Am I entitled to any housing benefits or council tax support, as my partner is working but I can't?
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tdotmelty27
Community member Posts: 39 Connected
Hi guys i am currently looking to get a property to rent with my partner (she works) earns 1200 a month
I have received universal credit and have been awarded lwcra so i am deemed unable to work or look for work i have currently gone through a pip assessment still waiting outcome im looking for a private property to rent would i be entitled to any housing benefits or council tax support or anything as my partner is working even tho i am deemed not to work?
I have received universal credit and have been awarded lwcra so i am deemed unable to work or look for work i have currently gone through a pip assessment still waiting outcome im looking for a private property to rent would i be entitled to any housing benefits or council tax support or anything as my partner is working even tho i am deemed not to work?
Comments
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Hi there
It will all depend on your circumstances
Are you not living together now? And for you get any housing element now?
If you move in together it will have to change to joint UC claim even though she is working
You need to get some expert advice first from welfare rights
You might also want to look at a benefits calculator so you can put all your detail in -
@janer1967 i didd a calculator on a website everyone says use and it staes ill get 780 a month universal credit or something like that i am currently getting like 680 do i suppose thw housing element is that extra bit?
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Sorry I dont know it should give you a breakdown
Do you claim any housing now? Did you put rent amount in calculator?
Tge extra may be as result of joint claim
Sorry it's hard to say without knowing all your personal details which is why you need expert advice -
@janer1967 appreciate it what experts would i have to go to?
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Welfare rights
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If you are not already getting it you cannot claim Housing Benefit because new claims are not possible. You would provide details of your tenancy to UC and your UC entitlement would then include a housing element. The amount you get will be limited to the applicable Local Housing Allowance rate for the postcode https://lha-direct.voa.gov.uk/Search.aspx.
Council Tax Reduction is separate and is claimed from the local authority. There may be no entitlement due to your partners income.
Information I post is for England unless otherwise stated. Rules may be different in other parts of UK. -
If you are already living together and have a joint claim, when you claimed UC did your partner tell UC that she looks after you (if she does) and that you have applied for PIP? If she hasn’t she should. If you are awarded Daily Living PIP she will then be able to get the carer element added to your UC claim and it should be backdated to the date she told them she was a carer.
if your claim is currently a single claim then when she is added to the claim she should say she is a carer and if DL PIP is awarded the carer element will then be included.Information I post is for England unless otherwise stated. Rules may be different in other parts of UK. -
tdotmelty27 said:@janer1967 i didd a calculator on a website everyone says use and it staes ill get 780 a month universal credit or something like that i am currently getting like 680 do i suppose thw housing element is that extra bit?Information I post is for England unless otherwise stated. Rules may be different in other parts of UK.
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@calcotti no we haven't moved in together looking to tho and im obviously on my single uc claim until we move in then will go for join claim however you mention carrers would she still get that as she works 30 hours a week so not sure how that works?
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If you are awarded Daily Living PIP and she looks after you for 35 hours/week then she is entitled to the carer element in UC. It doesn’t matter that she works. The carer element is an extra £162.92/month.
This is different to the rules for Carer’s Allowance which she would not be able to claim.Information I post is for England unless otherwise stated. Rules may be different in other parts of UK. -
I dont think she will get carers working full time and on the earnings you said in your original post as there is a limit to what you can earn and this would be above that
@calcotti maybe you can advise on this as you mentioned claiming it I thought earnings of 1200 per month would be over the limit to claim carers -
janer1967 said:I dont think she will get carers working full time and on the earnings you said in your original post as there is a limit to what you can earn and this would be above that
@calcotti maybe you can advise on this as you mentioned claiming it I thought earnings of 1200 per month would be over the limit to claim carersInformation I post is for England unless otherwise stated. Rules may be different in other parts of UK. -
@calcotti thanks for that you learn something new everyday
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