Step 4: deduct weekly income from applicable amount
If your income is less than your applicable amount, IS equals the difference between the two.
If your income is the same as or more than your applicable amount, you cannot get IS.
Example
Jodie is 25 and a full-time, second-year undergraduate student and a lone parent with two children aged three and six. She gets a student loan for maintenance of £8,000, a special support loan of £2,400 plus an independent students’ bursary of £1,000, a £1,305 lone parents’ grant and £1,215 for childcare. Her only other income is child benefit of £42.55 a week, child tax credit (CTC) of £132.58 a week, and adult disability payment (ADP) standard rate daily living component of £72.65 a week.
During the academic year September 2024 to June 2025:
Step 1: Jodie has no savings or capital.
Step 2: her applicable amount is:
Personal allowance for herself £90.50
Disability premium £42.50
Severe disability premium £81.50
Total applicable amount £214.50
Step 3: her weekly income is:
Loan and independent students’ bursary £187.79 (same as Samira example – see here) Step 4: her income is £26.71 below her applicable amount, so she can get IS of £26.71 a week from September 2024 to June 2025.
During the long vacation from June 2025 to September 2025:
Step 2: at 2024/25 rates, Jodie’s applicable amount is £214.50 (as above).
Step 3: her weekly income for IS purposes from the end of June 2025 to the beginning of September 2025, is nil. This is because her loan only counts as income during the academic year. Child benefit, CTC and PIP are disregarded.
Step 4: from the end of June 2025 to the beginning of September 2025, her weekly IS is £214.50 (2024/25 rates). Jodie’s IS should increase from the end of June. Note that it is likely Jodie will be required to claim universal credit before 2025.