Title 45 › Chapter 9— RETIREMENT OF RAILROAD EMPLOYEES › Subchapter IV— RAILROAD RETIREMENT ACT OF 1974 › § 231e
Pay any unpaid railroad annuities that were due when someone died to the person the Board finds was the dead person’s spouse who was living with them when they died. If there is no such spouse, first pay people who paid the burial expenses to the extent they were not reimbursed. If still unpaid, pay the children, grandchildren, parents, or brothers and sisters as if the money were a lump sum. Survivor annuities due a survivor follow the same spouse-first rule, and annuities due a spouse or divorced wife go to the worker who earned them if that worker is alive. Claims for these accrued, unpaid annuities must be filed within two years after the death. If no one can get the money, it goes to the Railroad Retirement Account. Whether someone counts as a spouse, child, parent, grandchild, brother, or sister is decided using the Social Security Act rules and the state rules for who inherits without a will. “Living with” follows the pre‑1957 Social Security rules. Make lump-sum death or retirement payments when rules say no monthly benefits will be paid or when a worker meets certain service and timing rules. If a worker had ten years of service before January 1, 1975 and had a current railroad connection when they died, a lump sum is calculated under the Railroad Retirement Act as it was on December 31, 1974, using the worker’s pay after December 31, 1936 and before January 1, 1975; no lump sum is paid under this rule if there is a surviving divorced wife who would get an annuity for the month of death. If the worker did not have ten years before 1975 but did have ten years (or five or more years all after December 31, 1995), had a current railroad connection, and left no survivor who would get an annuity for the month of death, a lump sum equal to what Social Security section 202(i) would pay is made, with a possible top‑up within one year if monthly survivor benefits do not reach that lump sum. If no benefits or no more benefits will be paid at all, a named beneficiary gets the lump sum, or if none, it goes in this order to the spouse living with the worker, then children, grandchildren, parents, siblings, or the estate. The main lump‑sum formulas add specific percent rates of earnings for set year ranges and include certain employee taxes for years after December 31, 1965 and before January 1, 1975, and they use exact monthly compensation caps for given past periods. A separate lump sum is also computed for retirees with ten years of service who do not qualify under special annuity rules, using a list of percentage rates for calendar years 1950 through 1974 applied to earnings above stated yearly thresholds. Finally, if a person got separation or severance pay on or after January 1, 1985 and would have gained extra credited months of service except for not being an employee in those months, a lump sum equals the compensation for those added months times the tax rate(s) under section 3201(b) of the Internal Revenue Code.
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Railroads — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
45 U.S.C. § 231e
Title 45 — Railroads
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60