Your circumstances | What to check | More information |
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If you need general help and support | Child Death Helpline: 0800 282 986 Compassionate Friends Helpline: 0345 123 2304 | Child Death Helpline: The Compassionate Friends: |
If you are employed | Check your entitlement to statutory parental bereavement pay (SPBP). You may qualify if you are a bereaved parent (or the partner of a bereaved parent who was living with the parent and child) and you satisfy employment and earnings conditions. Both parents can qualify. Note that: you can’t get SPBP for any week in which you get statutory sick pay. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If you are not well enough to work and you are not entitled to statutory sick pay (SSP) | Check if you are entitled to contributory employment and support allowance. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If your baby is stillborn before you have completed 24 weeks of pregnancy | Check your entitlement to statutory sick pay or employment and support allowance (ESA). If you or your partner already get ‘old style’ contributory ESA, check if you can top this up with income-related ESA. Consider whether you would qualify for universal credit (UC), but see the warning below. If you or your partner get a legacy benefit, and have not received a 'migration notice' (a migration notice is a letter telling you your legacy benefit will be ending and giving you a date by which to claim universal credit), always check whether you will be better off on UC before making a claim. This is because making a claim for UC normally ends your entitlement to legacy benefits. Legacy benefits are: •income support; •income-based jobseeker’s allowance; •income-related ESA; •working-age housing benefit; and •tax credits.
| Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If your baby has died either after 24 weeks’ pregnancy, or after being born alive before you completed 24 weeks’ pregnancy | Check your entitlement to statutory maternity pay (SMP) or maternity allowance (MA). If you meet the qualifying conditions, you can still get SMP or MA even though your baby has died. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
Check whether your partner (or the baby’s father) qualifies for statutory paternity pay (SPP). If they meet the qualifying conditions, they can still get up to 2 weeks SPP even though the baby has died. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
Check your entitlement to statutory shared parental pay.(SSPP) In some circumstances, even though your baby has died, you and/or your partner may qualify for SSPP if you give up your SMP early, or your partner may qualify for SSPP if you give up your MA early. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If a child that you have recently adopted has died | Check your entitlement to statutory adoption pay (SAP). If you qualify for this, it can continue to be paid for eight weeks following the death of your child. If you have jointly adopted a child with your partner, only one of you can claim SAP but the other can apply for statutory paternity pay (SPP). | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If you are not claiming SAP, check your entitlement to statutory paternity pay (SPP). You may qualify if your partner adopted the child, or you jointly adopted the child with your partner. If you have claimed SAP, check whether your partner (or the other adoptive parent) qualifies for SSP If the qualifying conditions are met, SPP can still be paid even though the child has died. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
Check your entitlement to statutory shared parental pay. In some circumstances, you and your partner may qualify for this if you give up your SAP early, even though your adopted child has died. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If you are entitled to child benefit | If you were entitled to child benefit for a child in the week they died, you continue to be entitled to it for eight weeks, or until the Monday following what would have been their 20th birthday, if that is sooner. If your child is born and dies in the same week, child benefit is paid for eight weeks provided you met the qualifying conditions that week. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): GOV.UK: |
If child disability payment was awarded for the child who has died (Scotland) | A lump sum award is paid equivalent to the amount of child disability payment awarded for the eight weeks prior to the child's death. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If you get tax credits | If you are entitled to child tax credit (CTC) for a child who dies you should continue to get CTC for the child for eight weeks following the death (or up to what would have been their 20th birthday, if that is sooner). | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If you are getting working tax credit (WTC) and you only qualify for the lone parent or childcare element on the basis that you or your partner were responsible for the child who has died, check that you get the correct amount of WTC. You should continue to get the same amount of WTC as you would have got had your child not died for eight weeks after the death (or up to what would have been their 20th birthday, if that is sooner). | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |
If you get a disabled child premium in your housing benefit, income support or income-based jobseeker’s allowance | If you were getting a disabled child premium for the child who has died, check whether you can continue to be get it for eight weeks following the death. | Welfare Benefits and Tax Credits Handbook (for subscribers): |