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Questions about Bill 124? Visit our News section and Bill 124 FAQs in both the working members and retired members sections.

Marrying after retirement

If you enter into a marriage or common-law relationship after we make your first pension payment, your new spouse isn’t automatically entitled to a survivor pension.

You must apply and take a reduction to your pension – the reduction can be significant. In addition, there must not be a previous spouse eligible for a survivor pension. A former spouse may also be entitled to a portion of your survivor benefit if specified in a court order or separation agreement with which we can comply.

Spousal eligibility

Whether a previous spouse is eligible for a pension can vary according to your marital status (including common law) depending on when:

  • You retire (your last day of employment in education)
  • Your pension starts (the due date of the first installment of your pension) 

The following rules apply:

  • If you have an eligible spouse when we make your first pension payment and you later separate and establish a new spousal relationship, your former spouse remains eligible for a survivor pension unless you and your former spouse waive the survivor pension as part of your settlement agreement. You can't provide a survivor pension for your new spouse unless your former spouse is deceased or you and your former spouse have waived the survivor pension as part of your settlement agreement.
  • If you have a dependent child who's the eligible survivor, your new spouse can't bump the child from primary eligibility for benefits.

If all eligibility criteria are met, the designation is effective six months after you apply. If you die within the six-month period before the direction takes effect, your application is void. 

For members who last taught prior to June 1, 1995, the survivor option election for a new spouse is effective on the date we receive the election notice.

Example of cost

Your pension will be permanently reduced to pay for your spouse's survivor pension and will be in addition to any reduction previously made for a former spouse. The reduction remains in effect even if your spouse dies before you.

From the following actuarial tables, you can see how providing a survivor pension to your new spouse can affect your pension. To calculate approximately how much a survivor pension costs, multiply your pension by the percentage indicated by cross-referencing your spouse's age to the survivor pension option. For reference, many teachers opt for the 50%, 60% and 75% options.

If you’re a 65-year-old pensioner and would like to provide your 70-year-old spouse with a survivor pension of 60% of your pension, you would receive 95.87% of your current pension. If your annual pension is $60,000, it would be reduced to $57,522 to provide your spouse with an annual survivor pension of $36,000.

Table 1 - Values are based on your spouse's age and assume you're 65 years of age

 50%55%60%65%70%75%
Age 4578.3676.1974.0371.8669.7067.53
Age 5082.7080.9679.2377.5075.7774.04
Age 5587.0085.7084.4083.1081.8080.50
Age 6090.9590.0489.1488.2387.3386.42
Age 6594.1993.6193.0392.4591.8791.29
Age 7096.5696.2195.8795.5295.1894.83
Age 7598.1197.9297.7397.5497.3597.16

Table 2 - Values are based on your spouse's age and assume you're 60 years of age

 50%55%60%65%70%75%
Age 4082.8681.1479.4377.7276.0074.29
Age 4586.2484.8783.4982.1280.7479.37
Age 5089.6288.5887.5486.5085.4784.43
Age 5592.7291.9991.2790.5489.8189.08
Age 6095.2894.8194.3393.8693.3992.92
Age 6597.1596.8696.5896.2996.0095.72
Age 7098.3998.2298.0697.9097.7497.58

Table assumptions
Valuation date: July 1, 2024
Pension inception date: July 1, 2015 (Table 1), July 1, 2020 (Table 2)
Member and spouse were born on July 1 and member isn't disabled
Values represent the percentage of pension received after the reduction is applied

Application deadline Application deadline

Apply anytime on or before the later of the following dates:

  • 90 days after your marriage or the day you reach the three-year cohabitation requirement for common-law spouses, whichever is earlier, or
  • 90 days after the date your children cease to be eligible, or
  • 90 days after we receive a valid waiver

You and your former spouse must complete Post-retirement Waiver of Survivor Pension After Separation (Family Law Form FL-8). If you miss the deadline, you may still be eligible provided you pass a medical examination confirming that you remain in good health for your age.

How to apply How to apply

Complete the Direction for a Survivor Pension – for pensioners form (e-signature enabled).

When to contact us When to contact us

Be sure to contact us to obtain a cost estimate for providing your spouse with a survivor pension before completing the application form.