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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Business
Levi Winchester

Five loopholes that mean you won't get first half of £650 cost of living payment in July

Millions of people who claim benefits will receive a £650 cost of living payment to help with rising bills starting from next month.

The money is being issued in two parts, with the first £326 instalment hitting bank accounts for most eligible households from July 14.

The second £324 payment will follow in autumn, although no set date has been announced yet.

To be eligible for the £650, you must first claim certain benefits - see the full list below.

But there are other circumstances that mean you might miss out on the money next month - even if you do claim the eligible benefits.

We explain…

You need to claim certain benefits

The £650 payment is only being awarded to those who claim certain means-tested benefits.

These are benefits where your income and savings are taken into account and includes:

  • Child Tax Credit

  • Jobseeker’s Allowance (Income-based)

  • Employment and Support Allowance (Income-related)

  • Income Support

  • Pension Credit

  • Universal Credit

  • Working Tax Credit

Your benefits can't be contribution-based

Anyone on contribution-based benefits, where payouts depend on National Insurance contributions over a set period, won't receive the £650.

This means not all claims for Jobseeker’s Allowance and Employment and Support Allowance will be accepted for the payment.

Income-related Employment and Support Allowance is on the list of benefits approved for the £650 by the Government, but not contribution-based Employment and Support Allowance.

Similarly, you'll be eligible if you claim income-based Jobseeker's Allowance but not contribution-based Jobseeker's Allowance.

You claim tax credits

If you claim tax credits, you will receive the £650 payment - but the first instalment won't arrive in July.

Those who claim Universal Credit, income-related Employment and Support Allowance and Jobseeker's Allowance, Income Support, and Pension Credit will receive £326 in July and a second payment of £324 in the autumn.

Those who claim tax credits will receive their first payment slightly later.

The first instalment is not expected to be processed until the autumn, with a second payment to follow in winter - although no exact date has been confirmed yet.

Your benefits must have started by a certain date

You must also have been claiming your benefits by a certain date to receive the first instalment of the £650.

The qualifying period is April 26, 2022 to May 25, 2022.

For Universal Credit, you must have been entitled to a payment, or later found to be eligible, for an assessment period that ended within these dates.

This timeframe is only for the first instalment, and includes tax credit claimants.

The deadline for applying for the second payment has not yet been set - so this means thousands of Brits who start a claim at a later date might end up being eligible for the final instalment.

The Government has not said when it will release the criteria for the second payment.

You only get one payment per household if you have a joint claim

If you have a joint benefits claim with a partner then you only get one payment of £650 - not two.

The news is a blow to households who may have been expecting to get £1,300, not £650.

Essentially, this is the equivalent of one payment per claim.

I'm not eligible for the £650 - what help can I get?

There are two other one-off payments being made to vulnerable households.

This includes £150 for those who claim certain disability benefits and £300 for pensioners in receipt of Winter Fuel Payments.

Every home in England, Scotland and Wales will also receive £400 off their energy bills, spread out over six months from October.

The Household Support Fund has been extended as well by another £500million, to help families who can't claim any cost of living payments.

Some of the help that is offered through the Household Support Fund includes money towards your bills and supermarket vouchers.

However, the support does vary between councils - as well as the eligibility criteria.

This means each local authority decides who to give the money to, and how the money should be spent - so you may face a postcode lottery in terms of the help available to you.

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