Benefits & Support

Bereavement Benefits Guide UK — Financial Support After a Death

What financial support is available when a partner dies in the UK. Bereavement Support Payment, funeral payments, widow's benefits, and other help available.

Benefits information is based on current DWP and HMRC rules. Entitlements depend on your personal circumstances. For free personalised help, contact Citizens Advice or call the Universal Credit helpline on 0800 328 5644.

Losing a partner is devastating, and financial worries should not add to that burden. Several forms of support are available in the UK — though you often need to know about them and claim within specific timeframes.

Bereavement Support Payment (BSP)

The main bereavement benefit, available since April 2017, replacing the older Bereavement Allowance, Widowed Parent’s Allowance, and Bereavement Payment.

Eligibility

RequirementDetail
RelationshipMarried or in a civil partnership (cohabiting does not qualify)
Your ageUnder State Pension age at the time of death
Partner’s NI recordMust have paid NI contributions (at least 25 weeks, or died from a work-related condition)
Claim deadlineWithin 21 months of death (full rate if within 3 months)

Payment Rates (2025/26)

RateLump SumMonthly PaymentDuration
Higher rate (with dependent children)£3,500£350/month18 months
Standard rate (no dependent children)£2,500£100/month18 months

Total Payments

RateLump Sum + 18 MonthlyTotal
Higher rate£3,500 + (18 × £350)£9,800
Standard rate£2,500 + (18 × £100)£4,300

When to Claim

Claim MadeAmount
Within 3 months of deathFull entitlement (lump sum + all 18 monthly payments)
3–21 months after deathLump sum + remaining monthly payments (some lost)
After 21 monthsCannot claim

Claim as soon as possible to receive the maximum amount.

Funeral Expenses Payment

If you cannot afford funeral costs and receive certain means-tested benefits:

FeatureDetail
Who can claimPerson responsible for funeral costs, on qualifying benefits
Qualifying benefitsUniversal Credit, Pension Credit, Income Support, income-based JSA/ESA, Housing Benefit, Child Tax Credit, Working Tax Credit (with disability/severe disability element)
What it coversBurial or cremation fees, up to £1,000 for other costs, travel costs
RepaymentMay need to be repaid from the deceased’s estate
Claim deadlineWithin 6 months of the funeral

Other Support Available

Financial

SupportDetail
Tell Us Once serviceNotifies multiple government departments of the death in one go
Widowed Parent’s AllowanceIf claimed before April 2017 (existing claims continue)
Pension CreditIf over State Pension age, you may now qualify
Partner’s State PensionYou may inherit part of your partner’s State Pension
Partner’s workplace pensionCheck for survivor benefits and death-in-service payments
Life insuranceCheck for any policies
Mortgage protectionMay pay off the mortgage

Practical

TaskAction
Register the deathWithin 5 days (England/Wales), 8 days (Scotland)
Use Tell Us OnceRegister the death and use this service at the same time
Notify banks and financial institutionsFreeze joint accounts, close sole accounts
Check for a willContact solicitor if one exists
Apply for probate/letters of administrationIf dealing with the estate

Impact on Benefits

SituationEffect
BSP and Universal CreditBSP does not count as income — no effect on UC
BSP and Tax CreditsNo effect
BSP and Pension CreditNo effect
Other inherited moneyMay affect means-tested benefits if savings exceed thresholds
Bereavement and workNo statutory bereavement leave (most employers offer 3–5 days)

Checklist After a Bereavement

PriorityAction
ImmediateRegister death; use Tell Us Once; arrange funeral
Within 1 weekNotify bank, mortgage lender, utility companies
Within 1 monthClaim BSP; check life insurance; notify employer/pension provider
Within 3 monthsClaim BSP (full rate window); apply for probate if needed
Within 6 monthsClaim Funeral Expenses Payment (if applicable)
OngoingReview budget, check benefit entitlements, get financial advice if needed

Getting Help

OrganisationHow They Help
Cruse Bereavement SupportFree counselling and support (0808 808 1677)
Citizens AdviceBenefits advice, practical help
MoneyHelperFinancial guidance after bereavement (0800 138 7777)
Tell Us Oncegov.uk/tell-us-once

What Happens to Your Benefits When a Partner Dies

Death changes your benefit entitlements significantly. Here’s what typically changes:

Universal Credit

If you were claiming as a couple, your Universal Credit claim must be re-assessed as a single person. In most cases:

  • Your single-person standard allowance will be lower than the couple rate
  • If you have children, you’ll receive the child elements as a lone parent
  • Housing costs element continues, recalculated for your situation
  • Report the death to Universal Credit as soon as possible via your journal

Pension Credit

If your partner was receiving Pension Credit, this stops on their death. You may now qualify for Pension Credit as a single person if you are over State Pension age and have low income. Apply through the Pension Credit claim line: 0800 99 1234.

Housing Benefit and Council Tax Reduction

If your joint household income has dropped significantly following the death, you may now qualify for Housing Benefit (if not already on UC) or an increased Council Tax Reduction. Contact your local council.

The Single Person Council Tax Discount

If you now live alone, you are entitled to a 25% discount on Council Tax. Contact your council to apply — this is automatic once you tell them. You may be entitled to a refund backdated to the date of death.

Inheriting State Pension

You may be able to inherit some or all of your late partner’s State Pension:

SituationWhat You May Inherit
Partner died before April 2016 (old system)You may inherit up to 100% of their Additional State Pension (SERPS) and Graduated Retirement Benefit
Partner died after April 2016 (new system)You may inherit 50% of any “protected payment” they had above the full new State Pension
Partner had deferred their State PensionYou inherit their deferred amount (as lump sum or extra weekly pension, depending on when they deferred)

Contact the State Pension forecasting line (0800 731 0469) or check GOV.UK to understand what you may be entitled to.

Checking for Life Insurance and Death-in-Service Benefits

Many people don’t realise their partner had life insurance or workplace death benefits. Check:

  1. Workplace pension: Most workplace pensions include a death-in-service benefit (usually 2–4x salary), paid as a lump sum to a nominated beneficiary. Contact the employer or pension provider.
  2. Mortgage protection: If your partner had a repayment mortgage, check whether there was a joint life insurance policy that pays off the mortgage on first death.
  3. Life insurance policies: Check bank statements for direct debit payments to insurance companies. Also check any paperwork in their files.
  4. Credit card or loan protection: Some credit agreements include payment protection that clears the balance on death — check each lender.

The Financial Reality of Bereavement: What People Don’t Expect

Beyond the formal benefits, bereaved partners often face unexpected financial challenges:

  • Probate delays: If there’s a will, it may take 3–12 months to get probate granted. Some bank accounts are frozen during this time. Many banks will release small sums (£30,000+) before probate on production of the death certificate.
  • Joint accounts: Joint bank accounts pass automatically to the surviving partner without probate. Sole accounts are frozen.
  • Bills and subscriptions: You may still be paying for services in your partner’s name (streaming, phone contracts, insurance). These need to be cancelled or transferred.
  • Income tax: A tax return for the year of death may be required. The executor has to account for all income up to the date of death.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Bereavement Support Payment