Apply for a child-raising pension

Service Description

The child-raising pension supports you as a single parent if your divorced spouse or partner dies. The pension therefore serves as a substitute for maintenance and allows you to devote more time to bringing up your children.

The child-raising pension is a pension from your own pension account. The amount corresponds to the pension you would receive if you were fully disabled. Your annual pension information will state the amount on which this is based. If your child-raising pension starts before the relevant age limit for you, you will have to accept deductions. For each month that you retire earlier, the deduction is 0.3 percent, up to a maximum of 10.8 percent.

If you receive the child-raising pension, you may have additional income (supplementary income). However, your income may be taken into account if you exceed an allowance. The amount of this allowance is calculated individually.

You can also receive the child-raising pension if you were still married or in a registered civil partnership at the time of death and had decided as a couple to share your pension entitlements in what is known as pension splitting.

You cannot receive a child-raising pension if you receive another, higher pension from the statutory pension insurance scheme at the same time.

The child-raising pension ends at the end of the month in which the conditions cease to apply, for example if you remarry or if your child reaches the age of 18 and child-raising therefore ends, but at the latest when you reach the standard retirement age.

Source: Zuständigkeitsfinder Thüringen (Linie6PLus)