Around 600,000 extra working families are now eligible for universal credit due to changes that hit at the end of last year. Work allowances increased by £42 per month. This is the amount those in households with children, or those with 'a limited capacity for work', can earn before Universal Credit starts to drop. l If you earn over your work allowance, you keep more of the benefit. The amount of Universal Credit you receive is reduced if you earn over this, but now you keep 45p per £1 of earnings, rather than 37p. l
Together these mean both that more people are eligible and that many who already get it now get more. On legacy benefits (eg tax credits or income support) – does Universal Credit pay more? There are three million people still on old style benefits: tax credits, income support, housing benefit, income-based jobseeker's allowance and income-related employment & support allowance. If you’re on one of those, you'll eventually be moved to universal credit which replaces them all. Yet this may take years. So it’s worth checking if you’d be better off switching now.
a result. So I’ve three simple steps for you. Step 1: Check if you’re in a category likely to be better off switching. If you work and pay rent, especially in a city, then you’re in the sweet spot where this may work. Same too if you’re at the higher end of earnings that still allow you to get benefits. On the other hand, if you’re a single parent and/or have a disability and you work but don’t pay rent, or you’re selfemployed earning under £1,200/mth, then you’re likely to be worse off on Universal Credit. Same too if you’ve a decent whack of savings, especially if they’re over the £16,000 cut-off. Step 2: If you’re in the right category, use a benefits calculator. It will tell you if you’re likely to be better off and by how much. But bear in mind these tools are ready reckoners that don’t include everything – so only treat this step as a jumping off point to see if you should do more.
Step 3: If the calculator shows you’ll make a decent gain, don’t do anything without one-on-one help. There are a lot of changes in the move to Universal Credit… l You’re usually paid monthly and must budget (tricky for some with impulse control or addiction problems). l It’s one payment to the household (a possible issue for those in financially abusive relationships). l The first payment takes five weeks (though you can get an advance to cover it). l The work rules may be different; some have to do 35 hours of ‘work-related’ activities a week. And most importantly if you have certain debts, including council tax, rent and energy bills, up to 25% can be taken off the standard Universal Credit payment which can scupper things (and that’s not included by the calculators). So you can see why I say go through it with a professional before taking the plunge.
The government runs a free guidance and information service called www.moneyhelper.org.uk, which offers the option to chat (online or phone) with an adviser – make use of it. Or you can get free one-on-one benefits check-ups from www.citizensadvice.org.uk or www.advicelocal.uk.
This isn’t easy though, and you need to get it right, as once you request to go on Universal Credit, there’s no going back – even if you find out that you’re getting less as
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Martin Lewis is the Founder and Chair of MoneySavingExpert.com. To join the 7.5 million people who get his free Money Tips weekly email, go to www.moneysavingexpert.com/latesttip