death, your spouse should contact SERS to begin the process of receiving death benefits.
If the surviving spouse qualifies for survivor benefits, they would be entitled to receive their pension and survivor benefits.
At retirement, you may elect to reduce your retirement benefit by 3.825% to remove the Social Security offset from your spouse's survivor benefit. You may also make an irrevocable election to eliminate your pension reduction if there is a change in your marital status due to death or divorce.