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Key Takeaways
- U.S. citizens can generally receive survivor benefits abroad. The rules depend on citizenship, country of residence and benefit type.
- Non‑citizen spouses can still qualify, but need to pay close attention to their residency history and the rules of their country of origin.
The number of people receiving Social Security benefits overseas, now more than 711,000 people, has more than doubled in the last two decades. About one in seven of them are receiving survivor benefits.
Your spouse can still receive those payments after you’re gone, even from abroad. The rules depend on citizenship, country of residence and benefit type. So, if you’re eyeing retirement in Mexico or another destination overseas, some planning now can prevent withheld checks.
Same Benefits, Foreign Address
Social Security survivor benefits are paid to a widow or widower based on the deceased worker’s earnings record. Eligible spouses can claim as early as age 60 (or age 50 with a qualifying disability), and waiting increases the monthly amount.
These age and relationship rules apply whether you live in Arizona or Guadalajara. If your surviving spouse is a U.S. citizen, payments typically continue indefinitely in most foreign countries. The key requirement is that they live somewhere the Treasury is allowed to send money. For example, Mexico is not on the restricted list, so U.S. citizens can normally keep collecting survivor benefits there without interruption.
For non-citizen spouses, Social Security examines both the spouse’s citizenship and how long they lived in the U.S. during the marriage. That’s where the five-year residency rule and country-to-country agreements come into play.
Tip
Spousal benefits and survivor benefits follow different rules. A spouse can collect up to 50% of a worker’s benefit while both are alive, starting at age 62. Survivor benefits, available after the worker dies, can equal up to 100% of the worker’s benefit, starting at age 60.
The 5-Year Test for Non-Citizen Spouses
A non‑U.S. citizen spouse can still receive survivor benefits, but must clear extra conditions. Often, they need to show they lived in the U.S. for at least five years while married to the worker. Those five years must fall during the marriage.
There are important exceptions. The U.S. has totalization agreements—bilateral treaties—with about 30 countries, including Mexico, Canada and most of Western Europe. These agreements serve two purposes: they prevent workers from paying Social Security taxes to both countries simultaneously, and they let workers combine credits earned in each country to meet eligibility thresholds.
For survivor benefits specifically, a spouse who is a citizen of a totalization-agreement country may continue receiving payments abroad even without meeting the full five-year U.S. residency test. Mexico’s agreement with the U.S. has been in effect since 2004, which matters for couples planning to retire south of the border.
Payments stop if the survivor moves to a restricted country—North Korea and other sanctioned nations, not Mexico. If someone moves to a restricted country, benefits are withheld until they leave.
Before You Go: A Benefits Checklist
Start by confirming your spouse’s eligibility for survivor benefits before you leave the U.S. Check your earnings record, estimate survivor benefits, and verify that your marriage length and ages qualify. If your spouse is not a U.S. citizen, document any years you lived together in the U.S. to satisfy the five‑year test.
Next, research whether your destination country is on Social Security’s “OK to pay” list. Most popular retirement spots, including Mexico, Portugal, and much of the rest of Europe, allow regular payments to continue. If your dream location appears on a restricted list, consider nearby alternatives that still welcome U.S. benefits.
You’ll also need a plan for receiving payments and handling taxes abroad. Many retirees keep both a local and a U.S. bank account to manage transfers and currency exchange. Remember that Social Security benefits may remain taxable for U.S. citizens, even while living overseas full‑time.
The Bottom Line
For many couples, survivor benefits do follow them abroad, especially when the surviving spouse is a U.S. citizen. Non‑citizen spouses can still qualify, but need to pay close attention to their residency history and the rules of their country of origin. If expat life is part of your retirement plan, treat Social Security like any other asset—plan for it before you go.

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