Who can make a new claim for housing benefit
Working-age HB is being phased out and replaced by UC. You cannot make a new claim for working-age HB unless you live in:1Reg 2(1) and 6A(2) UC(TP) Regs; Sch 1 paras 3A and 3B UC Regs •specified accommodation 1Accommodation from a relevant body also providing care, support or supervision, or temporary accommodation provided because of domestic abuse., which covers: ◦housing with care and support provided by a local authority, housing association, charity or voluntary organisation;
◦non-permanent accommodation because you have left home as a result of domestic abuse, where the accommodation is provided by a local authority, housing association, charity or voluntary organisation;
◦certain other types of supported accommodation known as ‘exempt accommodation’; or
•‘temporary accommodation’, which means a defined type of homeless accommodation where your rent is payable to a local authority or a provider of social housing.
If you cannot make a new claim for working-age HB, you may be able to claim UC for help with your housing costs instead. See here if there is uncertainty about what kind of accommodation you live in. If you already get working-age HB, you can carry on getting it until:
•a change of circumstances means you need to move to UC (see here – this is known as ‘natural migration’); or •the DWP 2The Department for Work and Pensions. A central government department that pays many benefits in Great Britain. writes to notify you that your working-age HB is stopping and that you must claim UC for help with your housing costs (see here – this is known as managed migration 3When the DWP writes to you and tells you that your legacy benefit is ending and that you need to make a claim for universal credit instead.).
In many cases, if you move to a new home within the same local authority area, you are able to continue getting HB rather than having to make a new claim for UC.
Pension-age HB is not being replaced by UC, which means that you can make a new claim for pension-age HB regardless of where you live.2Reg 6A(4) and (5) UC(TP) Regs; art 4 WRA(No.31)O However, if you are a member of a ‘mixed-age couple’ (ie, one of you is at least pension age 4This is age 66, and will reach 67 by October 2028. but not the other), see here. Example
Stan gets working-age HB and income-related ESA. He moves to a new privately-rented flat within the same local authority area. He is concerned that he will not be able to make a new claim for HB and that he will therefore need to claim UC. Stan’s adviser explains that this is not the case. Because Stan is staying in the same local authority area, he does not need to make a new claim for HB; his existing HB award can continue, adjusted to reflect his new rent.
Niamh lives with her parents and gets UC. She is offered a housing association flat with care and support. She asks the DWP to add a housing costs element to her UC award but is told that she will need to claim working-age HB instead, because her new home counts as ‘specified accommodation’. She is worried about doing this but is reassured that her UC will continue alongside her HB. All of this is correct.