Eligibility and Payment Schedule for SSS Survivorship Pension

In the Philippines, the SSS survivorship benefit is the package of benefits paid by the Social Security System (SSS) to the qualified beneficiaries of a deceased SSS member. Depending on the member’s contribution record and the identity of the survivors, the benefit may take the form of a monthly survivorship pension or a lump-sum benefit. The subject is governed primarily by the Social Security Act of 2018 (Republic Act No. 11199) and SSS implementing rules, circulars, and administrative practice.

This article explains, in legal and practical terms, who qualifies, when the monthly pension is payable, how long it continues, how it is divided, when it stops, what happens to dependent children, and how the payment schedule usually works.

I. Nature of the Survivorship Pension

The survivorship pension is not a general death assistance program. It is a social insurance benefit tied to the deceased member’s SSS coverage and contribution history. Its legal purpose is to replace, in part, the lost support that the member would otherwise have provided to the family.

A survivor’s claim may result in either:

  1. a monthly pension, if the deceased member had the required minimum number of paid contributions; or
  2. a lump-sum amount, if the contribution requirement for a monthly pension was not met.

The survivorship benefit is separate from other SSS benefits such as funeral benefit, retirement benefit, disability benefit, or employees’ compensation death benefits. In practice, a qualified family may be entitled to survivorship benefits and funeral benefit at the same time, subject to separate rules.


II. Legal Basis in Philippine Law

The controlling legal framework is the SSS law, especially the provisions on:

  • death or survivorship benefit;
  • primary and secondary beneficiaries;
  • dependency rules;
  • monthly pension entitlement; and
  • suspension or termination of benefits.

The SSS applies these rules through its regulations and claims procedures. In actual adjudication, the SSS also relies on related Philippine laws on marriage, family relations, legitimacy, filiation, and dependency, because beneficiary status often turns on those issues.


III. Who May Receive Survivorship Benefits

The law classifies beneficiaries into primary beneficiaries and secondary beneficiaries.

A. Primary beneficiaries

These generally include:

  • the dependent spouse, until he or she remarries; and
  • the dependent legitimate, legitimated, legally adopted, and illegitimate children of the deceased member.

The exact order matters. Primary beneficiaries have priority over secondary beneficiaries. If there is at least one qualified primary beneficiary, secondary beneficiaries ordinarily do not receive the death benefit in their own right.

B. Secondary beneficiaries

In the absence of qualified primary beneficiaries, the following may qualify as secondary beneficiaries:

  • the dependent parents of the deceased member; and
  • if there are no dependent parents, certain persons designated under SSS rules or the estate, depending on the applicable rule and benefit structure.

As a practical matter, most disputes arise not over the category itself, but over whether a claimant is truly dependent, legally recognized as a spouse, or legally established as a child.


IV. Core Eligibility for a Monthly Survivorship Pension

A monthly survivorship pension is generally payable when the deceased member had paid at least thirty-six (36) monthly contributions before the semester of death.

If this minimum contribution requirement is not met, the qualified beneficiaries usually receive a lump-sum benefit instead of a monthly pension.

That is the first major legal checkpoint:

  • 36 or more monthly contributions → potentially a monthly pension
  • Less than 36 monthly contributions → generally lump sum only

This rule is central. Even where the survivors are unquestionably qualified, a monthly pension does not arise unless the deceased member satisfied the contribution threshold required by law.


V. Meaning of “Dependent Spouse”

A spouse does not qualify merely because there was once a marriage ceremony. The spouse must be the legal spouse and must also be dependent upon the deceased member for support, as understood under the SSS law and related family law principles.

A. Legal spouse

The claimant must show a valid marriage to the deceased member. A void marriage creates major problems for survivorship entitlement. When there are competing spouses, the SSS usually requires proof regarding:

  • validity of the marriage;
  • absence or existence of a prior subsisting marriage;
  • annulment, declaration of nullity, or legal separation;
  • dates of marriage; and
  • whether the claimant was the lawful spouse at the time of death.

B. Dependency

Dependency generally refers to reliance on the deceased member for support. The surviving spouse is commonly presumed dependent where the marital relationship is valid and subsisting, but disputes may still arise.

C. Remarriage rule

The dependent spouse’s entitlement to the survivorship pension generally continues until remarriage. Upon remarriage, the spouse’s right to continue receiving the survivorship pension ceases. That rule is one of the most important grounds for termination.

A mere relationship or cohabitation may raise factual issues, but the classic statutory cutoff is remarriage.


VI. Meaning of “Dependent Child”

A child may qualify as a primary beneficiary if the child is:

  • legitimate,
  • legitimated,
  • legally adopted, or
  • illegitimate,

and is also dependent on the member.

Under the usual SSS rule, a dependent child is one who is:

  • unmarried,
  • not gainfully employed, and
  • below the statutory age limit, commonly below 21 years old,

unless the child became permanently incapacitated while still a minor, in which case entitlement may continue beyond age 21 subject to proof.

Important implications

A child usually stops qualifying upon any of the following:

  • reaching age 21, unless permanently incapacitated from minority;
  • marriage; or
  • becoming gainfully employed.

These are common grounds for cessation of the child’s share.


VII. Legitimate, Illegitimate, and Adopted Children

Philippine law recognizes multiple classes of children for survivorship purposes, but the practical treatment may differ.

A. Legitimate, legitimated, and legally adopted children

These are commonly recognized as primary beneficiaries upon proof of filiation or adoption.

B. Illegitimate children

Illegitimate children are also recognized under SSS law as primary beneficiaries if dependency and filiation are properly established. In practice, the challenge is often documentary: the SSS may require sufficient proof of paternity or filiation consistent with Philippine law.

C. Proof issues

Common proof may include:

  • PSA-issued birth certificate;
  • judicial decree of adoption;
  • acknowledgment documents where relevant;
  • school, medical, or support records; and
  • other competent evidence accepted by the SSS.

Where paternity is disputed, the claim may become evidentiary and adversarial.


VIII. Dependent Parents as Secondary Beneficiaries

If the deceased member left no qualified primary beneficiaries, the dependent parents may receive the death benefit as secondary beneficiaries.

Key points:

  • They must show dependency upon the deceased member.
  • Their rights arise only in the absence of primary beneficiaries.
  • Whether they receive a monthly pension or lump sum still depends on the deceased member’s contribution record and the structure allowed by law and SSS rules.

If there is a lawful surviving spouse or qualified dependent child, the parents generally do not displace them.


IX. Monthly Survivorship Pension vs. Lump-Sum Benefit

This is the most important structural distinction.

A. When monthly pension is payable

The beneficiaries are generally entitled to a monthly survivorship pension if:

  1. the deceased was an SSS member;
  2. the deceased had the required minimum paid monthly contributions for pension entitlement, commonly at least 36 monthly contributions before the semester of death; and
  3. the claimant is a qualified beneficiary under the law.

B. When lump-sum benefit is payable

A lump sum is generally paid if:

  1. the deceased member did not meet the minimum number of paid monthly contributions for a monthly pension; or
  2. there is another statutory or factual reason why the claim cannot be paid as a continuing pension.

The lump sum is not a discretionary substitute. It is the statutory form of death benefit when pension entitlement does not exist.


X. Who Actually Receives the Monthly Pension

Where there is a qualified surviving spouse and qualified dependent children, the benefit is typically structured around the basic survivorship pension plus possible dependent’s pension for qualified children, subject to statutory limits.

A. Surviving spouse

The spouse commonly receives the basic monthly survivorship pension, subject to continued qualification.

B. Qualified dependent children

Qualified dependent children may be entitled to a dependent’s pension, usually an additional amount per child, but only up to the maximum number allowed under SSS rules, commonly not exceeding five dependent children, counted from the youngest and without substitution except as allowed by rule.

This means not every child in a large family necessarily generates a separate additional pension. The law and SSS practice place a cap.


XI. The Dependent’s Pension for Children

The dependent’s pension is an additional monthly amount granted to qualified dependent children of the deceased member, attached to the main survivorship pension.

Common legal features include:

  • it is payable only to qualified dependent children;
  • it is usually limited to five children maximum;
  • priority is often determined by statutory rule, typically beginning with the youngest;
  • no substitution is generally allowed once the original set is determined, except where SSS rules expressly permit otherwise;
  • each child’s entitlement ends upon disqualification, such as reaching age 21, marriage, or gainful employment, unless permanently incapacitated from minority.

The dependent’s pension is important because survivors often assume all children will receive equal separate pensions indefinitely. That is not how the system works. The law imposes eligibility conditions and caps.


XII. Minimum Pension Rules

The SSS pension system has long applied minimum monthly pension rules depending on the credited years of service or contribution history. Those minimums affect not only retirement and disability pensions but also survivorship pensions derived from the deceased member’s entitlement.

As a practical matter, the survivorship pension is often tied to what the deceased member would have been entitled to under the law, subject to minimum pension guarantees then recognized by SSS rules.

Because pension computation is highly formula-driven and subject to statutory amendments and SSS implementation, the exact amount can vary depending on:

  • contribution history;
  • monthly salary credits;
  • credited years of service;
  • applicable statutory formula at the time;
  • minimum pension guarantees; and
  • existence of dependent children entitled to dependent’s pension.

XIII. How the Survivorship Pension Is Computed

The exact computation is formula-based. In broad legal terms, the monthly survivorship pension is linked to the deceased member’s credited years of service and monthly salary credits, using the pension formula under SSS law. The law historically provides a choice among formula outcomes, with the highest applicable result used, subject to minimum pension floors.

In practical claims processing, SSS computes the benefit from its internal records. Beneficiaries are not expected to compute it manually with certainty unless they have the complete contribution record.

What affects the amount

The amount may depend on:

  • number of posted contributions;
  • monthly salary credits;
  • credited years of service;
  • whether the member had already been a pensioner;
  • whether there are qualified dependent children;
  • whether the pension is subject to statutory across-the-board adjustments; and
  • whether a 13th month pension is payable.

XIV. Payment Schedule: When the Pension Starts

A. Commencement of entitlement

As a rule, entitlement arises upon the death of the member, but actual release depends on successful filing, approval, and SSS processing.

In legal theory, the right accrues from the date fixed by law and the approved claim; in practice, the first release may include accrued arrears if processing took time.

Example

If a member dies in January and the claim is approved months later, the beneficiary may receive a first payment that includes unpaid months from the effective date of entitlement, subject to SSS rules and documentary completeness.

B. Effect of delayed filing

Delayed filing may create issues about the release of accrued benefits and evidentiary requirements. As a practical matter, survivors should file promptly because late filing can complicate verification, beneficiary disputes, and account documentation.


XV. Payment Schedule: How Often the Pension Is Paid

A monthly survivorship pension is paid on a monthly basis.

The SSS typically releases pensions through:

  • enrolled bank accounts under an approved disbursement facility;
  • UMID-ATM or similar approved channels;
  • accredited payout arrangements; or
  • other SSS-authorized disbursement mechanisms.

The actual calendar date of crediting may vary depending on:

  • SSS branch processing;
  • pensioner’s disbursement enrollment;
  • banking cycle;
  • system maintenance;
  • holidays or weekends; and
  • verification or compliance holds.

Legally, the benefit is a monthly pension, not a quarterly or annual entitlement, though actual crediting may sometimes bunch together when there are delays.


XVI. Is There a Fixed Day Every Month?

In ordinary discussion, people often ask for the “payment schedule” as though the law states a universal day of the month for all survivorship pensioners. In practice, there is no single statutory calendar date applicable in all cases. Release timing usually depends on SSS operational arrangements and the beneficiary’s approved payout channel.

So the correct legal description is this:

  • the benefit is monthly;
  • actual crediting dates are administrative and operational, not generally fixed by statute in one universal rule for all survivors;
  • where processing is delayed, the first payment may include retroactive accruals.

XVII. 13th Month Pension

Qualified SSS pensioners, including survivorship pension beneficiaries receiving a monthly pension, are generally entitled to a 13th month pension, subject to the applicable law and SSS implementation.

This is typically released once each year and is distinct from the regular monthly pension.

Important points:

  • It applies to monthly pensioners, not merely lump-sum beneficiaries.
  • It is separate from the regular monthly release.
  • It is usually released according to SSS’s annual disbursement schedule.

XVIII. Suspension, Termination, or Reduction of Benefits

A survivorship pension is not always permanent in the same form. It may be suspended, reduced, or terminated upon certain events.

A. As to the surviving spouse

The surviving spouse’s pension may stop upon:

  • remarriage;
  • discovery of ineligibility;
  • proof that the marriage was void or not legally valid;
  • fraud, misrepresentation, or double claiming; or
  • failure to comply with SSS verification requirements.

B. As to dependent children

A child’s share or dependent’s pension may stop when the child:

  • turns 21 years old, unless permanently incapacitated from minority;
  • marries;
  • becomes gainfully employed; or
  • is found not to be a legally recognized dependent child.

C. Verification and compliance

The SSS may require periodic compliance, such as confirmation of civil status, survivorship, banking details, or documentary updates. Noncompliance can delay or suspend release until compliance is completed.


XIX. What Happens if the Surviving Spouse Dies

If the surviving spouse who had been receiving the pension later dies, the fate of the continuing benefit depends on whether there remain qualified dependent children entitled under the law.

The spouse’s personal entitlement does not automatically pass as an inheritable private asset in the ordinary succession sense. Survivorship pension rights are statutory benefits, not purely hereditary property rights. Continued payment depends on the continued existence of a qualified beneficiary class under the SSS law.


XX. What Happens if There Are Multiple Claimants

This is common in Philippine practice. Disputes may involve:

  • legal spouse vs. common-law partner;
  • first spouse vs. second spouse;
  • legitimate children vs. illegitimate children;
  • acknowledged child vs. unacknowledged child;
  • parents claiming dependency despite the existence of children; or
  • rival claims over who should receive arrears.

Governing principle

The SSS must determine who the lawful beneficiaries are under statute, not simply who appears more needy.

A common-law partner is not automatically the legal “spouse” for survivorship purposes where there is no valid marriage. Likewise, a person in a void marriage may be disqualified even if there was long cohabitation.

Children’s claims depend heavily on proof of filiation and dependency.


XXI. Relationship to a Member Already Receiving SSS Pension

If the deceased had already become an SSS retirement or disability pensioner before death, survivorship entitlement may still arise in favor of qualified beneficiaries. The amount and basis of the pension are then tied to what the deceased pensioner had been entitled to receive, subject to the survivorship rules.

Thus, death after retirement does not necessarily extinguish family protection. Survivorship may continue for qualified beneficiaries under the statutory framework.


XXII. Lump-Sum Payment: How It Works

When a monthly pension is not available, the law generally provides a lump-sum death benefit.

The amount is typically based on the applicable statutory formula or a multiple of the monthly pension concept, depending on the member’s contribution record and the governing law at the time. SSS calculates this administratively.

A lump sum is ordinarily one-time, unlike a monthly pension. A claimant who receives only a lump sum does not thereby become a monthly pensioner.


XXIII. Payment of Arrears

Where claim approval is delayed, the beneficiary may receive accumulated unpaid months from the effective date of entitlement. These are often called arrears or accrued pension.

Arrears may arise because of:

  • slow completion of documentary requirements;
  • conflicting claimants;
  • delayed posting verification;
  • system checks;
  • bank enrollment issues; or
  • branch-level adjudication.

Arrears do not change the legal nature of the benefit. They remain monthly pension amounts that were simply released later in one batch.


XXIV. Funeral Benefit vs. Survivorship Pension

The funeral benefit is different from the survivorship benefit.

Funeral benefit

This is paid to the person who actually shouldered the burial or funeral expenses of the deceased member or pensioner, subject to SSS rules.

Survivorship pension

This is paid to the legal beneficiaries of the deceased member or pensioner.

A person may qualify for funeral benefit without being the survivor entitled to the survivorship pension, and vice versa.


XXV. Who Cannot Qualify

A person may fail to qualify for monthly survivorship pension for any of these common reasons:

  • the deceased member lacked the required 36 monthly contributions for a monthly pension;
  • the claimant is not a primary or secondary beneficiary under the law;
  • the supposed spouse is not a legal spouse;
  • the marriage is void or not adequately proven;
  • the child’s filiation is not proven;
  • the child is already over the age limit and not covered by the incapacity exception;
  • the child is married or gainfully employed;
  • the parents are not dependent;
  • a primary beneficiary exists, displacing the secondary beneficiary;
  • remarriage occurred; or
  • fraud or misrepresentation is discovered.

XXVI. Effect of Permanent Incapacity of a Child

A child who became permanently incapacitated and incapable of self-support while still a minor may continue to qualify beyond age 21, subject to proof acceptable to the SSS.

This is a significant exception to the general age cutoff. The incapacity must usually be:

  • permanent,
  • medically supported,
  • causally tied to inability to support oneself, and
  • shown to have existed while the child was still within minority.

The SSS may require medical evaluations and continuing verification.


XXVII. Common Documentary Requirements

Although requirements may vary by case, these are the documents commonly relevant in survivorship claims:

  • death certificate of the member;
  • claimant’s identification documents;
  • marriage certificate, if spouse is claiming;
  • birth certificates of dependent children;
  • adoption papers, if applicable;
  • proof of bank or disbursement enrollment;
  • proof of dependency for parents, if applicable;
  • affidavits or supporting records where civil registry records are incomplete;
  • medical proof for permanently incapacitated child;
  • proof resolving conflicting civil status or prior marriages, where necessary.

Incomplete documentation often delays the start of actual monthly releases.


XXVIII. Prescription and Delay Concerns

In social insurance claims, delay in filing is risky even when the substantive right may still exist. The longer the delay:

  • the harder it is to gather proof;
  • the more likely records become inconsistent;
  • the greater the chance of competing claimants; and
  • the more likely administrative verification will take longer.

From a practical legal perspective, survivors should not assume that a death benefit can be claimed casually years later without complication.


XXIX. Administrative Adjudication and Disputes

SSS claims are first determined administratively. If there is denial, partial approval, suspension, or dispute over beneficiary status, the matter may proceed through the available review mechanisms under SSS procedures and, where appropriate, judicial review.

Typical contested issues include:

  • which spouse is lawful;
  • whether a child is legally recognized;
  • whether a child is still dependent;
  • whether parents are truly dependent;
  • whether the contribution record supports a monthly pension; and
  • whether pension payments should continue after a disqualifying event.

In contested cases, documents alone may not suffice; affidavits, court decrees, and other competent proof become important.


XXX. Interaction with Philippine Family Law

Because survivorship pension depends on status, family law issues matter deeply.

A. Void marriages

A void marriage can defeat a spouse’s claim.

B. Bigamous marriages

If the deceased contracted a subsequent marriage while a prior valid marriage subsisted, the later marriage may be void, affecting the later spouse’s claim.

C. Children from different relationships

Children from different relationships may all qualify if they meet the statutory class and proof requirements.

D. Adoption

Only legal adoption creates the status relevant to adopted-child entitlement.

The SSS does not create family status on its own; it recognizes status established under law and proof.


XXXI. Does Cohabitation Alone Qualify a Partner?

Generally, no. Mere cohabitation does not automatically make one a “spouse” for survivorship pension purposes. The law speaks of the dependent spouse, meaning a legally recognized spouse.

A common-law partner may be financially dependent in fact, but that alone does not substitute for the statutory requirement of legal spousal status.


XXXII. Can Both Spouse and Children Receive Benefits at the Same Time?

Yes, in the statutory sense that:

  • the surviving spouse may receive the basic survivorship pension; and
  • qualified dependent children may receive the dependent’s pension attached to that main benefit.

But this does not mean each person receives a wholly separate full pension. The law structures the benefit in layers, with child-dependent additions subject to cap and qualification.


XXXIII. Can Parents Claim Together With the Spouse or Children?

As a rule, no, not as co-equal beneficiaries where primary beneficiaries exist. Dependent parents are secondary beneficiaries. They are called only in the absence of primary beneficiaries.

This is an order-of-preference rule, not merely a sharing rule.


XXXIV. Are Survivorship Pension Payments Transferable or Inheritable?

As a rule, SSS survivorship pensions are statutory social insurance benefits, not freely transferable private claims. They belong only to those whom the law recognizes as beneficiaries and only while statutory conditions are met.

Accordingly:

  • a spouse cannot ordinarily assign the pension as if it were a commercial receivable;
  • the pension does not simply become part of the estate as a normal inheritable stream;
  • continued payment depends on continuing qualification under the SSS law.

XXXV. Tax and Creditor Considerations

SSS benefits are generally treated with statutory protection and are not ordinarily subject to the same treatment as ordinary private income streams. Social security benefits also typically enjoy protection from attachment or execution, subject to applicable law and exceptions. The precise application depends on the governing statutory protection provisions and the context of enforcement.


XXXVI. Practical Meaning of “Payment Schedule”

In ordinary Philippine usage, “payment schedule” may refer to four different things. These should be distinguished:

1. Legal frequency

The survivorship pension is monthly.

2. Start date

Payment generally starts from the legally recognized entitlement date upon death and claim approval, with possible arrears.

3. Administrative crediting date

The actual day the amount enters the beneficiary’s bank or payout channel may vary.

4. Annual extra benefit

Qualified monthly pensioners generally receive a 13th month pension under the SSS system.

So the legally accurate answer is not simply “paid on day X.” The proper answer is that it is a monthly continuing benefit, subject to processing, crediting arrangements, and ongoing qualification.


XXXVII. Illustrative Scenarios

Scenario 1: Member dies with 80 contributions, leaving a lawful wife and two minor children

The survivors will generally qualify for a monthly survivorship pension, with the wife as primary beneficiary and the children potentially entitled to dependent’s pension.

Scenario 2: Member dies with 20 contributions, leaving a lawful spouse

The spouse may be entitled to a lump-sum death benefit, not a monthly pension, because the minimum 36 monthly contributions for pension entitlement was not met.

Scenario 3: Member dies leaving a common-law partner and one acknowledged minor illegitimate child, but no lawful spouse

The partner does not automatically qualify as “spouse” absent a valid marriage. The child may qualify if filiation and dependency are properly established.

Scenario 4: Member dies single, no children, with dependent parents

The parents may qualify as secondary beneficiaries, assuming no primary beneficiaries exist and dependency is proven.

Scenario 5: Surviving spouse later remarries

The spouse’s continuing entitlement to survivorship pension generally ceases upon remarriage.

Scenario 6: Child beneficiary turns 21

The child’s dependent’s pension generally stops, unless the child had become permanently incapacitated while still a minor.


XXXVIII. Frequent Misunderstandings

Several misconceptions commonly appear in practice.

“Any wife can claim.”

Not true. The claimant must be the legal spouse and must meet the statutory conditions.

“Common-law spouse automatically gets the pension.”

Not generally true.

“All children get paid indefinitely.”

Not true. Qualification is limited by age, marital status, employment, incapacity rules, and a cap on dependent children.

“If the member dies, the family always gets monthly pension.”

Not true. A monthly pension depends on the deceased member’s minimum paid contributions.

“Parents can share with the spouse.”

Not generally. Parents are secondary, not co-equal with primary beneficiaries.

“There is one fixed nationwide calendar day for payment.”

Not as a general rule of law. The benefit is monthly, but actual crediting dates depend on administrative arrangements.


XXXIX. Best Legal Reading of the Rule

The most accurate legal summary is this:

A qualified beneficiary of a deceased SSS member in the Philippines is entitled to a monthly survivorship pension if the deceased member had the statutory minimum number of paid contributions, generally at least 36 monthly contributions, and the claimant falls within the law’s definition of primary beneficiary or, in their absence, secondary beneficiary. The surviving spouse receives the pension until remarriage, while qualified dependent children may receive a dependent’s pension subject to statutory age, civil status, employment, and incapacity rules. If the contribution requirement for a monthly pension is not met, the beneficiaries generally receive a lump-sum death benefit instead. The pension is payable monthly, may include arrears if processed later, and is generally accompanied by a 13th month pension for qualified monthly pensioners.


XL. Bottom-Line Rules

For Philippine SSS survivorship pension, the core rules are these:

  1. The claimant must be a qualified beneficiary under law. Primary beneficiaries come first: dependent spouse and dependent children.

  2. A monthly survivorship pension generally requires at least 36 paid monthly contributions by the deceased member. Without that, the usual benefit is a lump sum.

  3. The spouse must be the legal spouse and remains entitled only until remarriage.

  4. Dependent children must generally be unmarried, not gainfully employed, and below 21, unless permanently incapacitated while still minors.

  5. Dependent children’s pension is additional, limited, and not open-ended.

  6. Dependent parents are secondary beneficiaries and inherit the right only when there are no primary beneficiaries.

  7. The pension is monthly, but the actual crediting date is administrative, not one universal statutory calendar date.

  8. Qualified monthly pensioners generally receive a 13th month pension.

  9. Proof of marriage, filiation, and dependency is often the decisive issue in disputed claims.

  10. Survivorship benefits are statutory social insurance rights, not ordinary inheritable or transferable private assets.

That is the legal framework governing eligibility and payment schedule for SSS survivorship pension in the Philippine setting.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.