Retired Military Wife Benefits: Healthcare, SBP & Full Benefits List

Retired military wives may receive healthcare through TRICARE, survivor benefits like the Survivor Benefit Plan, and access to base privileges. Eligibility depends on marriage status, military retirement rules, and federal program requirements.

Retired military wives may still qualify for certain federal benefits after their spouse leaves service.

When a service member retires, the support system around their spouse doesn’t disappear, but it also doesn’t work like a fixed pension or guaranteed monthly payout.

The benefits are spread across different programs and depend on eligibility rules set by federal agencies.

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Quick answers for military retirees and family travelers.

Who Counts as a Retired Military Spouse?

A retired military spouse is generally a legally married spouse of a retired service member.

The spouse must be added to DEERS, and the retiree is the sponsor.

Eligibility Criteria

  • The spouse must be legally married and not divorced.
  • Must live with the retiree (or, if separated, not divorced, for SBP eligibility).

Some benefits, like SBP, require the spouse to have been married at least one day before the member’s death.

If remarriage occurs, most spousal benefits end. But special rules allow restoration for SBP/DIC if remarriage happens after age 57.

So, it’s not just about the marriage alone, but the spouse also needs to be properly reflected in the military benefit system.

DEERS Enrollment and ID Cards

DEERS is the system that establishes eligibility for military benefits.

To enroll a spouse, the retiree usually needs original documentation, such as a

  • Marriage certificate
  • Birth certificate
  • Social Security card, and
  • Photo ID.

Once enrolled, the spouse receives a dependent ID card, which is used for base access, commissary shopping, exchange shopping, and other privileges.

If the spouse’s status changes later because of divorce, remarriage, or death, DEERS must be updated.

Healthcare Benefits through TRICARE

Retired military spouses can usually enroll in the same TRICARE options available to other retiree family members.

That may include

  • TRICARE Prime
  • TRICARE Select, and
  • TRICARE For Life (If Medicare-eligible).
Plan / Patient Type Active-Duty Family (Group A) Retired Family (Group A)
TRICARE Prime $0 enrollment fee; $0 PCP copay $381.96/yr individual ($765 family); $26 PCP copay
TRICARE Select $0 enrollment fee; $0 copay/deductible $186.96/yr individual ($375 family); $150 deductible; 25% cost-share
Catastrophic Cap $1,000/person; $3,000/family $3,000/family (Prime); $4,381/family (Select)
Preventive Care $0 $0
TRICARE For Life N/A (only Medicare age) Requires Medicare; acts as wraparound (no TRICARE premiums)
Source: tricare.mil/Costs/Compare

Unlike active-duty families, retired families generally pay more in premiums, enrollment fees, deductibles, and cost-shares.

TRICARE Prime and TRICARE Select are still valuable, but they are not free for most retirees’ families.

Spouses who were already on TRICARE as active-duty dependents usually need to reenroll as retiree family members after retirement.

New spouses who marry after retirement typically have 90 days to enroll.

Survivor Benefits (After Veteran’s Death)

If the retiree dies, the surviving spouse may be eligible for two major benefits:

  • SBP provides a monthly annuity if the retiree elects it, and
  • DIC is a tax-free VA benefit for qualifying survivors of service-connected deaths.

That is one of the most important financial protections available to a military spouse after a retiree’s death.

Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP)

If the retiree had elected SBP at retirement, the spouse gets a monthly annuity.

SBP pays up to 55% of the retiree’s base pay at the time of retirement.

To apply, the spouse must submit DD Form 2656/7 which is the Survivor Annuity Election, and a death certificate to DFAS.

SBP continues monthly for life unless the spouse remarries before age 55.

To get SBP, the sponsor must have

  • Elected it in writing at retirement, and the consent form expires when the retiree dies.
  • Spouses married at least one day before death are eligible.

VA Dependency & Indemnity Compensation (DIC)

The spouse may also qualify for DIC, a tax-free VA benefit for survivors of service-connected deaths.

VA DIC (Surviving Spouse) Key Rule
What it is Tax-free monthly VA payment to surviving spouse of a veteran
Basic eligibility (spouse) Married ≥1 year OR married within 15 years of discharge OR have a child together + lived together until death
Service connection rule Veteran died from service-related condition OR
100% disability rule Veteran was 100% disabled for 10 years, OR 5 years after discharge, OR 1 year (POW cases)
Remarriage rule Generally not remarried (some exceptions after age 55–57)
Monthly payment (base) ~$1,600–$1,700/month tax-free (varies with COLA)
Extras Additional amounts for children, Aid & Attendance, or long-term 100% rating
Tax status Fully tax-free
Application form VA Form 21P-534EZ
Key condition Must prove marriage + qualifying cause of death or disability duration rule

Do Spouses Get Commissary & Exchange Benefits

Retired military spouses with the proper ID card can usually shop at the commissary and exchange, use MWR facilities, and access many base recreation services.

Along with that, authorized family members may shop tax-free at commissaries and exchanges, both in person and through official online programs.

That can include:

  • commissary shopping,
  • exchange shopping,
  • gyms and pools,
  • libraries,
  • lodging,
  • and many MWR recreation programs.

Warning Notice

Dependent children under 18 cannot shop without a parent. Spouses can sponsor guests and close family, depending on base rules. All must show ID at checkout.

Benefits Many Spouses Overlook

Some benefits are easy to miss.

Retired spouses may be able to use Space-A travel, military lodging, discounted recreation, and some local MWR programs.

It also has education programs, spouse career support, military scholarships, and caregiver support, which are important but often overlooked.

Benefit Who May Qualify What It Provides
Education – DEA (Chapter 35) Surviving spouses of veterans who died in service or from service-connected causes, or are 100% permanent & total disabled Up to ~36–45 months of education benefits for college, training, apprenticeships, or job training
Post-9/11 GI Bill (Transferred Benefits) Spouses of service members who transferred benefits during active service Tuition coverage, monthly housing allowance, and funds for education or training
MyCAA (Military Spouse Career Advancement Account) Spouses of active-duty/selected reserve members in eligible pay grades Up to $4,000 for certifications, licenses, or associate degrees in portable careers
SECO Career & Education Counseling All military spouses (active duty, reserve, and retired families) Free career coaching, resume help, job search assistance, and licensing guidance
Licensing Portability Support Military spouses relocating due to PCS moves Assistance transferring or expediting professional licenses across states (e.g., healthcare, teaching)
VA Home Loan (Survivor Benefit) Surviving spouses of eligible veterans (service-connected death or qualifying active-duty death, with remarriage limits) VA-backed home purchase or refinance loans, typically with no down payment required
Caregiver Support (PCAFC & Services) Spouses caring for veterans with serious service-connected disabilities Monthly stipend, caregiver training, respite care, and possible health coverage
Burial & Survivors Benefits Surviving spouses of eligible veterans Burial in national cemetery, headstone/marker, burial allowance, and possible transportation reimbursement
Source:
  1. https://www.va.gov/family-and-caregiver-benefits/education-and-careers/dependents-education-assistance/
  2. https://www.va.gov/family-and-caregiver-benefits/housing-assistance/surviving-spouse-home-loan/
  3. https://www.va.gov/housing-assistance/home-loans/eligibility/

Those programs are super important, especially when a spouse is trying to rebuild a career or family stability after military retirement.

Do Former Spouses Get Any Benefits?

If the marriage ends in divorce, former-spouse benefits may still apply in some situations.

Benefit Former Spouse Eligible? Result
VA Dependency & Indemnity Compensation (DIC) No Ends after divorce; only surviving spouses qualify
VA Survivors Pension No Requires surviving spouse status at time of death
CHAMPVA Health Care No Ends at divorce; spouse must meet eligibility rules as current or surviving spouse
VA Chapter 35 (DEA Education Benefits) No Only for eligible surviving spouses/dependents
VA Burial Benefits (as spouse entitlement) No Only applies to current surviving spouse
VA Home Loan (Survivor Spouse eligibility) No Ends after divorce
VA Caregiver Programs (PCAFC/CHAMPVA caregiver link) No Only for eligible family caregivers tied to veteran
Military Retirement Pay Division (USFSPA court order) Yes Can receive a share of retired pay if awarded in divorce
Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) Yes (if awarded) Can receive annuity if named in divorce decree or election
TRICARE (20/20/20 rule or exceptions) Sometimes Only if strict service/marriage requirements are met
Social Security spousal benefits Sometimes Not VA-related; depends on marriage length and SSA rules

The former spouse usually needs to update DEERS, provide the required documents, and meet the time and remarriage conditions that apply to their case.

Retired Spouse Benefits FAQs

Retired Spouse Benefits FAQs

Verify DEERS enrollment at an ID card office and enroll in TRICARE within 90 days of retirement. Confirm SBP coverage status and retain copies of all enrollment and retirement documents.

Retiree status is typically updated automatically via DFAS. If not reflected, bring retirement orders to an ID card office to confirm DEERS shows “Retired” and dependents remain enrolled.

Notify DFAS and the Service Casualty Office. Apply for SBP (DD Form 2656-7) and VA DIC benefits (VA Form 21P-534EZ). Obtain a new surviving spouse ID card through DEERS.

It depends on overlap rules. Under the 20/20/20 rule, full TRICARE and exchange benefits may continue. Partial eligibility applies under 20/20/15. Otherwise, most benefits end after divorce finalization.

Yes, if eligible under VA rules (typically service-connected death or SBP/DIC status). A Certificate of Eligibility is required through the VA before applying for a mortgage.

Remarriage before age 57 generally ends SBP, DIC, and related survivor benefits. Some benefits may be restored if the later marriage ends under qualifying conditions.

References:

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