Financial Guide for Widows and Widowers UK — What to Do After Bereavement
Practical money guide for widows and widowers in the UK. Covers immediate steps, pensions, benefits, property, bank accounts, and estate administration.
·7 min read
Losing a spouse or partner is devastating, and dealing with finances during grief is overwhelming. This guide provides a clear, step-by-step approach to the financial tasks you will need to handle — there is no rush for most of these, so take things at your own pace.
Immediate Steps (First Few Days)
Action
Details
Register the death
At the local register office within 5 days (8 days in Scotland)
Get death certificates
Order at least 6–10 copies (you will need them for banks, insurers, pension providers)
Tell the Tell Us Once service
One call notifies DWP, HMRC, council, DVLA, Passport Office — ask the registrar
Notify the bank
Joint accounts can usually continue; sole accounts may be frozen until probate
Check for life insurance
Look through paperwork, emails, and bank statements for any policies
Contact employer (if they were working)
They may owe final salary, holiday pay, or death-in-service benefit
Check pension death benefits
Contact workplace and private pension providers
Bereavement Support Payment
Detail
Amount
Eligibility
Your spouse/civil partner paid NI contributions and was under State Pension age
Higher rate (with dependent children)
£3,500 lump sum + £350/month for 18 months
Standard rate (no dependent children)
£2,500 lump sum + £100/month for 18 months
Time limit to claim
Within 21 months of the death (full amount if claimed within 3 months)
Taxable?
No — it is tax-free
Affects other benefits?
No — it does not count as income for Universal Credit or tax
How to claim
Online at gov.uk or by phone (0800 731 0453)
Bank Accounts and Financial Accounts
Joint Accounts
Situation
What happens
Joint bank account
Usually continues in the surviving partner’s name — notify the bank
Joint savings account
Same — passes to the surviving account holder
Joint credit card
You are liable for the full balance (not just half)
Joint mortgage
You are responsible for full payments — contact lender to update
Sole Accounts
Account type
What happens
Sole bank account
Frozen until probate/letters of administration granted
Sole savings/ISAs
Frozen — but you may be able to inherit ISA allowance (Additional Permitted Subscription)
Sole credit card
Debt is paid from the estate — you are not personally liable unless you were a guarantor
Premium Bonds
The estate can keep them for 12 months (still eligible for prizes)
Inheriting an ISA (Additional Permitted Subscription)
Detail
Information
What is it?
You inherit an additional ISA allowance equal to the value of your spouse’s ISAs
This is in addition to
Your own £20,000 annual ISA allowance
Time limit
Must be used within 3 years of death (or 180 days after probate)
Cash or S&S ISA?
You can choose — does not need to match the original ISA type
Does it need to be the same provider?
For Cash ISAs yes (or transfer), for S&S ISAs you can use any provider
Pensions
Workplace and Private Pensions
Pension status
What happens
Defined benefit (final salary) pension — before retirement
Lump sum death benefit (typically 2–4x salary) + spouse’s pension
Defined benefit pension — in payment
Spouse’s pension (typically 50% of the member’s pension)
Defined contribution pension — uncrystallised
Full pot passes to nominees — tax-free if death before age 75
Defined contribution pension — in drawdown, death before 75
Remaining pot passes tax-free to nominees
Defined contribution pension — in drawdown, death after 75
Remaining pot taxable at nominee’s marginal income tax rate
Annuity
Depends on the annuity type — check if a spouse’s pension or guaranteed period was included
Contact every pension provider — workplace, personal, and any old pensions. There may be valuable death benefits you are not aware of.
State Pension
Situation
What you may inherit
Your spouse had NI years before April 2016
You may inherit extra State Pension based on their pre-2016 record
Your own State Pension is below the full amount
Your spouse’s NI record may help increase yours
Your spouse was deferring their State Pension
You may benefit from their deferred amount
Both on the new State Pension (from April 2016 only)
You generally cannot inherit the new State Pension itself
Contact the Pension Service: 0800 731 0469
Property
If You Owned the Property Jointly
Ownership type
What happens
Joint tenants (most common for couples)
Property automatically passes to you — no probate needed for the property
Tenants in common
Your spouse’s share passes according to their will (or intestacy rules) — may need probate
Mortgage
Situation
Action
Joint mortgage
Contact lender — you continue payments on the full mortgage
Life insurance / mortgage protection policy
Claim immediately — may pay off part or all of the mortgage
Cannot afford the mortgage
Speak to lender about options — they must treat you fairly
Sole mortgage in their name
This becomes an estate matter — seek legal advice
Council Tax
Living situation after bereavement
Council tax impact
You now live alone
You qualify for the 25% single person discount — apply to your council
Property is empty while probate is sorted
May be exempt for up to 6 months
Benefits and Support
Benefit
Eligibility
Bereavement Support Payment
Spouse/civil partner paid NI, was under State Pension age at death
Universal Credit
Apply if your income is now low — claim as a single person
Council Tax Reduction
Apply if on low income
Pension Credit
If you are State Pension age and income is low
Housing Benefit (legacy claims)
If renting and on low income
Funeral Expenses Payment
If on a qualifying benefit and responsible for funeral costs (up to ~£1,000 + necessary extras)
Widowed Parent’s Allowance
Legacy benefit — only if your spouse died before 6 April 2017
Dealing with Debt
Type of debt
Your liability
Joint debts (joint loan, joint credit card)
You are liable for the full amount
Sole debts in their name
Paid from the estate — you are NOT personally liable
Secured debts (mortgage, car finance)
The asset may be repossessed if not paid — check insurance policies
Guarantee debts (you were a guarantor)
You are liable if the estate cannot pay
If the estate has more debts than assets, it is “insolvent” — debts are paid in a set order and anything remaining is written off. You do not inherit debt.
Inheritance Tax Between Spouses
Detail
Information
Transfers between spouses/civil partners
Completely exempt from IHT
Unused nil-rate band
Transfers to surviving spouse — you can potentially use both
Combined nil-rate bands available on your death
Up to £650,000 + £350,000 (residence) = £1,000,000
When is IHT relevant?
When YOU die — your estate is assessed on total assets vs combined allowances
Estate Administration
Step
Details
Is probate needed?
Yes if there is property, or assets above ~£5,000 (varies by provider)
How to apply
Online at gov.uk if you are the executor — fee is £300 (estates under £5,000: free)
How long does probate take?
Usually 8–12 weeks for the grant, then months to distribute the estate
Do you need a solicitor?
Not required — but helpful for complex estates (cost: £2,000–£5,000+)
Intestacy (no will)
Estate distributed according to legal rules — spouse gets most/all in many cases
Financial Timeline After Bereavement
Timeframe
Actions
Week 1
Register death, get death certificates, Tell Us Once, notify bank
Month 1
Claim Bereavement Support Payment, contact pension providers, check life insurance
Months 1–3
Apply for probate, update council tax, review benefit entitlements
Months 3–6
Settle debts from estate, transfer assets, update your will
Months 6–12
Review your own financial plan, consider financial advice, use inherited ISA allowance
Ongoing
Update beneficiary nominations on your own pensions and policies