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Wanting to decorate while on housing benefits

McCartneyP
Posts: 1 Newbie
Hi there,
The title basically speaks for itself.
I am completely oblivious to how this all works so any help would be greatly appreciated.
Simple question hopefully somewhat simple answer.
If your on housing benefits and want to redecorate your house how does this work? My friend is on housing benefits and wants to re-decorate his home, painting walls and buying new furniture. He is getting help from his parents to pay for it all. Would the fact he is getting financial aid to re-decorate his house from his parents call into question his need for benefits?
Thanks
Peter
The title basically speaks for itself.
I am completely oblivious to how this all works so any help would be greatly appreciated.
Simple question hopefully somewhat simple answer.
If your on housing benefits and want to redecorate your house how does this work? My friend is on housing benefits and wants to re-decorate his home, painting walls and buying new furniture. He is getting help from his parents to pay for it all. Would the fact he is getting financial aid to re-decorate his house from his parents call into question his need for benefits?
Thanks
Peter
0
Comments
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Gifts from parents are not counted as income, so no need for you to worry.0
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Get it in cash, to be worry free.0
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tazwhoever wrote: »Get it in cash, to be worry free.0
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Your friend should ask the owner/landlord about decorating.
The landlord might want to keep it magnolia for broad appeal.0 -
tazwhoever wrote: »Get it in cash, to be worry free.
That is really bad advice. If someone is given money by relatives/friends in cash and the DWP get to hear of them spending it (from nosey neighbours etc) it is much harder to prove where cash came from than it is to produce a bank statement showing a bank transfer coming in.
When I give my daughter money I always put the reference 'DAD' on it just in case the DWP query anything.
DarrenXbigman's guide to a happy life.
Eat properly
Sleep properly
Save some money0 -
That is really bad advice. If someone is given money by relatives/friends in cash and the DWP get to hear of them spending it (from nosey neighbours etc) it is much harder to prove where cash came from than it is to produce a bank statement showing a bank transfer coming in.
When I give my daughter money I always put the reference 'DAD' on it just in case the DWP query anything.
Darren
I just thought getting money into account from others, might cause problems for OP. Where this money came from? Why?0 -
tazwhoever wrote: »I just thought getting money into account from others, might cause problems for OP. Where this money came from? Why?
That is a popular misconception. DWP investigators see cash as a big flashing alert that something is going on. They will dig way beyond a bit of cash spent on decorating. It is not worth the grief that will entail. A bank transfer and then purchases at B&Q on a credit/debit card that show a clear trail and usage cannot be argued with.
DarrenXbigman's guide to a happy life.
Eat properly
Sleep properly
Save some money0
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