We’d like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum.
This is to keep it a safe and useful space for MoneySaving discussions. Threads that are – or become – political in nature may be removed in line with the Forum’s rules. Thank you for your understanding.
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!
help - am new to all this
valish
Posts: 2 Newbie
can anyone help me please. I live in a rented 3 bedroom house (due to divorce, i had to find suitable accommodation for me and the kids as per court order), now my ex has full custody of daughter. I work part time 15 hours a week and want to know what benefits i can get. My take home pay is approx £109 per week and i have to pay £80 a week towards my rent, leaving me with £29 for council tax, bills and food etc. What can i claim?
0
Comments
-
can anyone help me please. I live in a rented 3 bedroom house (due to divorce, i had to find suitable accommodation for me and the kids as per court order), now my ex has full custody of daughter. I work part time 15 hours a week and want to know what benefits i can get. My take home pay is approx £109 per week and i have to pay £80 a week towards my rent, leaving me with £29 for council tax, bills and food etc. What can i claim?
Presuming you have no savings.
If you have children living with you then you can claim Child Benefit and Child Tax credit.
In order to claim Working Tax Credit you need to be working for at least 16 hours a week.
You can claim Housing Benefit (you need to check your entitlement by looking at your local council website) and Council Tax benefit.0 -
Do you only have 1 child and they are now living with your ex?
If so you won't get any child related benefits and you will only be entitled to the shared room rate for LHA0 -
apparently even if i work 16 hours a week because i am single i cannot claim working tax credit. They say i need to work 30 hours, annoying thing is, if i worked 30 hours a week i wouldn;t need to claim working tax credit.0
-
How old are you and do you have any children living with you?0
-
It doesn't make a huge difference. You can claim housing benefit and council tax benefit and if you got working tax credits they deduct 85% of that from your housing and council tax benefit anyway so if you rent and work enough hours to reach your personal allowance figure of usually £71 per week plus £5 disregard then working tax credits make little difference.apparently even if i work 16 hours a week because i am single i cannot claim working tax credit. They say i need to work 30 hours, annoying thing is, if i worked 30 hours a week i wouldn;t need to claim working tax credit.:footie:
Regular savers earn 6% interest (HSBC, First Direct, M&S)
Loans cost 2.9% per year (Nationwide) = FREE money.
0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply
Categories
- All Categories
- 352.2K Banking & Borrowing
- 253.6K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 454.3K Spending & Discounts
- 245.2K Work, Benefits & Business
- 600.9K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 177.5K Life & Family
- 259K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.7K Read-Only Boards