If you move, you can notify the Régie des rentes du Québec of your change of address using the Service québécois de changement d'adresse. Through this service, you can notify several government departments and agencies of your new address at the same time.
If you wish to communicate your new address to the Régie des rentes du Québec only, other options are also available.
The surviving spouse’s pension ensures a basic income to the spouse (see Definitions) of a deceased person. It is paid by the Régie des rentes du Québec only if the deceased person contributed sufficiently to the Québec Pension Plan.
The plan to which a person contributes (the Canada Pension Plan or the Québec Pension Plan) depends on the location where the person works, not where the person lives. If the deceased worked in Québec, he or she contributed to the Québec Pension Plan. If the deceased worked in another province or a territory, he or she contributed to the Canada Pension Plan.
However, a deceased person who worked for the Canadian Forces (the army) or the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is subject to the Canada Pension Plan even if he or she worked in Québec.
If the deceased contributed to only one of the plans, benefits will be paid by that plan regardless of where he or she lived at the time of death.
If the deceased was a worker who had left Québec
The location of the deceased’s permanent domicile at the time of death determines whether the application for a pension will be processed by the Québec Pension Plan or the Canada Pension Plan. For example,
- if the deceased contributed to both plans and lived in Québec at the time of death, benefits will be paid by the Québec Pension Plan;
- if the deceased contributed to both plans and lived in Canada outside Québec at the time of death, benefits will be paid by the Canada Pension Plan.
Spouse
The person who was married to, or in a civil union or de facto union with the deceased person at the time of his or her death.
De facto spouse
The person with whom the deceased person lived in a conjugal relationship
- for at least the three years preceding the death;
- for one year if a child was born or is to be born of the union, or if a child was adopted.
Clientele
Any surviving spouse (see Definitions) of a deceased person.
Note
The legally separated spouse of a deceased person may be entitled to the surviving spouse’s pension under certain conditions.
Conditions
The deceased must have sufficiently contributed to the Québec Pension Plan, that is, for at least one third of the period during which he or she could have contributed or for at least three years, or for 10 years.
If the deceased person contributed to a pension plan in a country that has signed an international social security agreement with Québec, the number of years the person participated in that plan is taken into account in determining whether he or she contributed sufficiently.
The amount of the pension varies based on
- the contributions that the deceased paid to the Québec Pension Plan;
- the surviving spouse's age;
- whether the deceased left any dependent children;
- whether the surviving spouse is disabled;
- whether the surviving spouse is already receiving a retirement or disability pension.
The surviving spouse’s pension is paid on the last working day of each month.
Monthly payments
The amounts shown below are valid from January 1 to December 31, 2012.
| Under 45 |
With no dependent children |
$495.83 |
| Under 45 |
With one or more dependent children |
$800.76 |
| Under 45 |
Disabled, with or without dependent children |
$833.18 |
When the surviving spouse turns 65, the Régie des rentes du Québec revises the amount of the pension based on his or her retirement pension. The maximum amount of a surviving spouse’s pension at 65 or over is $607.50.
If the spouse receives a surviving spouse’s pension at the same time as another pension from the Régie, the benefits will be combined into a single monthly payment, referred to as a combined pension . The amount of a combined pension is not necessarily equal to the sum of the two pensions, since it is subject to a maximum fixed by law.
The surviving spouse’s pension is taxable and is indexed annually.
Note
A surviving spouse continues to receive the surviving spouse’s pension even if he or she remarries or enters into a civil union.