Help with your rent
Need help with your rent or mortgage payments? Fear not: here are a few ways of securing financial help.
Social fund - help with rent in advance
The social fund is a system by which people on low incomes may receive payments and discretionary grants or loans for needs that cannot be met from their regular income. Payments are made by Jobcentre Plus. If you're leaving residential or institutional accommodation, need help to stay in your own home, have had an unsettled way of life, or are facing exceptional pressure, you may be able to get a community care grant.
Social fund payments are often very hard to get, but it's still important to apply. If you are turned down you have a right to a review where the decision may be overturned. You may receive a budgeting or crisis loan instead of a grant. Remember that if you are offered a loan you will have to repay it from your weekly benefit.
Contact an advice agency for help with claiming a grant or appealing against a decision. For further advice, contact your local Citizens Advice Bureau or housing advice centre.
Housing benefit
Housing benefit is money that enables people on low incomes to pay their rent. You can claim housing benefit if you are 16 or over, and whether or not you are working or claiming income support. It's not available to full-time students, unless they have children or a disability.
To get housing benefit you need to fill in an application form that you can get from your local council. The council has a duty to make a payment of housing benefit within 14 days provided they have received all the information and paperwork requested. They will need to see proof of all your income and savings, as well as a copy of your tenancy agreement.
Your age, the number of people in your household, the rent you pay and your income will also affect the amount of housing benefit you will receive. It will not cover charges in your rent for water rates, heating or hot water.
"If your housing benefit doesn't cover all your rent, you can ask the local authority for a discretionary housing payment."
If the rent you pay is high then the housing benefit section of the council may restrict the amount of money you receive. Always ask the council to assess the maximum rent they will cover for a property (called eligible rent) in advance of signing an agreement.
The minimum amount of housing benefit that can be paid each week is 50p. If after your benefit is calculated you are entitled to less than 50p a week, you will not get any Housing Benefit.
If your housing benefit does not cover all of your rent and you need more help, as long as you are entitled to some housing benefit (or council tax benefit) you can ask the local authority for a discretionary housing payment. This is an extra payment (not housing benefit), which you can get if you need further financial assistance with your housing costs. It's up to the local authority whether to give you this help, so you should give them as much information as possible.
If you want more information about discretionary housing payments, you should consult an experienced adviser, for example, at a Citizens Advice Bureau.
Help closer to home
If making your rent is more of a short-term problem, for example, you've recently lost your job; it's always worth calling on parents to see if they can offer a loan to help you. However, while they are unlikely to charge you interest, be clear how and when the money will be paid back.
Of course, looking after yourself is always the best option, so when times are good consider saving up some money in a contingency fund to help pay the rent at a later, leaner stage.
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