As I’m paid weekly, I could lose cost of living payment
I am a 55-year-old IT apprentice, and my low income means I qualify for universal credit. But because my wages are paid weekly, I’m worried I’m going to miss out on the government’s cost of living payment again.
Universal credit is calculated on a monthly basis, so, in four months of the year, when my claim is based on five weeks’ pay, rather than four weeks’, I don’t receive any money.
I receive about £140 a month when I do get it.
I missed out on the first £326 because the assessment period was one of the months when my claim was based on five weeks’ earnings.
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has announced the qualification period for the second payment of £324, and I think the same thing is going to happen again, because they’ve picked an assessment period where my universal credit is again based on five weeks pay.
This is ridiculous. I’m being unjustly punished for being paid weekly, instead of monthly.
DE, Sheffield
These are tough times but you had jumped the gun on this as, when we contacted the DWP on your behalf, it confirmed you would, in fact, be eligible for the second payment of £324, which will be paid by the government next month.
The £650 cost of living payment, which was announced earlier this year by the then chancellor Rishi Sunak, was split into the two lump sums of £326 and £324.
You are eligible for the second payment if you received a universal credit payment in an assessment period that ended between 26 August and 25 September 2022.
The government website warns that you won’t receive the cash giveaway if your earnings reduce the benefit to £0 (called a nil award) in this key window, which is what you were worried about.
The payments will land
Read more on theguardian.com