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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
You cannot claim benefits to house your children. Any Housing benefit claim will be as a single person. If you are under age 35, then that is the shared room rate of HB minus (your income and some benefits).ILR1980 wrote:what about others benefits like income related or housing ? Can you claim these at single rate or for kids?
Petaltop wrote:The idea behind the financial requirment to sponsor your family and the 35k for ILR, is that you show you can keep your own family.
The £35k requirement is ONLY for Tier 2 General migrants applying for ILR w.e.f. April 2016.
You cannot claim benefits to house your children. Any Housing benefit claim will be as a single person. If you are under age 35, then that is the shared room rate of HB minus (your income and some benefits). HB can be claimed as Single plus children as far as I am aware.
Exactly, to make sure people will have enough to keep their own families, especially with a spouse working too and with the limit of 2 children to claim for with TCs and HB(?) starting in a few months time and with their replacement UC of course. That doesn't mean that those who applied for ILR before that date or those who didn't need to show 35k for ILR, can get addtional money from the welfare state.CR001 wrote: The £35k requirement is ONLY for Tier 2 General migrants applying for ILR w.e.f. April 2016.
OP said his children are subject to immigration control. Tax Credits is one of the exceptions for his children and his wife too for WTC, if they have a child, but I can't find where it says HB is. Perhaps i missed it? Although we don't know what citizenship his wife and children hold for any exceptions.CR001 wrote:HB can be claimed as Single plus children as far as I am aware.
Actually financial circumstances of certain families keep changing over time and never stay the same for the rest of their lives. There is not enough guideline on internet about couple where one is British/settled with resource to public funds while others is subject to immigration control and thing become complicated if they have children as children cannot claim for themselves so i assume their visa status is irrelevant.Petaltop wrote:The idea behind the financial requirment to sponsor your family and the 35k for ILR, is that you show you can keep your own family.
You cannot claim benefits to house your children. Any Housing benefit claim will be as a single person. If you are under age 35, then that is the shared room rate of HB minus (your income and some benefits).ILR1980 wrote:what about others benefits like income related or housing ? Can you claim these at single rate or for kids?
You have already found the income based benefits you can claim: Tax Credits and Child Benefit.
If you are in an area where Tax Credits has already been replaced by Universal Credit, then there are different rules to claim that, i.e. both parents to work: self employment based on what the claimant should earn even if they don't etc. Most of the benefits were increased because of the financial crisis, but now they are going back to what they were before.
Can your wife get a job? You could claim some of the childcare costs back via the benefit Working Tax Credit. Under a Universal Credit claim, she will be expected to look for work when the youngest child is age one.
I have read this guideline as i posted this link in my OP but this guideline is still vague and unclear about others benefits beside child benefits, CTC, WTC . If your child is subject to immigration control and one of parent hold settle status or British nationality then if their child is on settlement visa with no resource to public funds then why parent can claim child benefits on their behalf? why same logic cannot be applied for housing benefit? or am i missing something in here ?Petaltop wrote:CR001 wrote: OP said his children are subject to immigration control. Tax Credits is one of the exceptions for his children and his wife too for WTC, if they have a child, but I can't find where it says HB is. Perhaps i missed it? Although we don't know what citizenship his wife and children hold for any exceptions.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/public-funds
I haven't finished reading this yet, but I don't know if Casa has?
There are some interesting additions to Public Funds in that guide as well as confirmation of others i.e. an admin error causing benefits to be paid to someone when not allowed, will not cause a refusal, but the benefits to be paid back.
The benefit rules often differ. What is taken as income for one benefit is not for another: what is taken as capilal for one is not for another; the savings cap for most income based benefits is 16K and savings of 6k and over reduces benefits for most income based benefits but not for other income based benefits; some can still have free school dinners when they claim WTC and some can't; some get greater deductutions for council tax allowance than others on the same income; some have to pay all their CTC and WTC back for that year while others don't etc, etc, etc.ILR1980 wrote: I have read this guideline as i posted this link in my OP but this guideline is still vague and unclear about others benefits beside child benefits, CTC, WTC . If your child is subject to immigration control and one of parent hold settle status or British nationality then if their child is on settlement visa with no resource to public funds then why parent can claim child benefits on their behalf? why same logic cannot be applied for housing benefit? or am i missing something in here ?
Child Benefit is an income based benefit.ILR1980 wrote: but child benefit has nothing to do with your earnings
TC is based on the previous years earnings with a 2.5k disregard and number of children etc No limit to the number of children claimed for.ILR1980 wrote:and calculator still offer child tax credit even if you earned £28,000 for last years .
You did not got the point. I was saying that you get fixed amount of child benefit irrespective of your earning . You only pay tax charge if you or your partner individual income is over £50,000 so my point was that there are certain benefit which you can still claim even when you have this income needed to financially support the family for settlement purpose.Petaltop wrote:Child Benefit is an income based benefit.ILR1980 wrote: but child benefit has nothing to do with your earnings
https://www.gov.uk/child-benefit/overview.
Not quite. At one time everyone did get CB, but now it has been made a income based benefit.ILR1980 wrote: You did not got the point. I was saying that you get fixed amount of child benefit irrespective of your earning . You only pay tax charge if you or your partner individual income is over £50,000 so my point was that there are certain benefit which you can still claim even when you have this income needed to financially support the family for settlement purpose.
You are asking about what income based benefits you can have to keep your family. Tax Credits, Child Benefit, Housing Benefit, are all income based benefits.ILR1980 wrote:Secondly you also misunderstood that i want benefits for my family.
Universal Credit is part of the welfare reforms and it is IS replacing 6 income based benefits.ILR1980 wrote:Thirdly Universal credit is different which is all in one sort of fund for peopel with low income or no work and you have option to either claim universal credit or tax credits as cannot claim boht and i dont think they are replacing each others.
You won't get that option. Under the Welfare Reform Act, you will be told when your exisiting income based benefits are being stopped. You will then need to sign a Universal Credit agreement before you can claim Universal Credit.ILR1980 wrote:Its your option to choose universal credit instead of claiming Jobseekers Allowance, housing benefit
working tax credit, child tax credit etc
Thanks for details response . To be honest i dont mind any reform in benefit system . I just want more clarity and simplicity about rules and regulation of claiming benefits especially in cases where one partner is subject to immigration control while others have this status which give them resource to public funds . They confuse people when they demand from them to claim jointly as per regulation of tax credits without considering that partners could have different immigration status. We dont even know whether status of children matter in such scenario.Petaltop wrote:ILR1980 wrote: You can read all about the welfare reforms on sites like this
https://www.turn2us.org.uk/Benefit-guid ... de-content
The benefit calculatiors only take into account the benefit amounts for this tax year. They list the changes for next tax year in a separate place, so that claimants can prepare for these. They also list the known changes so far for the 2018/9 tax year, for the same reason.
If you haven't claimed benefits yet and are not in area where Universal Credet is in for parents, it could be up to 3 years before you are put on to UC, if you don't trigger an early move onto UC and are in one of the areas put on last. By then you might be keeping your own children anyway and your question would be moot.ILR1980 wrote: So now question remain the same for universal credit. Would you be able to claim universal credit if you are entitled to child tax credit and working tax credit especially when your children and partner have no resource to public funds ? would there be same exception for couple in universal credit as exist in case of tax credits right now ?
I did read a while ago that the government wanted to make the "no recourse to publc funds" mean that, because it was unfair that some could still get access to some public funds via a partner, while for others it really did mean no public funds. For those haivng to make the 18.6 to sponsor a partner, that was set just above the poverty cap for WTCs.ILR1980 wrote:Found this
Freedom of Information request 575/2013
Received: 5 February 2013
Published: 14 March 2013
Information request
How will Universal Credits treat a couple which consists of one British Citizen
with Children, and their non-EEA national partner/wife ETC who has “No
Recourse to Public Funds”.
DWP response
If someone who is eligible to claim Universal Credit has a partner who is a
person subject to immigration control with no recourse to public funds, only
the eligible claimant will be entitled to an award. However the partner’s
income/capital will be taken into account when assessing the means of the
whole household, and this will affect the amount of the claimant’s award.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... 5-2013.pdf
Dear Department for Work and Pensions,
The current legislation (Rule 6a and b) make exceptions for Child
Benefit and Tax Credits stating that if a member of a couple is
elegible for CB / CTC / WTC then both members of a couple are
elegible for them, and both members of the couple will be
considered as having recourse to public funds.
How will Universal Credits treat a couple which consists of one
British Citizen with children, and their non-EEA national
partner/wife ETC who has "No Recourse to Public Funds".
Will they both be deemed to be elegible for public funds when
claiming universal credits? or?... failing to treat the couple in the same manner as they are treated for tax credits will essentially be removing the rights of the couple...
Please be as clear as possible with any explainations
Yours faithfully,
Wayne Pearsall
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... rtner_wh_2