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Bereavement Support Payment

A lump sum plus 18 months of monthly payments for surviving spouses, civil partners or cohabiting parents when their partner dies, paid regardless of the survivor's income or savings.

£4,300 – £9,800 per yearOfficial linksLast verified 29 April 2026

Who it helps

Surviving spouses, civil partners, or cohabiting parents (with dependent children) when their partner dies. The deceased must have paid sufficient National Insurance contributions or have died from a work-related cause.

The full picture

Bereavement Support Payment (BSP) replaced earlier bereavement benefits in April 2017. It's paid to a surviving spouse, civil partner, or (since 2023) cohabiting parent of dependent children, when the deceased had paid sufficient National Insurance contributions or died from a work-related cause.

Two rates — based on whether you have dependent children:

**Higher rate (with dependent children or pregnant)**: - £3,500 lump sum - £350/month for 18 months (£6,300 total) - **Total: £9,800 over 18 months**

**Lower rate (no dependent children)**: - £2,500 lump sum - £100/month for 18 months (£1,800 total) - **Total: £4,300 over 18 months**

Not means-tested — you can receive BSP regardless of your income, savings or whether you're working. It's tax-free and doesn't count as income for Universal Credit, Pension Credit or other means-tested benefits.

Cohabiting parents (not married or in a civil partnership) became eligible in February 2023. If you were cohabiting with the deceased before this date, your claim can be backdated to the original death date.

Claim within 3 months of the death to receive all 18 monthly payments. Claims after 3 months get fewer monthly payments.

Worth knowing before you apply

  • Apply within 3 months of the death to receive all 18 monthly payments
  • Higher rate (with dependent children or pregnant): £3,500 + £350/month for 18 months = £9,800
  • Lower rate (no dependents): £2,500 + £100/month for 18 months = £4,300
  • Tax-free and doesn't count as income for means-tested benefits
  • Cohabiting parents have qualified since February 2023 — backdating possible to original death date
  • Replaces older Widowed Parent's Allowance, Bereavement Allowance and Bereavement Payment
  • You must have been under State Pension age when your partner died
  • Surviving partners over State Pension age may instead inherit some of the deceased's State Pension

How to claim

Apply via gov.uk/bereavement-support-payment within 3 months of the death to get the full 18 months of payments. The form is BSP1; you'll need the death certificate, marriage / civil partnership certificate (or proof of cohabitation with dependent children), and the deceased's NI number. Decisions usually take 4–6 weeks.

Last verified 29 April 2026
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