Income support and income-based jobseeker’s allowance
During the first 12 weeks of a temporary absence, your child is still treated as part of your household for income support (IS) and income-based jobseeker’s allowance (JSA).1IS Reg 16(1) and (5)(b) IS Regs
JSA Reg 78(1) and 5(c) JSA Regs After 12 weeks’ absence, s/he is still treated as part of your household provided you are still in ‘regular contact’ with her/him.2IS Reg 16(5)(b) IS Regs
JSA Reg 78(5)(c) JSA Regs ‘Regular contact’ is not defined. Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) guidance says that regular contact includes visits, letters and telephone calls that take place regularly or frequently, and that weekly or monthly visits are considered regular contact.3para 22074 DMG The DWP usually continues to treat the child as part of your household for the first year of absence, provided child benefit remains in payment for her/him.4para 22075 DMG After 52 weeks in a care home, a child is usually no longer treated as being part of your household, but there are exceptions (see below). How your IS/income-based JSA is affected depends on whether or not you still get amounts in your benefit for your child (see below).
If you do not get amounts for your child
Most claimants do not get amounts in their IS/income-based JSA for their child(ren). In this situation, the amount of benefit you get should be unaffected by your child being in a care home, unless you stop being entitled to carer’s allowance (CA) for her/him or s/he no longer counts as part of your household (see here). If you stop being entitled to CA for the child, entitlement to the carer premium stops eight weeks after this date (see here).5IS Sch 2 para 14ZA(3) IS Regs
JSA Sch 1 para 17(3) JSA Regs If claiming CA was the only basis of your IS claim, from eight weeks after your CA ends you are no longer able to claim IS on that basis.6Sch 1B para 5 IS Regs If the child no longer counts as part of your household, your benefit may be affected. For example, if you no longer count as caring for a child aged under five, you cannot claim IS as a lone parent.
If you still get amounts for your child
Your IS/income-based JSA may still include amounts for your child (child allowances and premiums). This will only be the case if you have been claiming IS/income-based JSA including amounts for a child since before 6 April 2004 and have not claimed child tax credit (CTC). See here for more details. In most cases, providing your child’s stay in a care home is temporary, s/he continues to be treated as part of your household for IS/income-based JSA, and you continue to get a child personal allowance and family premium in your applicable amount for up to 52 weeks (sometimes for longer - see here). However, the amount of IS/income-based JSA may change during the 52-week period because of the impact on premiums (part of your ‘applicable amount’ – see here). •The carer premium stops eight weeks after your CA stops (see here).7IS Sch 2 para 14ZA(3) IS Regs
JSA Sch 1 para 17(3) JSA Regs •The disabled child premium stops when your child’s DLA care component or PIP daily living component stops (see here), unless there is another basis for getting it – ie, your child is still getting DLA mobility component, PIP mobility component or is severely sight impaired or blind.8IS Sch 2 para 14 IS Regs, pre-amendment by SS(WTCCTC)(CA) Regs
JSA Sch 1 para 16 JSA Regs, pre-amendment by SS(WTCCTC)(CA) Regs •The enhanced disability premium stops when your child’s DLA care component or PIP daily living component stops (see here).9IS Sch 2 para 13A IS Regs, pre-amendment by SS(WTCCTC)(CA) Regs
JSA Sch 1 para 15A JSA Regs, pre-amendment by SS(WTCCTC)(CA) Regs
When a child stops being treated as part of your household
If the stay in a care home is expected to last for more than 52 weeks, or if it has lasted for more than 52 weeks, the child is no longer treated as part of your household for IS/income-based JSA purposes.10IS Reg 16(2) IS Regs
JSA Reg 78(2) JSA Regs This means that if you have still been getting amounts for your child in your IS/income-based JSA, these will stop. The exception to this rule is if:11IS Reg 16(2) IS Regs
JSA Reg 78(2) JSA Regs •there are exceptional circumstances; and
•the absence is unlikely to be substantially more than 52 weeks.
Note: when a place in a care home has been arranged by the local authority and the child is away from home for more than 24 hours, technically the child is ‘looked after’ by the local authority.12s17(6) and 25(8) C(S)A 1995 Applied strictly, the rules mean that the child should not be treated as part of your household for IS/income-based JSA after s/he has been in a care home for 24 hours.13IS Reg 16(5)(c) IS Regs
JSA Reg 78(4)(f) JSA Regs In practice, however, it seems that the DWP applies the rules described above.