Amount of working tax credit
The WTC you can get is made up of a basic element of £2,070 a year, plus whichever of the following elements apply:
•lone parent or couple element of £2,125 a year;
•30-hour element of £860 a year if you work at least 30 hours a week. If you have a child, you can add your hours to those of your partner to make up the 30 hours, providing one of you works at least 16 hours a week;
•disabled worker element of £3,345 a year if you qualify for WTC as a disabled worker;
•severe disability element of £1,445 a year if you or your partner get the highest rate of the DLA care component or the enhanced rate of the PIP or ADP daily living component;
•childcare element. You may get up to 70 per cent of childcare costs up to a limit of £175 for one child or £300 a week for two or more children for whom you get CTC – ie, a maximum of £122.50 or £210. Childcare must be of a certain type, including a registered childminder, nursery or playscheme, an out-of-hours club or sitter service. You do not get help with childcare at home provided by a relative. Generally, to get the childcare element, you, and your partner if you have one, must be working 16 hours or more a week. If you claim as a couple, you can still be entitled if one of you is working 16 hours or more a week and the other is incapacitated, entitled to CA, in hospital or in prison.
These are the amounts for the tax year April 2022 to April 2023. You get less than the maximum if your income is more than a set threshold.
The income threshold is £6,770. If your income is below this, you get maximum WTC. If your income is above this threshold, you get a reduced amount.
For details of how income is treated and how your WTC award is calculated, see CPAG’s Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook.
See the relevant chapters of this Handbook for more information on how specific income (eg, fostering allowances and payments from the local authority) is treated.