Widowed Before 40 and Coping With the Financial Consequences

The unexpected death of a spouse, brings complex financial decisions: how to handle mortgage payments, loans, leases and credit card debts.

By Caitlin Kelly

It was April 10, 2018, and Colin Brougham hadn’t sent his usual text to his wife that he was biking home. Instead, he lay dead a few blocks away after a commuter train struck him.

“I knew he was dead before I knew he was dead,” recalled Rachel Brougham, his widow. “My son and I went to the scene, and when I was told it was him, I screamed so loud I think all of Minneapolis heard me.”

Brougham was only 39.

“My life as I knew it changed in an instant,” said Brougham, now 46. “My future as I imagined was stolen. Grief changes your brain chemistry. It changes how you think, how you interact with others, how you work. It literally changes every single thing about your life.”

Those widowed in their 20s and 30s, few of whom may even have a will, can feel even more stunned and unprepared. Who expects to die that young?

Brougham, like anyone whose spouse dies unexpectedly, suddenly faced a variety of complex financial decisions: how to handle mortgage payments, car and student loans, leases and credit card debts. Blinded by grief, exhausted and overwhelmed, the bereaved must also plan and pay for cremation or a funeral.

Social Security’s one-time death benefit is only $255. The median cost of a U.S. funeral in 2021 was $6,971 (with cremation) or $7,848 (with a viewing and burial), according to the National Funeral Directors Association. Social Security survivor benefits are also available for children. Brougham’s 15-year-old son, Thomas, receives $2,149 a month until he turns 18 or graduates from high school, whichever is later.

“As a certified financial planner, and someone who specializes in supporting young widows and widowers, I’ve seen firsthand the raw heartache of this unique community,” said Brian K. Seymour II, founder and CEO of Prosperitage Wealth in Atlanta. “Losing your partner at a young age, whether to illness or a sudden accident, throws you into a storm of grief and financial upheaval.”

Even if it feels overwhelming, Seymour recommends getting control of your financial situation immediately.

“Gather all your financial documents — bank statements, investment accounts, life insurance policies, wills — and get yourself organized,” he said. “If you feel lost, seek professional help from a fee-only fiduciary financial adviser who specializes in young widows and widowers. We understand your unique challenges and can tailor a plan that considers your income, debt, benefits and goals.”

Those who have more time to prepare — the spouse is dying of a terminal disease, for example — also face making difficult decisions amid emotional distress.

Sarah Seib, 39, whose husband, Jason Markle, died in 2022 of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease, had a steady job with a local technology company. Markle worked for many years at Syracuse University as an undergraduate administrator, but the demands of his disease quickly turned Seib into his full-time caregiver, costing her that income even as she owed $50,000 in student debt.

As her husband’s health deteriorated, he kept working to the very end because the couple desperately needed his income and health insurance. He communicated through a Tobii Dynavox tablet, which he used by blinking. A GoFundMe campaign provided $20,000 to help with growing costs.

Markle had a 401(k) plan, but tapping into it early would have meant paying a penalty and taxes. The day he died, Seib lost access to his health insurance. Her mother, who had moved in to help Seib financially and emotionally as her husband’s health declined, still lives in Syracuse, New York, with her and now pays half the mortgage.

“You need help from all sides,” Seib said. “A widow’s head is not right and won’t be right for a long time.”

Francisco Rosado, a barber and DJ who goes by Frank Rose in Orlando, Florida, lost his wife, Rebekkah Rosado, when he was 34 and she was 33. He had been her caretaker for three years as she fought Hodgkin lymphoma, a form of blood cancer. Rebekkah Rosado had run a thriving wedding planning business and kept working as much as she could, but the couple sold their house to cut expenses and pay medical bills. They also received $10,000 from a GoFundMe campaign that allowed Francisco Rosado to stop working and spend time with his wife before she died.

For many people whose spouse is from another country, communicating with family members abroad can add complications or welcome support — or both, as it did for Robin Truiett-Theodorson, who, in 2008, became a widow at 36 after 5 1/2 years of marriage to Mark Theodorson, a British man.

Her father assumed her late husband’s car payments, and her family “helped me quite a bit,” she said. Her mother-in-law in Britain sent some money, and Truiett-Theodorson was grateful that their home in Baltimore had no mortgage. She deferred her student debt for 18 months and consolidated her credit card debt.

Many young widows and widowers will also have to face their spouse’s debts, which can add an enormous burden if they are not discharged by creditors.

Jeanette Koncikowski was separated from her husband, Mark, when he died two years after completing chiropractic school. Both were 36, with children 5 and 9 years old. He died of a rare condition, sudden unexplained death in epilepsy, owing about $150,000 on student loans.

“In order to finance that amount, we did a mix of private and federal loans, and he was the sole signatory, later consolidated,” said Koncikowski, now 45 and living in Eden, New York. “At the time of his death, I was originally told by the lender that I would have to pay them back, even though I did not cosign. They said since we were married when the debt was accrued, I was responsible for the debt.”

But once she shared her separation agreement and her husband’s death certificate with the lender, the entire debt was forgiven. “It was a small saving grace in an otherwise horrific experience,” Koncikowski said.

Daniel Kopp, a certified financial planner in Sarasota, Florida, who lost a spouse when he was 31, said it matters when the debt was taken on.

“If it was before the marriage and the couple does not live in a community property state — there are nine — then the surviving spouse would generally not be responsible for the student loans,” he said. “Community property states can make the surviving spouse be held liable for paying the private loans if they were taken on after the marriage even if the spouse did not cosign. It’s the classic financial planning answer: It depends.”

Everyone who has received life insurance funds after a spouse’s death knows the mixed emotions they bring.

“It was a great sense of relief — and guilt,” Brougham said. “I thought, ‘Oh, my God, my husband’s dead and now I have $1 million.” In fact, she received $1.575 million from both term and whole life policies, which she invested for future needs.

Rosado received $250,000 in an insurance payout, and Kopp said he had received about $300,000. This money helped free them from financial panic at the worst moment of their young lives. In addition, life insurance proceeds are not considered taxable income.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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