Food & Drink10 mins ago
Can anyone help please?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Kathyan. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Income Support Tables are here:
http://www.jobcentreplus.gov.uk/cms.asp?Page=/Home/Custo mers/WorkingAgeBenefits/493
They show that the personal allowance for a single parent is �56.20 per week. They also show that the personal allowance for a dependent child (which must, I'm sure, include any child still attending school) is �43.88 per week for children 'from birth to the day before 19th birthday'. (So I'm not too sure why the 16th birthday should be so important).
The Income-Based JSA tables are here:
http://www.jobcentreplus.gov.uk/cms.asp?Page=/Home/Custo mers/WorkingAgeBenefits/497
They show that the personal allowance for a single parent is �56.20 per week. They also show that the personal allowance for a dependent child is �43.88 per week for children 'from birth to the day before 19th birthday'.
Now, it doesn't take a genius to spot that the two sets of figures are identical. So, as long as your friend will be getting Income-based JSA (rather than Contribution-based JSA), which she should do, then shouldn't be any reduction in her income.
I don't claim to be an expert in this field but I do know that the people at your local Citizen's Advice Bureau should be able to point your friend in the right direction.
Chris
kathyan, your friend can still claim for her son whilst in receipt of child benefit for him on the basis that he is in relevant education, up to his 19th birthday if needs be, the childs personal allowance is paid via childrens tax credits now but this doesn't make any difference to the amount of benefit she receives, it changed over a couple of years ago approx.
The only change on the childs 16th birthday why JSA has to be claimed is that the parent is deemed capable of seeking work ( unless covered by a doctors cert) in other words Income Support is not payable as a parent of a 16 year old is no longer required to be permanently at home due to childs age. So the parent claims JSA and childrens tax credits instead of Income Support and Childrens tax credits.
Tell your friend not to worry her income will not decrease as long as child benefit in payment and son in education.