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The social security index is a database of deceased persons in the United States identified by social security. The index is available for public access to find specific records.
how to find deceased social security number
Only the direct or immediate legal next of kin can request a deceased person's medical records. You will likely be asked to provide proof of relationship (such as birth certificate of an adult child) and the death certificate (such as the parent). You would need the person's "identifying information" such as Social Security number, hospital/patient number, date(s) of service, etc. Even when researchers seek medical records for genealogical purposes, the "proof" of relationship and even a reason for the request must be submitted before the request is approved or denied. Call the administration or medical records department for their exact policies.
Yes, social security money can be claimed from a deceased father after one year.
yes the children with deceased parents get social security benefit's. but only if the parents were workers in the US.
First search on Ancestry.com. They have many WWII and earlier records. Depending on how common the name, you'll need person's name, birth date, birth place, and residence before service. If person is deceased, you can search the Social Security Death Index on Ancestry.com. That will give you the social security number.
You can check the Social Security Death Index (SSDI) database to verify whether a Social Security number belongs to a deceased person. This database is maintained by the Social Security Administration and is publicly accessible.
Yes, but it depends on how long they are married. Call social security.
You can get social security at that age if you are disabled, a disabled widow, the widow of a spouse who was already collecting social security and you are not a worker. You can get social security if you are a child of a deceased parent or your grandparents are on social security and they are your sole source of care.
No. The Social Security Number (SSN) is retained for the person even after he/she is deceased. The reason for this is that important documents (such as tax records) still maintain the person's SSN. If the identical SSN is given to another individual, it will simply confuse matters.
Because you are receiving benefits as a survivor under your deceased spouse. So your medicare card would have your deceased spouse's social security number with the addition of one or two alphanumeric characters after it, such as DC, where D stands for deceased. Although it is your spouse's social security number, in the case of medicare, it is not a social security number, but rather, an identifying number.
Ask him to give it to you. If he is deceased, look for his social security card or ask your attorney how to get it.