The post Debt Collectors Warned a 72-Year-Old Widow Her Social Security Was at Risk. Federal Law Said Otherwise. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 72-year-old widow opens her mail and finds yet another letter from a collection agency. The phone rings during dinner. The voice on the line warns that her Social Security check could be next if she does not pay the credit card balance, hers, or one her late husband left behind. She has already lived through the worst year of her life. Now someone is threatening the one deposit that arrives every month without fail.
This fear is widespread right now. Household credit card balances are at record levels, the average card APR sits at 21%, and the delinquency rate on those cards is 2.92%, enough stress in the system to keep collectors working the phones hard. Online forums are full of older widows describing the same scene: a collector implying they can drain a checking account that holds nothing but federal benefits.
The relief, and it is real, comes from a federal law written decades ago.
Under Section 207 of the Social Security Act, retirement and survivor benefits cannot be reached by ordinary creditors. A credit card company, a medical debt buyer, a personal loan collector, a private collection agency: none of them can garnish a Social Security payment. Not the check, not the direct deposit, not a portion of it.
A real life example helps. Say her monthly benefit is $1,800 after the 2026 cost of living adjustment (COLA) of 2.8%. A collector with a court judgment for $9,000 in credit card debt has zero legal authority to take any of that $1,800. Even if they sue and win, the Social Security portion is exempt.
The federal government built a second layer of protection at the bank itself. When benefits arrive by direct deposit, the bank is required to automatically shield up to two months of benefit payments from a garnishment order. So if $1,800 lands every month, roughly two months of deposits in the account are protected before any freeze can touch them, with no paperwork to file and no court appearance required.
The key practical step: keep those benefit deposits identifiable. If she moves money around between accounts or commingles benefits with other deposits in a way that hides the source, the automatic protection gets harder to apply. A separate account, or at minimum a clear deposit trail, makes the shield easy for the bank to recognize.
The harder question is whether she owes anything at all. As a general rule, a surviving spouse is not personally responsible for debts that were in her husband’s name only. Those debts are paid out of his estate, and if the estate cannot cover them, the creditor usually has to absorb the loss.
Two exceptions matter. In community property states, a surviving spouse may share responsibility for debts incurred during the marriage. And on joint accounts, where both names appeared on the card, she remains liable for the balance. Collectors sometimes blur this distinction and speak as if every debt automatically transfers. It does not.
Federal debts behave differently. The federal government can still reach Social Security for back federal taxes, defaulted federal student loans, and court-ordered child support or alimony. A credit card collector is not on that list.
Two dynamics make the biggest difference.
If a collector keeps calling after a written cease request, or files a lawsuit, a free legal aid clinic or an elder law attorney can usually resolve it quickly. Many states also run a senior legal helpline at zero cost.
The piece that matters most: the Social Security check is hers. Grief and a stack of unpaid bills can make anyone feel cornered, but the monthly deposit that pays the rent and the electric bill is protected by federal law from the people calling. Knowing that before the next phone call changes the whole conversation.
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The post Debt Collectors Warned a 72-Year-Old Widow Her Social Security Was at Risk. Federal Law Said Otherwise. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

