Benefits

Bereavement Support Payment UK — Complete Guide 2026

How Bereavement Support Payment works, who qualifies, how much you get, and how to claim. Covers rates, eligibility, and interaction with other benefits. Updated 2026.

Bereavement Support Payment (BSP) helps people who have lost a spouse or civil partner. It replaced three older bereavement benefits in April 2017 and provides a lump sum followed by monthly payments.

What is Bereavement Support Payment?

Key Facts

Feature Details
Who it’s for Widows, widowers, and surviving civil partners
Based on income? No
Affects other benefits? No — fully disregarded
Duration Lump sum + 18 monthly payments
Must be under State Pension age

The Two Rates

Rate Lump Sum Monthly Payment Who Gets It
Higher rate £3,500 £350 Those with dependent children or pregnant at time of death
Standard rate £2,500 £100 All other eligible claimants

Total Maximum BSP

Rate Total Over 18 Months
Higher rate £3,500 + (18 × £350) = £9,800
Standard rate £2,500 + (18 × £100) = £4,300

Eligibility

Main Requirements

Requirement Details
Relationship Married to or in a civil partnership with the deceased
Age Under State Pension age when partner died
NI contributions Partner paid 25+ weeks of Class 1 or Class 2 NI (or died from industrial accident/disease)
Residency Usually in Great Britain (some exceptions for EEA/international)

The NI Contribution Requirement

The person who died must have paid enough NI:

Type of NI Counts?
Class 1 (employed) Yes — at least 25 weeks
Class 2 (self-employed) Yes — at least 25 weeks
Class 3 (voluntary) No
Industrial accident/disease death NI not required

If the person died before reaching 25 weeks of NI, you still qualify if they died due to an industrial accident or prescribed industrial disease.

Who Is NOT Eligible

Situation Why Not Eligible
Cohabiting but not married/civil partnered Not legally recognised for BSP
Already reached State Pension age Too old to claim
Partner didn’t pay enough NI Unless industrial death
Living outside UK (most cases) Residency requirement

Unmarried partners: This is a well-known gap in the system. If your partner died and you weren’t married, you can’t get BSP. You may instead qualify for Universal Credit, especially if you have children.

How to Claim

Claim as Soon as Possible

You must claim within 3 months of the death to receive all 18 monthly payments:

Claim Timing Effect
Within 3 months of death Full 18 monthly payments
3–21 months after death Fewer monthly payments (still get lump sum)
After 21 months No entitlement

Online Claim

  1. Visit gov.uk/bereavement-support-payment
  2. Complete the online form
  3. You’ll need the deceased’s death certificate and NI number

By Phone or Post

  • Phone: 0800 731 0469 (Bereavement Service helpline)
  • Post: Download form BSP1 from gov.uk

What You’ll Need

Information Details
Death certificate Or coroner’s reference number
Your NI number Your National Insurance number
Partner’s NI number Or details to locate their record
Bank details For payment
Marriage/civil partnership certificate Proof of relationship
Children’s details If claiming higher rate

Higher Rate — Who Qualifies?

You get the higher rate if, when your partner died, you were:

  • Pregnant (and the child was your partner’s)
  • Entitled to Child Benefit for at least one child
  • Would have been entitled to Child Benefit but for a waiting period
Situation Rate
Pregnant at date of death Higher rate
Receiving Child Benefit for child Higher rate
No children, not pregnant Standard rate

BSP and Other Benefits

Fully Disregarded

BSP is fully disregarded as income and capital for the purposes of:

  • Universal Credit
  • Housing Benefit
  • Council Tax Reduction
  • Pension Credit
  • Income Support
  • Income-related ESA
  • Income-based JSA

This means claiming BSP won’t reduce any of those benefits.

Tax

BSP is not taxable — you don’t need to include it on a Self Assessment return.

If Your Partner Was Excluded from the UK Benefits System

If your partner was subject to immigration control and couldn’t access UK benefits, this does not affect your entitlement to BSP — your NI record and residency are what matter.

Bereavement Benefits Before April 2017

If your partner died before 6 April 2017, different rules apply. Older bereavement benefits include:

Old Benefit Who Got It
Bereavement Payment One-off £2,000 lump sum
Widowed Parent’s Allowance Widows/widowers with children
Bereavement Allowance Age 45+ without children

These are now closed to new claims. If you were already receiving one of these, it continues under those rules.

Appeals and Challenges

If you’re refused BSP:

  1. Request a Mandatory Reconsideration within 1 month of the decision
  2. If refused again, appeal to the Social Security and Child Support Tribunal
  3. Citizens Advice or Cruse Bereavement Support can help you appeal

Other Financial Support After Bereavement

Support Details
Universal Credit If you have low income after the death
Child Benefit If you have children
Council Tax Reduction Contact your local council
Housing Benefit If renting, contact local council
Pension Credit If over State Pension age
Funeral Expenses Payment Help with funeral costs, income-related
Budgeting Advance Via Universal Credit

Funeral Expenses Payment

If you’re on a qualifying benefit (Universal Credit, Pension Credit, Income Support, Housing Benefit, Child Tax Credit, or Working Tax Credit), you may get help with funeral costs:

  • Amount: Up to £1,000 for other funeral costs, plus burial/cremation fees
  • Claim by: Within 6 months of the funeral
  • Form: SF200, available at gov.uk

Quick Reference

Question Answer
Higher rate lump sum £3,500
Higher rate monthly £350 for 18 months
Standard rate lump sum £2,500
Standard rate monthly £100 for 18 months
Must claim within 3 months for full payments
Last chance to claim 21 months after death
Means-tested? No
Taxable? No
Affects other benefits? No
Unmarried partners eligible? No