

 
Social Security: The Lump-Sum Death Benefit 
Updated March 3, 2021 
Congressional Research Service 
https://crsreports.congress.gov 
R43637 
 
  
 
Social Security: The Lump-Sum Death Benefit 
 
Summary 
When a Social Security-insured worker dies, the surviving spouse who was living with the 
deceased is entitled to a one-time lump-sum death benefit of $255. If they were living apart, the 
surviving spouse can still receive the lump sum under certain conditions. If there is no such 
spouse, the payment can be made to a child who meets certain requirements. In the majority of 
deaths, however, no payment is made. 
The lump-sum death benefit was once an important part of Social Security benefits to survivors. 
Between 1937 and 1939, the lump sum was the only benefit available to survivors of insured 
workers who died before 65 years old, and before 1952, the $255 amount was greater than three 
times the maximum monthly benefits payable under Social Security. However, because the lump-
sum death benefit has been capped at $255 for the past eight decades, inflation has eroded its 
value. At the same time, the real value of other Social Security benefits has increased. The total 
payment of lump-sum death benefits in 2019 was about $206 million, approximately 0.02% of 
total Social Security (Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance) benefit payments. 
The lump-sum death benefit’s eroding value has brought about various proposals to change it, 
including some recent congressional proposals that would have increased the benefit amount. 
Several presidential budget proposals have also proposed changes, ranging from eliminating the 
provision to changing eligibility rules. None of these proposals were enacted into law.
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Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
History of the Lump-Sum Death Benefit ........................................................................................ 1 
Current Eligibility Rules.................................................................................................................. 2 
Number of Benefit Payments and Total Spending .......................................................................... 2 
Past Proposals to Change or Eliminate the Lump-Sum Death Benefit ........................................... 4 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. The Lump-Sum Death Benefit (1940-2019) .................................................................... 4 
  
Contacts 
Author Information .......................................................................................................................... 5 
Acknowledgments ........................................................................................................................... 5 
 
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Social Security: The Lump-Sum Death Benefit 
 
Introduction 
Following the death of a worker beneficiary or other insured worker,1 Social Security makes a 
lump-sum death benefit payment of $255 to the eligible surviving spouse or, if there is no spouse, 
to eligible surviving dependent children.2 In 2019, such payments were made for about 794,920 
deaths, for a total of about $206 million in benefit payments.3 The death payment was capped at 
$255 in 1954, and since 1982, almost all payments have equaled $255, so the real (inflation-
adjusted) value of the benefit now declines each year. 
History of the Lump-Sum Death Benefit 
Monthly survivors benefits were not included in the original Social Security Act of 1935 (P.L. 74-
271), but the program did include a lump-sum benefit that would be paid if a worker died before 
the retirement age of 65.4 That provision provided some benefits to families who otherwise would 
have paid Social Security taxes but received no benefits. The benefit equaled 3.5% of the 
worker’s covered earnings—those earnings that were subject to the Social Security payroll tax. 
Those payments were made from 1937 through 1939. 
When monthly survivors benefits were added to the program in 1939 via the Social Security 
Amendments of 1939 (P.L. 76-379), a limited version of the lump-sum death benefit was retained. 
It was paid only when no survivors benefits were paid on the basis of the deceased worker’s 
earnings record. When made, the payment equaled six times the primary insurance amount 
(PIA).5 The payment was made to a family member or to an individual who helped pay for the 
funeral.  
In 1950, eligibility for the payment was expanded to include cases where survivors benefits were 
also paid “so that survivors benefits need not be diverted for payment of burial expenses of an 
insured worker.”6 The benefit was therefore paid in nearly every death of a Social Security-
insured worker. The 1950 legislation (P.L. 81-734) also sharply increased the PIA (and therefore 
increased regular monthly benefit levels). To maintain the lump-sum benefit at its pre-1950 level, 
the formula was changed to equal three times the PIA, rather than six times. 
                                                 
1 An insured worker is one who has worked enough in employment subject to Social Security payroll taxes to qualify 
for benefits. 
2 The surviving spouse and dependent children may be eligible for survivors benefits, as well; for more on survivors 
benefits, see CRS Report RS22294, Social Security Survivors Benefits. 
3 Social Security Administration (SSA), Annual Statistical Supplement, 2020, Table 4.A5 and Table 6.D9, at 
https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/supplement/2020/index.html. Statistics reported in the two tables (Table 
4.A5 and Table 6.D9) may slightly differ due to differences in data sources and calculation methods. 
4 For more details, see Larry DeWitt, The History & Development of the Lump Sum Death Benefit, Social Security 
Administration, Historian’s Office, Research Note #2, June 1996, updated September 7, 2006, at http://www.ssa.gov/
history/lumpsum.html. 
5 The primary insurance amount (PIA) is the benefit a person would receive if he or she elects to begin receiving 
retirement benefits at full retirement age. The PIA is a calculated based on lifetime covered (Social Security payroll 
taxed) earnings. For a background on Social Security benefit computation, see CRS Report R42035, Social Security 
Primer. 
6 U.S. Congress, House Committee of Conference, Social Security Amendments of 1950, committee print, 81st Cong., 
2nd sess., August 1, 1950, H.Rept. 2771, p. 107, http://ssa.gov/history/pdf/Downey%20PDFs/
Social%20Security%20Amendments%20of%201950%20Vol%203.pdf. 
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The Social Security Amendments of 1954 (P.L. 83-761) kept the formula of three times the PIA 
but capped the benefit at $255, which was approximately three times the maximum PIA payable 
under Social Security in 1952. By 1974, the minimum PIA had reached $85, or one-third of the 
$255 cap, so the lowest possible lump-sum benefit also reached $255. As a result, the lump-sum 
death payment has been unindexed since 1973, 7 and nearly all lump-sum benefits have been $255 
since (because some payments are based on PIAs from earlier years, some payments were slightly 
lower). In 1974, the average payment per worker was $254.64, and payments have averaged $255 
since 1982.8 Currently, the payment may be lower if the deceased was covered by a foreign 
system with which the United States has an agreement to integrate benefits, known as a 
totalization agreement.9 
Finally, in 1981, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 (P.L. 97-35) restricted 
eligibility for the lump-sum payment to limited categories of survivors.10 That change reduced the 
number of payments made by nearly half, from 1.57 million in 1980 to about 808,000 in 1982. 
Current Eligibility Rules 
If a surviving spouse is living with the worker at the time of death, the benefit is paid to the 
spouse. If the worker and the spouse were living apart, the spouse can still receive the lump-sum 
death payment if the spouse was already receiving benefits based on the worker’s record or 
became eligible for survivors benefits upon the worker’s death. If there is no eligible spouse, the 
benefit is paid to a child (or children) who is receiving or is eligible to receive monthly benefits 
on the worker’s record.11 If there are multiple eligible children, the benefit is split evenly among 
them. When there are no eligible survivors, no death benefit is paid.  
Number of Benefit Payments and Total Spending 
In 2019, the Social Security Administration (SSA) paid about $206 million in lump-sum benefits 
for 794,920 deaths.12 Because the $255 payment was split between multiple recipients in some 
cases, the agency made a total of 830,009 payments. The number of payments is projected to 
remain at about the same level during the next few years; thus total spending will also remain at 
approximately the same dollar level. 
                                                 
7 Social Security Administration (SSA), Social Security Trustee Report, 2018, available at https://www.ssa.gov/OACT/
TR/2018/tr2018.pdf.  
8 SSA, Annual Statistical Supplement, 2019, Table 6.D9 at https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/supplement/
2017/6d.pdf.  
9 SSA, Program Operations Manual System, GN 01701.220: Lump-Sum Death Payment (LSDP) in Totalization Claims, 
at https://secure.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.nsf/lnx/0201701220. 
10 Before 1981, if no spouse or child of the deceased worker was eligible to receive the lump-sum death benefit, a 
funeral home or other party who was responsible for the funeral expenses could sometimes claim the benefit. After the 
1981 changes, the only people eligible for the lump sum are a spouse who was living with the worker at the time of his 
death or a spouse or child who is receiving monthly benefits on the worker’s record. 
11 To receive benefits, the child must be a dependent of the worker, unmarried, and (1) younger than 18 years old or a 
full-time elementary or secondary school student and had not attained the age of 19 or (2) under a disability that began 
before the age of 22. 
12 SSA, Annual Statistical Supplement, 2020, Tables 4.A5 and 6.D9. 
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For most deaths, no lump-sum death benefit is paid. In 2019, fewer than 40% of the deaths among 
insured workers resulted in lump-sum death benefit payments.13 One possible reason is that, for 
many deaths, there was no eligible family member to receive the death payment.  
The lump-sum death benefit’s real value has declined significantly since it was introduced. For 
example, in 1954, the average lump-sum nominal death benefit per worker was $208, which 
would have been equivalent to almost $1,916 in 2019 dollars.14 In recent decades, inflation has 
caused the real value of the $255 payment to continue to decline, as shown in Figure 1. 
Total spending on the lump-sum death benefit as a share of total Social Security benefit payments 
has generally been declining over the years since 1937 (see Figure 1). In the 1960s, the lump-
sum death benefit accounted for more than 1% of Social Security benefit outlays, but that share 
declined to about 0.38% in 1980. In 1981, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (P.L. 97-35), 
which restricted eligibility for the lump-sum payment to limited categories of survivors, 
decreased the total lump-sum death benefit by nearly half from $394 million in 1980 to $203 
million in 1982. Consequently, the lump-sum death benefit’s share of total Social Security 
benefits further dropped to 0.15% in 1982. Since then, the share has declined steadily and reached 
about 0.02% in 2019. Under current law, the share will likely continue to decrease as payments 
on the lump-sum death benefit remain relatively stable and payments on other benefits continue 
to increase steadily. The lump-sum death benefit’s share of total Social Security benefits (indexed 
to wages) has declined faster than the lump sum’s real value (indexed to prices), mainly because 
Social Security benefits are linked to national wage levels, which are increasing faster than price 
levels.  
SSA estimated in 2016 that the lump-sum death benefit’s annual administrative costs were about 
$10 million.15 SSA also projected that more lump-sum death benefits would be paid out as the 
number of baby boomer deaths increases; SSA projects that in 2024, almost 900,000 lump-sum 
death benefits will be paid out, costing $217 million.16 
                                                 
13 In 2019, about 1.7 million retired worker beneficiaries and 240,514 disabled worker beneficiaries died (see SSA, 
Annual Statistical Supplement, 2020, Table 6.F2). In comparison, there were 830,009 lump-sum death payments tied to 
approximately 794,920 deaths. This means that about 40% of beneficiary deaths resulted in a lump-sum death payment 
(794,920/(1,749,570 +240,514)=39.9%). This estimate does not include deaths of insured workers who are not 
currently beneficiaries (data for deaths of insured workers are not readily available). Including deaths of insured 
workers in the estimate could result in a percentage of deaths that lead to a lump-sum death payment that is lower than 
40%.  
14 Real value of the average benefit is calculated using Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical 
Workers (CPI-W). 
15 SSA, Office of the Inspector General, Informational Report: Lump-sum Death Benefit, July 2016, at 
https://oig.ssa.gov/sites/default/files/audit/full/pdf/A-08-16-50108.pdf. As of February 2021, this is the most recent 
estimate available.  
16 Ibid. 
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Social Security: The Lump-Sum Death Benefit 
 
Figure 1. The Lump-Sum Death Benefit (1940-2019) 
 
Source: CRS, based on Social Security Administration, 2020 Annual Statistical Supplement, Tables 6.D9 and 4.A5. 
Note: Real value of the average death benefit is shown in 2019 dollars, based on the Consumer Price Index for 
Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). 
Past Proposals to Change or Eliminate the Lump-
Sum Death Benefit 
Over the years, various proposals would have changed or eliminated the death benefit. In 1979, 
President Carter’s budget described it as “largely an anachronism” and proposed replacing it with 
a similar benefit that would be paid only if the deceased or the surviving spouse were eligible for 
Supplemental Security Income, a program that provides cash benefits to aged, blind, or disabled 
persons with limited income and assets.17 Under that proposal, only about 30,000 recipients 
would have received a benefit each year.18  
The 1979 Advisory Council on Social Security recommended that the benefit be increased to 
three times the PIA, but no more than $500. A significant minority of the council favored the 
Carter proposal of targeting the benefit to those with the greatest need, but with a higher benefit 
of perhaps $625. The council found that the benefit “provides valuable assistance at a time of 
special financial need. The monthly survivors benefits under Social Security are designed to meet 
regular recurring costs, whereas the lump-sum death payment is designed to meet the expenses of 
a final illness and funeral.”19 In 2019, the median cost of an adult funeral with viewing and burial 
was $7,640,20 and the lump-sum death benefit was fixed at $255 per worker. Although the benefit 
                                                 
17 For more information on Supplemental Security Income, see CRS In Focus IF10482, Supplemental Security Income 
(SSI). 
18 Government Accountability Office (formerly General Accounting Office), The Lump Sum Death Benefit—Should It 
Be Changed?, HRD-80-87, August 8, 1980, p. 5, at http://www.gao.gov/assets/140/130061.pdf.  
19 1979 Advisory Panel on Social Security, Social security financing and benefits, December 1979, pp. 173-175. 
20 National Funeral Directors Association, “Statistics,” 2019, at http://www.nfda.org/news/statistics. 
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was once linked to burial expenses and is sometimes still referred to as a “burial benefit,” it no 
longer has any legal connection with funeral expenses.21  
President Bush’s FY2007 budget proposed eliminating the benefit, arguing that it “no longer 
provides meaningful monetary benefit for survivors” and that it results in high administrative 
costs.22 The $15 million estimated annual administrative cost at the time was about 7% of lump-
sum death benefit outlays. Administrative costs for the entire Social Security program are less 
than 1% of benefit outlays. 
Some proposals would have increased the benefit. For example, in the 110th Congress, H.R. 341 
proposed expanding eligibility for the benefit to insured workers upon the death of their 
uninsured spouses. In the 111th Congress, the Social Security Death Benefit Increase Act of 2010 
(H.R. 6388) would have increased the benefit from $255 to $332, and the BASIC Act (H.R. 5001) 
would have increased it to 47% of the worker’s PIA. In the 114th Congress, the Social Security 
Lump-Sum Death Benefit Improvement and Modernization Act of 2015 (H.R. 1109) proposed 
increasing the benefit to $1,000. In addition, in the 115th Congress, H.R. 5302 and S. 1739 
(BASIC Act) proposed increasing the lump-sum death benefit to 50% of the worker’s PIA. None 
of these proposals have been enacted into law. 
 
Author Information 
 
Zhe Li 
   
Analyst in Social Policy 
    
 
Acknowledgments 
The original report was written by former CRS analyst Noah Meyerson. 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
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under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
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copy or otherwise use copyrighted material. 
 
                                                 
21 Larry DeWitt, The History & Development of the Lump Sum Death Benefit, Social Security Administration, 
Historian’s Office, Research Note #2, June 1996, updated September 7, 2006, at http://www.ssa.gov/history/
lumpsum.html. 
22 Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2007, February 2006, p. 
290, at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BUDGET-2007-BUD/pdf/BUDGET-2007-BUD-29.pdf. 
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