Yes. A non-spouse claimant can receive SSS funeral benefits in the Philippines after paying for the burial or cremation, but paying the funeral bill is not always enough by itself. Under current SSS rules, the surviving legal spouse has priority. A child, parent, sibling, live-in partner, friend, employer, or other natural person may claim only if they can prove that they paid the funeral expenses and satisfy the additional SSS requirements when a legal spouse exists, cannot be located, did not pay, is deceased, or the deceased SSS member was single.
The key question is not simply “Am I an heir?” or “Am I family?” The practical question SSS will ask is: Who actually defrayed the funeral expenses, and does that person have the proper documents?
What the SSS Funeral Benefit Is
The SSS funeral benefit is a cash benefit meant to help defray funeral expenses upon the death of an SSS member, retirement pensioner, or permanent total disability pensioner. The official SSS Funeral Benefit page describes it as a benefit granted to help cover funeral costs after the death of a member or pensioner. (Social Security System)
The funeral benefit is separate from the SSS death benefit. This distinction matters:
| Benefit | Who usually receives it | Main purpose |
|---|---|---|
| SSS Funeral Benefit | The person who paid the funeral expenses, subject to SSS priority rules | Reimbursement or assistance for burial, cremation, and related funeral costs |
| SSS Death Benefit | Qualified beneficiaries such as dependent spouse, dependent children, dependent parents, designated beneficiaries, or legal heirs | Pension or lump sum benefit arising from the member’s death |
A non-spouse who paid for the burial may qualify for the funeral benefit even if that person is not qualified to receive the death pension.
Legal Basis for SSS Funeral Benefits
The main legal basis is Republic Act No. 11199 (2019), also known as the Social Security Act of 2018. Section 13-B of RA 11199 provides for a funeral grant to help defray funeral expenses upon the death of an SSS member, including a permanently totally disabled member or retiree. (Lawphil)
The detailed current claim rules are found in SSS Circular No. 2023-009, which issued the revised guidelines on the Social Security funeral benefit program. The circular expressly covers funeral benefit claimants such as the surviving legal spouse, children, parents, or any other natural person who paid the funeral expenses of a qualified member or pensioner.
The Civil Code also gives background on funeral arrangements. Article 305 of the Civil Code states that the duty and right to arrange the funeral of a relative follows the order for support, while Articles 306 to 310 deal with the nature of funerals, the deceased’s wishes, consent regarding remains, wrongful interference, and funeral expenses. (Supreme Court E-Library)
For SSS purposes, however, the controlling rule is the SSS funeral benefit guideline: the benefit is paid according to SSS priority rules and proof of payment, not merely according to who is emotionally closest to the deceased.
Can a Non-Spouse Claimant Receive the SSS Funeral Benefit?
Yes, but the answer depends on the deceased member’s civil status and the claimant’s documents.
Under SSS Circular No. 2023-009, the order of priority is:
Surviving legal spouse; or
Child, parent, or any other natural person who can present proof of payment, provided that:
- the surviving legal spouse did not pay the funeral expenses or cannot be located;
- the legal spouse is already deceased; or
- the deceased member was single.
This means a non-spouse claimant may include:
- a child;
- a parent;
- a sibling;
- a common-law or live-in partner;
- a fiancé or fiancée;
- a friend;
- a neighbor;
- an employer’s representative who personally paid, if the claim is properly supported;
- any other natural person who actually paid the funeral expenses.
The phrase natural person is important. SSS Circular No. 2023-009 refers to natural persons, not corporations. If a company, cooperative, funeral plan provider, or employer paid the funeral expense, SSS may require proof showing who the proper individual claimant is, or whether a representative is merely filing documents for the actual payer.
The Surviving Legal Spouse Has Priority
A common misunderstanding is that the person who paid automatically wins. That is not always true.
If the deceased member had a surviving legal spouse, SSS gives the spouse priority. A “legal spouse” means a spouse in a valid marriage that has not been terminated by death, annulment, declaration of nullity, or another legally recognized ground.
This can create hard situations in real life:
- The deceased was separated from the legal spouse for many years.
- The live-in partner paid the funeral bill.
- The children handled the wake and burial.
- The legal spouse is abroad and not communicating.
- The legal spouse appears only after burial to claim benefits.
For SSS funeral benefit purposes, separation in fact does not automatically remove the surviving legal spouse’s priority. If the marriage still legally exists, the non-spouse claimant should prepare the extra documents required by SSS.
How Much Is the SSS Funeral Benefit?
For deaths covered by the current rules beginning 20 October 2023, the amount is:
| Contributions of deceased member or pensioner | Funeral benefit amount |
|---|---|
| At least 36 monthly contributions up to the month of death | Variable amount from ₱20,000 to ₱60,000 |
| At least 1 but less than 36 monthly contributions up to the month of death | Fixed amount of ₱12,000 |
SSS Circular No. 2023-009 states that for members or pensioners with at least 36 contributions, the formula is ₱20,000 + (0.5% × number of paid contributions × AMSC), but not exceeding ₱60,000. AMSC means Average Monthly Salary Credit, a value used by SSS in computing benefits.
The benefit is tied to funeral expenses. The same circular provides that the funeral benefit is a reimbursement of funeral expenses shown in the proof of payment, but it cannot exceed the computed funeral benefit due.
What Funeral Expenses Are Covered?
SSS Circular No. 2023-009 limits funeral expenses to specific types of expenses, including:
- embalming services;
- burial transfer services and permits;
- funeral services, including church service fees or equivalent religious service fees;
- cremation or interment services;
- purchase or rental of coffin;
- purchase or rental of niche, cemetery lot, memorial lot, or columbarium;
- payment for a memorial or funeral insurance plan.
Expenses outside these categories may be questioned. For example, food for visitors, transportation of relatives, flowers, clothing, obituary publication, and family gathering expenses may be emotionally necessary but may not always be treated as covered funeral expenses for SSS computation.
Documents Needed by a Non-Spouse Claimant
The exact documents may vary depending on the facts, but a non-spouse claimant should usually prepare the following.
| Requirement | Practical notes |
|---|---|
| Funeral Claim Application | Used especially for over-the-counter filing. The SSS funeral claim form requires deceased member information, claimant information, certification, photo, and SSS processing details. |
| Valid IDs of claimant | Bring originals and photocopies. For foreign claimants, passport and government-issued foreign ID may be useful. |
| Proof of SSS membership of the deceased | SSS card, UMID, E-1, RS-1, NW-1, OW-1, E-4, employment record with SSS number, payslip, company ID, or SSS-issued certification/document showing the correct SSS number. (Social Security System) |
| Death certificate | PSA or Local Civil Registrar copy. SSS may also accept a civil registry certification of death bearing the official seal. (Social Security System) |
| Proof of payment of funeral expenses | For non-spouse claimants, the safest document is a BIR-registered receipt or invoice issued under the claimant’s name and indicating the deceased member’s name. |
| Additional documents concerning the surviving legal spouse | Waiver, affidavit, spouse’s death certificate, marriage certificate, or CENOMAR, depending on the situation. |
| Disbursement account | SSS pays through UMID-ATM or an approved disbursement account under DAEM for online claimants. (Social Security System) |
Because of the BIR transition from official receipts to invoices under the Ease of Paying Taxes rules, many businesses now issue invoices as the primary sales document, while official receipts may be supplementary. For SSS filing, the important practical point is that the funeral provider’s document should be BIR-registered, complete, traceable, and clearly show the claimant and deceased member. If the branch still asks for an “OR,” explain the invoice format and ask whether the document is acceptable under current BIR invoicing rules.
Special Requirement When the Claimant Is Not the Surviving Legal Spouse
If the claimant is other than the surviving legal spouse, SSS requires stronger proof.
For a non-spouse claimant, SSS Circular No. 2023-009 provides that the proof of payment must generally be an official receipt issued under the claimant’s name and indicating the deceased member or pensioner’s name. The proof must be submitted together with one of the required documents concerning the surviving legal spouse.
If the legal spouse is alive and willing to cooperate
Submit a duly notarized waiver signed by the surviving legal spouse in favor of the claimant.
This is the cleanest route when, for example:
- the children paid for the burial;
- the separated spouse did not pay;
- the spouse agrees that the live-in partner should claim;
- the spouse is abroad but willing to sign documents.
SSS has a prescribed Waiver of Claim for Funeral Expenses form for this purpose. The waiver identifies the deceased member, surviving legal spouse, claimant, relationship, and funeral expense items. (Social Security System)
If the legal spouse did not pay or cannot be located
Submit a duly notarized affidavit attested by two disinterested persons stating that the surviving legal spouse did not pay the funeral expenses or cannot be located.
“Disinterested persons” should be people who are not claiming the benefit and have no direct financial interest in the claim. In practice, SSS tends to scrutinize affidavits more carefully when the claim involves a live-in partner, estranged family members, or relatives who are fighting over benefits.
A strong affidavit should explain:
- who paid the funeral expenses;
- how the payment was made;
- why the legal spouse did not pay;
- what efforts were made to locate or contact the spouse;
- the relationship of the witnesses to the deceased and claimant;
- that the witnesses are not benefiting from the claim.
Supporting documents such as text messages, remittance slips, bank transfer records, barangay certification, funeral home certification, or written acknowledgment by relatives can help.
If the legal spouse is already dead
Submit the legal spouse’s death certificate registered with the Local Civil Registrar or issued by the PSA, plus the marriage certificate showing the marriage between the deceased member and the spouse. (Social Security System)
If the deceased member was single
Submit the deceased member’s Certificate of No Marriage Record (CENOMAR) from the PSA, if SSS requires it. (Social Security System)
This is common when a parent, sibling, child, or partner claims and the SSS record does not clearly match the deceased member’s civil status.
Step-by-Step Guide for a Non-Spouse Claimant
1. Confirm that the deceased was an SSS member or pensioner
Get the deceased member’s:
- SSS number or CRN;
- full name as registered with SSS;
- date of birth;
- date of death;
- prior employer records, if available;
- SSS ID, UMID, E-1, or employment documents.
If the SSS number is unknown, search through old payslips, employment files, company IDs, contribution payment receipts, or SSS documents. SSS will validate the deceased member’s information and qualification.
2. Secure the death certificate
For deaths in the Philippines, obtain the death certificate from:
- the Local Civil Registrar where the death was registered; or
- the Philippine Statistics Authority once the record is available.
If the PSA copy is not yet available, SSS may accept an LCR-registered death certificate or civil registry certification, depending on the branch and claim stage.
If the death certificate is not available, SSS lists substitute documents such as certification of non-availability from the LCR and PSA, plus documents like a church death certification, cemetery burial certification, or cremation certification. (Social Security System)
3. Secure proof that you paid
For non-spouse claimants, this is often the most important document.
Ask the funeral parlor, crematorium, cemetery, memorial park, or plan provider to issue the receipt or invoice in the actual payer’s name, not merely in the name of the eldest child, spouse, or person who arranged the wake.
The document should ideally show:
- claimant’s full legal name;
- deceased member’s full name;
- date of payment;
- amount paid;
- service details;
- BIR registration details;
- name and address of the funeral provider.
If the original document was lost or submitted to another agency, SSS may accept a certified true copy of the OR or a certification from the funeral parlor or memorial service stating the payment details. (Social Security System)
4. Resolve the legal spouse issue early
Before filing, determine whether the deceased was:
- single;
- married;
- widowed;
- legally separated;
- annulled;
- with a declared null marriage;
- separated in fact but still legally married.
If a legal spouse exists, prepare the waiver or affidavit requirement before going to SSS. This avoids the common situation where the claimant queues at the branch only to be told that the claim cannot proceed without the spouse-related document.
5. Decide whether to file online or over the counter
SSS states that funeral benefit applications are filed online for SSS member-claimants, while non-SSS member-claimants must file over the counter at an SSS branch office. (Social Security System)
| Claimant type | Filing mode |
|---|---|
| Claimant has SSS number, My.SSS account, and DAEM-approved disbursement account | Usually online through My.SSS |
| Claimant has no SSS number or no online access | Over the counter at an SSS branch |
| Claim involves complicated spouse, foreign document, or disputed payment issue | Often better handled over the counter |
For online filing, SSS requires the claimant to have an SS number, My.SSS registration, and an approved disbursement account under DAEM. Uploaded documents must be image or PDF files, with maximum file size of 2MB per document. (Social Security System)
6. File the claim and keep proof of filing
For over-the-counter filing, bring originals and photocopies. Ask for an acknowledgment or reference number.
For online filing, check the email notice from SSS after submission. Save:
- screenshots of submission;
- claim reference number;
- email confirmation;
- uploaded file copies;
- DAEM account approval;
- all receipts and affidavits.
7. Monitor the claim
The claim may be delayed if:
- the deceased member’s SSS number is wrong;
- the name on the death certificate differs from SSS records;
- the claimant’s name on the receipt does not match the claimant’s ID;
- the receipt does not show the deceased member’s name;
- the legal spouse issue is unresolved;
- the death was abroad and foreign documents need review;
- the DAEM account is rejected;
- SSS contributions are unposted or under verification;
- another claimant filed first.
What If Several People Paid for the Funeral?
SSS Circular No. 2023-009 addresses competing claimants. If two or more claimants file simultaneously, payment may be made on a pro-rated basis. If there is a remaining balance from the funeral benefit after payment to the first claimant, succeeding claimants may also be paid, but not beyond the remaining balance.
Example:
- Computed funeral benefit: ₱40,000
- Child A paid: ₱25,000
- Child B paid: ₱15,000
- Both have proper receipts and documents
SSS may prorate or pay according to documented expenses, subject to its validation.
If only one person’s name appears on all receipts, SSS will usually treat that person as the payer unless the documents show otherwise. Families who shared expenses should document contributions clearly through receipts, bank transfer records, signed acknowledgments, and affidavits.
What If the Live-In Partner Paid for the Burial?
A live-in partner is not a “surviving legal spouse” under SSS rules if there was no valid marriage. But a live-in partner may still claim as any other natural person who paid the funeral expenses.
The problem arises when the deceased was legally married to someone else.
In that case, the live-in partner should be ready with:
- funeral receipt or invoice in the live-in partner’s name;
- proof of actual payment;
- waiver from the legal spouse, if available; or
- notarized affidavit attested by two disinterested persons stating that the legal spouse did not pay or cannot be located.
If the deceased was single, a CENOMAR may be needed to prove that there is no surviving legal spouse.
What If the Claimant Is a Foreigner?
A foreigner may potentially claim the SSS funeral benefit if the foreigner is a natural person who paid the covered funeral expenses and the deceased was a qualified SSS member or pensioner. The SSS rule focuses on the claimant’s payment and priority status, not Filipino citizenship.
A foreign claimant should prepare:
- passport and valid foreign government ID;
- proof of payment under the foreign claimant’s name;
- local address or Philippine representative information, if applicable;
- notarized or authenticated documents when signed abroad;
- English translation of foreign-language documents.
For a deceased member who died abroad, SSS accepts a death certificate issued by the vital statistics office, county, or equivalent authority of the host country. If the death certificate is not written in English, SSS requires an official English translation from the DFA or Philippine Embassy. (Social Security System)
For foreign public documents used in the Philippines, the usual rule is that documents from Apostille countries should be apostilled by the competent authority of the issuing country, while documents from non-Apostille countries may require consular authentication. The DFA Apostille office explains that Philippine apostilles apply to Philippine public documents for use abroad, while foreign documents follow the authentication process of the issuing country. (Apostille Philippines)
What If the Claim Is Filed Through a Representative?
If the claimant cannot personally file, SSS may require authorization documents. For SSS death benefit filings, SSS recognizes a Letter of Authority or Special Power of Attorney specifically authorizing the representative to file or sign for the claimant, with IDs of both claimant and representative. The same practical approach is commonly applied to benefit-related filings where representation is allowed. (Social Security System)
A representative is not automatically the claimant. The payee should still be the actual qualified claimant unless SSS accepts a specific authority to receive on the claimant’s behalf.
For claimants abroad, the SPA should be carefully drafted. It should specifically authorize the representative to:
- file the SSS funeral benefit claim;
- sign forms and affidavits;
- submit and receive documents;
- follow up with SSS;
- receive notices;
- receive proceeds only if SSS allows payment through the representative.
Filing Deadline
Applications for SSS funeral benefit must be filed within 10 years from the month of death of the member or pensioner, subject to SSS rules.
Even though the deadline is long, filing early is better because documents are easier to secure, witnesses are available, funeral providers can still issue certifications, and family disputes are easier to manage before memories fade.
Common Reasons SSS Funeral Claims by Non-Spouses Are Delayed or Denied
The receipt is not in the claimant’s name
This is the most common problem. If the receipt is in the legal spouse’s name, eldest child’s name, or funeral plan holder’s name, SSS may ask why another person is claiming.
The deceased was married, but no spouse waiver or affidavit was submitted
If the deceased had a legal spouse, SSS will usually require documentation showing why a non-spouse should be paid.
The claimant is a live-in partner and the family objects
A live-in partner can claim if they paid, but objections from the legal spouse or children can cause closer scrutiny.
The death certificate has name errors
Differences in spelling, middle name, birth date, or marital status can cause SSS to require correction, supporting documents, or additional proof.
The documents are foreign-issued and not translated or authenticated
Foreign death certificates, marriage records, and affidavits should be prepared according to SSS and Philippine authentication requirements.
The funeral was paid through a memorial plan
If the deceased member paid the funeral or memorial plan before death, SSS may require a certification of availment from the plan company. SSS rules allow this type of certification in specific cases involving children, parents, or legal heirs. (Social Security System)
False affidavits or fake receipts are submitted
RA 11199 penalizes false statements, false affidavits, and false documents submitted in connection with SSS benefit claims, with liability tied to Article 172 of the Revised Penal Code on falsification by private individuals and use of falsified documents. (Social Security System)
Practical Examples
Example 1: Child paid because the mother is abroad
The deceased father was legally married. His adult daughter paid the funeral expenses. The surviving wife is abroad and agrees that the daughter should claim.
The daughter should submit the funeral receipt in her name, death certificate, proof of SSS membership, and a notarized waiver from the surviving wife. If the waiver is signed abroad, it may need proper notarization, apostille, or consular processing depending on where it is executed and how SSS will receive it.
Example 2: Live-in partner paid, but deceased had an estranged wife
The deceased lived with his partner for 12 years, but he was still legally married to another woman. The live-in partner paid the cremation and memorial lot.
The live-in partner is not the surviving legal spouse, but may claim as another natural person who paid. The partner should submit proof of payment in their name plus either a waiver from the legal wife or a notarized affidavit with two disinterested persons stating that the legal spouse did not pay or cannot be located.
Example 3: Parent paid for unmarried child
A mother paid the burial expenses of her unmarried adult son who was an SSS member. She should prepare proof of payment, the death certificate, proof of SSS membership, and possibly the son’s CENOMAR if SSS needs confirmation that there is no surviving legal spouse.
Example 4: Siblings shared the expenses
Two siblings split the funeral bill. One paid the coffin and funeral services; the other paid the cremation and columbarium.
Each should keep receipts under their own name. If they file at the same time, SSS may prorate the benefit. If one files first, the other may be paid only if a balance remains from the computed funeral benefit.
What to Do If SSS Rejects the Claim
If SSS rejects or suspends the claim, ask for the specific reason in writing or in the claim status notice. The usual first step is to correct the deficiency: missing waiver, unreadable upload, wrong receipt name, lack of death certificate, or DAEM issue.
If the issue is factual, such as who actually paid, submit stronger proof:
- bank transfer records;
- funeral provider certification;
- affidavits from disinterested persons;
- written acknowledgments from relatives;
- spouse waiver;
- corrected civil registry documents.
If the issue becomes a legal dispute, SSS matters may be elevated under the rules of the Social Security Commission (SSC). The SSS page on SSC rules states that petitions and pleadings may be electronically filed with the Commission Clerk, subject to compliance with the 2016 SSC Rules of Procedure. (Social Security System)
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a sibling claim SSS funeral benefits if they paid for the burial?
Yes, a sibling may claim if they actually paid the funeral expenses and can submit proof of payment. If the deceased had a surviving legal spouse, the sibling must also submit the required spouse waiver, affidavit, spouse death certificate, or other applicable document.
Can a live-in partner claim SSS burial benefits?
Yes, a live-in partner may claim as a non-spouse natural person who paid the funeral expenses. But if the deceased had a legal spouse, the live-in partner must address the surviving spouse’s priority through the documents required by SSS.
Is the SSS funeral benefit only for the legal spouse?
No. The legal spouse has priority, but SSS rules allow a child, parent, or any other natural person to claim if that person paid and meets the conditions.
What if the receipt is under the name of the deceased member?
This may cause difficulty because SSS usually wants proof showing the claimant paid. If the payment came from a funeral plan under the deceased member’s name, ask the plan provider for a certification of availment and proof of payment history. If the claimant actually paid but the receipt was issued incorrectly, request a funeral provider certification explaining who paid.
Can I claim if I only paid part of the funeral expenses?
Possibly. SSS may pay based on documented expenses and available benefit balance. If multiple claimants paid, SSS may prorate payment or pay succeeding claimants only up to the remaining balance.
How long do I have to file the SSS funeral claim?
The claim must be filed within 10 years from the month of death of the SSS member or pensioner.
Do I need a PSA death certificate?
A PSA death certificate is preferred, but SSS may accept an LCR-registered death certificate or civil registry certification depending on the situation. If no death certificate is available, SSS lists substitute documents together with certifications of non-availability.
Can a foreigner claim SSS funeral benefits?
Yes, if the foreigner is the person who paid the funeral expenses and the deceased was a qualified SSS member or pensioner. Foreign IDs, translated documents, and authentication or apostille requirements may apply.
What if the legal spouse refuses to sign a waiver?
A non-spouse claimant may submit a notarized affidavit attested by two disinterested persons stating that the surviving legal spouse did not pay or cannot be located. If the spouse actively contests the claim, SSS may require additional proof or hold the claim for closer evaluation.
Can SSS pay the funeral benefit even if the burial already happened?
Yes. The funeral benefit is commonly claimed after burial or cremation because proof of payment is usually required. Just make sure the claim is filed within the 10-year prescriptive period.
Key Takeaways
- A non-spouse claimant can receive SSS funeral benefits if they actually paid the funeral expenses and submit complete proof.
- The surviving legal spouse has priority, even if the spouse was separated from the deceased, unless proper SSS documents support payment to another claimant.
- For non-spouse claimants, the receipt or invoice should ideally be in the claimant’s name and should identify the deceased member.
- If the deceased had a legal spouse, prepare a notarized waiver, affidavit with two disinterested persons, spouse death certificate, or CENOMAR, depending on the facts.
- The current SSS funeral benefit is ₱12,000 for members with 1 to 35 contributions, or ₱20,000 to ₱60,000 for those with at least 36 contributions, subject to SSS computation and documented expenses.
- Non-SSS member-claimants must usually file over the counter, while SSS member-claimants with My.SSS and DAEM may file online.
- File within 10 years from the month of death, but filing early avoids document, witness, and family-dispute problems.