Incapacity Benefit
Introduction:
Incapacity Benefit gives
financial help to people who are not working because they are sick
or disabled. It can be paid based on the number of National Insurance
contributions they have paid or been credited, or if they were sick
or disabled when they were 16 or over but under 20 (25 if they were
in education or training before age 20) may be able to claim under
the youth provisions.
People who have reached state pension age
cannot normally get Incapacity Benefit. State pension age is currently
60 for a woman and 65 for a man. This will be equalised at 65 for
both men and women from 6 April 2020. The change from the current
pensionable age of 60 for women to 65 will be phased in over a 10-year
period from 2010 to 2020. For more information, get leaflet PM2
You and state pensions from your social security office.
If you cannot get Incapacity Benefit, you may still be able to get
National Insurance credits for each full week you are sick. A full
week starts on Sunday and ends on Saturday. If you do not have enough
money to live on, you may be able to get Income Support. For more
information, see leaflet SD1 Sick or
disabled. If you were getting Invalidity Benefit If you were getting
Invalidity Benefit when it was replaced by Incapacity Benefit in
April 1995 or were getting Incapacity Benefit before 6 April 2001,
your claim may be covered by transitional
protection. This means that your entitlement to Incapacity Benefit
may be based on different rules.
What
is Incapacity Benefit?
Do you qualify?
Payment rates
If you have personal pension
How to Claim
How is your incapacity assessed?
When does the Own Occupation Test apply?
When does the Personal Capability Assessment apply?
Exemptions
How much do you get?
Does anything affect what you get?
New permitted work rules from April 2002
Transitional Rules
Linking rules
What happens on retirement?
How are you paid?
Reviews and Appeals
Further information
What is Incapacity Benefit?
Incapacity Benefit is for people unable to work because of
illness or a disability. It is paid if Statutory Sick Pay (SSP)
has ended, or if you cannot get SSP (SSP is paid for the first 28
weeks of sickness). IB is not paid if you were already over state
pension age when you became sick.
You must have paid enough National Insurance contributions to qualify.
It is not means-tested, so the amount you receive does not depend
on your income or savings. However, if you make a new claim to IB
for a date on or after 6th April 2001, you will have any gross Pension
Income taken into account when the payable rate of benefit is being
calculated.
Incapacity Benefit replaced Invalidity and Sickness Benefit from
13 April 1995. People getting Invalidity Benefit (IVB) or Sickness
Benefit at the time of the changeover were automatically transferred
onto Incapacity Benefit and the amount of benefit, they were receiving
at the time was not affected.
Do you qualify?
You qualify
for short-term Incapacity Benefit if you:
have paid National Insurance contributions and
you are 'incapable of work' or are in a 'period of incapacity for
work'.
If you have been incapable of work because of sickness or disability
for at least 4 days in a row including weekends and Bank Holidays,
and
cannot get statutory sick pay
you are under state pension age (65) or
you are no more than 5 years over state pension age, your 'period
of incapacity for work' began before pension age, and you would
be entitled to retirement pension if you claimed it.
If you are aged under 20 you may be able to get IB even if you have
not paid enough National Insurance contributions, provided you have
been sick for at least 28 weeks without a break.
The same applies if you are aged 20 or over but under 25, and you
were in education or training for at least 3 months before your
20th birthday.
Payment rates
There
are several different rates of IB
For the first 28 weeks of incapacity you can get the short-term
lower rate. After 28 weeks on the lower rate, you move onto the
short-term higher rate. This is paid from week 29 to week 52. After
52 weeks, the long-term rate becomes payable.
Short-term IB at the lower rate will be paid if
you do not get SSP and have been sick for at least 4 days in a row
including weekends and bank holidays, or if you qualify under the
special rules for young people.
Short-term IB at the higher rate will be paid if
you have been sick for more than 28 weeks and less than 52 weeks.
If you qualify under the special rules for young people you must
have been getting lower rate IB for 28 weeks.
Long-term IB will be paid if
you have been sick for more than 52 weeks. If you qualify under
the special rules for young people, you must have been getting short-term
IB for 52 weeks.
If you get the highest rate care component of Disability Living
Allowance (DLA) or you are terminally ill, you will get IB paid
at the long-term rate after you have been sick for 28 weeks.
If you qualify under the special rules for young people and you
get the highest rate care component of DLA or you are terminally
ill, you will get IB paid at the long-term rate after you have been
getting IB for 28 weeks.
What else do I need to know?
If you are
under 20 (25 if you have been in education or training) you may
be able to get IB even if you have not paid NI contributions.
If you have recently come from abroad, or returned from abroad,
there are some extra rules. You may be treated as having paid the
necessary National Insurance contributions to get IB if you have:
Been working abroad for an employer based in the United Kingdom
and paid NI contributions for the first 52 weeks of that employment,
or
Paid enough UK NI contributions and the equivalent of NI contributions
in certain other countries.
If you became sick before reaching pension age, you may be able
to get IB after pension age. It can be paid at the Retirement Pension
rate for up to one year of sickness.
If you get the long-term rate of IB you may qualify for extra money
depending on your age when you became sick. You may get Incapacity
Age Addition if you get long-term IB and were aged under 45 on the
day you became unable to work. This includes days you got Statutory
Sick Pay.
If you have a personal pension
For new claims, half of your occupational or personal pension(s)
above £85 is to be deducted from your incapacity benefit.
For example, if you have a weekly occupational pension of £95
then your incapacity benefit will be reduced by £5 a week.
It is intended that
permanent health insurance payments arranged through your employer
will also be taken into account after your employment has ended.
The government has
said you will be exempt if:
You already get incapacity
benefit at the time the rules change - see below;
Your claim links back
to an earlier incapacity benefit award that ended before the rules
changed (contact the Benefits Agency to learn about the special
linking rules for work and training;
You get disability
living allowance higher rate care component;
The pension payments
are in connection with the death of a member of the scheme.
It is expected that
the rules will treat you as having an income from an occupational
pension that would be available to you if you applied for it. So
you can avoid the reduction by deferring part of your pension. But
this wont apply to personal pensions unless you are aged 60
or over
How
to claim:
You claim
using the Incapacity Benefit claim pack, SC1, available from:
A doctor's surgery
Hospital
Department of Social Security (DSS)
You should send this form to your local DSS office after 4 days
of sickness. For the first seven days you do not need a medical
certificate. If you are incapable of work for more than seven days,
you must also send a medical certificate (form Med 3) from your
doctor. If you have worked in the same job for at least eight of
the last twenty six weeks, for the first 28 weeks of your incapacity
for work you will be assessed under the 'Own Occupation Test'.
If you have not worked recently, or after you have been incapable
of work for 28 weeks you will have to go through the personal capability
assessment. This tests your ability to do any kind of work. If you
score enough points on this test you will be accepted as incapable
of work.
The Benefits Agency will write to your GP for information about
your mental health problem. On the basis of the letter, the Benefits
Agency will decide whether your mental health problem is severe
or less severe.
If they decide that you have a severe mental health problem, you
will be awarded Incapacity Benefit.
If they decide that you have a less severe mental health problem,
you will be sent a questionnaire, which asks you what physical problems
you have.
If you have a mental health problem, you will need to write about
your health problems in the special section (self-assessment questionnaire)
on the claim form. You will be asked to attend a medical examination
by a Benefits Agency Doctor, so that an additional mental health
assessment can be carried out.
Backdating claims - You can send in your claim form up to three
months after the first day for which you wish to claim. Ask your
doctor for a backdated medical certificate, form Med 5. Your claim
cannot be backdated for longer than this.
How is your incapacity assessed?:
Your 'incapacity
for work' must be 'by reason of some specific disease or bodily
or mental disablement'. There are two tests of incapacity:
the 'own occupation' test which looks at your ability to do your
usual job if you've worked recently.
the personal capability assessment, which assesses your capacity
to do any work. The test looks at your ability to carry out a range
of activities such as working, standing, and sitting, and includes
an assessment of mental health where appropriate.
When does the 'own occupation test' apply?:
If you have
worked in one occupation for more than 8 weeks out of the last 21
weeks before the first day for which a decision on incapacity needs
to be made. The work you do must be for at least 16 hours per week.
The 8 weeks do not need to be consecutive. You can be employed or
self-employed provided you are paid or the work is done in expectation
of payment. If you make a fresh claim for benefit before the 196
days are up, and the break between claims is less than 8 weeks,
the own occupation test will continue to apply for the remainder
of the linked spell of 196 days.
When does the 'personal capability assessment'
apply?:
If the 'own
occupation test' does not apply i.e. you have not worked for more
than 8 weeks in the last 21 weeks; the personal capability assessment
applies from the first day of incapacity for which you claim. This
assessment will also be applied after 28 weeks (196 days) of Incapacity
Benefit. Until you are assessed under the personal capability assessment,
you must continue to send in medical certificates.
Exemptions:
You are exempt
if there is medical evidence that you are suffering from any one
of the following conditions:
severe learning disability - this is defined as a 'condition which
results from the arrested or incomplete physical development of
brain, or severe damage to the brain, and which involves severe
impairment of intelligence and social functioning' (this is less
restrictive than the 'severe mental impairment' test for DLA component
in that it includes conditions such as head injury which arise later
in life.
severe and progressive neurological or muscle wasting disease (e.g.
Huntington's chorea)
severe mental illness involving the presence of mental disease which
severely and adversely affects mood or behaviour, and severely restricts
social functioning or awareness of immediate environment.
You are also so exempt if you get DLA higher rate care component,
or constant Attendance Allowance (intermediate or exceptional rate)
Extra exemptions if you have been incapable of work since before
13 April 1995 include:
you were aged 58 over on 13 April 1995 and were entitled to Invalidity
Benefit between 01.December 1993 and 12 April 1995 (breaks off benefit
of 8 weeks or less are allowed)
How much do you get?
Weekly amounts(April
2003):
NB The rules for benefits mean that your individual circumstances
may affect the amount you can get. This means you will not always
be able to work out exactly how much you will get by using these
amounts.
Under state pension age
short-term lower rate £54.40
short-term higher rate £64.35
Over state pension age
short-term lower rate £69.20
short-term higher rate £72.15
Incapacity age addiction (payable only
with the long-term rate)
lower rate (35-44) £7.60
higher rate (under 35) £15.15
Reductions after 6 weeks in hospital
If you are in hospital and have a dependant, a reduction of £15.40
If you are in hospital and do not have a dependant, a reduction
of £29.20
If your dependant is in hospital, a reduction in the extra money
you get for them of £15.40
Does anything else affect what you get?:
Other
Benefits
You cannot get Incapacity Benefit as well as Retirement Pension
or Jobseeker's Allowance. Other benefits such as maternity allowance,
severe Disablement Allowance, Invalid Care Allowance and Unemployment
supplements are known as overlapping benefits. You can receive an
amount equal to the highest of these benefits.
Other benefits that can be paid on top include:
Disability Living Allowance
Attendance Allowance
Disablement Benefit
If you were claiming Income Support, Housing Benefit or Council
Tax Benefit because of incapacity, you will continue to get the
disability premium paid with these benefits for as long as you remain
incapable of working.
Other Income
Incapacity Benefit is not means-tested so it is not affected if
you receive
wages or an occupational pension or sick pay while you are off sick.
Work
Generally if you do any work you are treated as capable of work
and thus cannot get Incapacity Benefit.
But you are allowed to do some kinds of work and still receive Incapacity
Benefit or Severe Disablement Allowance, or still be counted as
incapable of work for other purposes e.g. Disability Premium. An
Adjudication Officer at the Department of Social Security (DSS)
makes the decision on whether or not the work you do is allowed.
New permitted work rules from 8 April 2002:
From 8 April
2002 there are new rules if you want to try some paid work while
getting Incapacity Benefit, Severe Disablement Allowance, National
Insurance Credits or Income Support because of illness or disability.
The new rules are called the permitted work rules and the work is
called permitted work.
If you were already doing therapeutic work when the rules changed,
you may be able to carry on doing it until April 2003. After that
you can consider doing permitted work straight away under the new
rules.
The new arrangements allow you to try some paid work without the
need for prior approval from a doctor, but you should tell the office
that pays your benefit before you start work.
You can work:
for earnings of up to and including £20.00 a week for an unlimited
period, or
for less than 16 hours a week, on average, with earnings up to and
including £67.50 a week for a 26 week period. The period can
be extended for another 26 weeks if a Job Broker, Personal Adviser
or Disability Employment Adviser agrees that it will help you towards
work of 16 or more hours a week. There is no limit to the number
of times you can do permitted work in this category while you are
getting incapacity benefit; but there must be a gap of at least
52 weeks between periods. These subsequent periods are for 52 weeks
and a Job Broker, Personal Adviser or Disability Employment Adviser
must support the work from the outset.
in supported permitted work for earnings of up to and including
£67.50 a week for an unlimited period.
Supported permitted work is work done with the ongoing support or
supervision from a professional caseworker (employed or engaged
by a public body or voluntary organisation). This could be work
done in the community or in a sheltered workshop. It also includes
work done under medical supervision as part of a hospital treatment
programme.
You do not have to undergo a medical test just because you are doing
permitted work. However, if a medical test is due it will go ahead
as planned.
You can carry on getting Incapacity Benefit or Severe Disablement
Allowance while doing permitted work without it affecting your benefit.
If you get Income Support, Housing Benefit or Council Tax Benefit
your benefit will be reduced if your average earnings are more than
your earnings disregard.
Voluntary work:
You can
do as much voluntary work as you like. Your Incapacity Benefit will
not be affected as long as you do not receive any pay other than
expenses.
The voluntary work must not be for a close relative.
You must tell your social security office if you do any voluntary
work, and if you are paid in any way.
Permitted expenses could include:
Travel
Childminding or the costs of caring for another dependent
Equipment needed for work
Use of a telephone
Meal vouchers
Transitional Rules:
There are
transitional rules that protect the amount of benefit you get if
you transferred to Incapacity Benefit from invalidity benefit and
sickness benefit.
But you must pass the personal capability assessment unless you
are exempt.
Transferred from Invalidity Benefit?
If you were entitled to Invalidity Benefit on 12.04.95, your benefit
automatically became a 'transitional award of long-term Incapacity
Benefit.' If your invalidity benefit stopped at any time between
15.02.95 and 12.04.95 and you became incapable of work again no
more than 8 weeks after your last day of incapacity in that period,
your new award is also a transitional award of long-term Incapacity
Benefit.
Transferred from Sickness Benefit?
If you were entitled to sickness benefit on 12.04.95, your award
automatically became a 'transitional award of short-term Incapacity
Benefit', paid at the same rate as ordinary short-term Incapacity
Benefit.
A transitional award ends when you move onto a long-term benefit.
If you are getting sickness benefit because of an industrial accident
or disease you can move on to long term Incapacity Benefit even
if you don't satisfy the contribution conditions.
Linking Rules:
There are
linking rules which theoretically help people to restart benefits
without losing out after a trial period at work.
This means that if you are off work because of illness or disability
within 8 weeks of the end of your last incapacity benefit payment,
the two periods of incapacity for work can sometimes be linked together
to form a single period, and you will go back onto the benefit at
the same rate and same terms as before. Ask for advice about this
before starting work to find out how you can protect your rights;
in practice these rules have been found to be problematic.
8 week linking rule
If you are off work because of illness or disability within 8 weeks
of the end of your last incapacity benefit award, you'll go back
on to benefit at the same rate on the same terms as before. This
is because you are still in the same 'period of incapacity for work'.
52 week linking rule
This linking rule means that, if you have received benefit due to
your incapacity for work, you can try out work or training for up
to a year but later return to your previous level of benefit. This
linking rule applies to claimants who reclaim the benefit within
52 weeks of leaving it for work or training. To quality for the
52 week protection you must:
have been incapable of work for more than 196 days (gaps of up to
8 weeks are ignored)
and
start work or training within one week of entitlement to the incapacity
for work benefit ending
and
notify the Benefits Agency within one month of benefit stopping
that you have started work or training (even if you have already
informed them) and that you want to apply for the 52 week rule.
What happens on retirement?:
Long-term
Incapacity Benefit
If you over pension age (60 for women, 65 for men), you cannot normally
receive long-term Incapacity Benefit. You can only receive long-term
Incapacity Benefit after pension age if:
you are entitled to a transitional award because you were previously
entitled to invalidity benefit and
you reached pension age before 13.04.95
Short-term Incapacity Benefit
You can make a claim for short-term Incapacity Benefit up to five
years beyond pension age if you are in a 'period of incapacity for
work', which begun before you reached pension age. (A 'period of
incapacity for work' is made up of 4 or more consecutive days of
incapacity). Or you can stay on short-term benefit beyond pension
age rather than draw your pension if you choose.
Points to note:
You cannot get Incapacity Benefit and retirement pension at the
same time, so you will not get short-term benefit if you draw your
pension.
You don't have to satisfy the National Insurance contribution conditions
for Incapacity Benefit once you reach pension age.
How are you paid?:
Incapacity
Benefit is usually paid fortnightly in arrears. The DSS can consider
weekly payment if fortnightly payments are causing hardship. If
you get a transitional award, benefit is still paid weekly in arrears
as before. You may be paid by an order book, by direct credit transfer
into a bank or building society, or by giro bank cheque.
Reviews and Appeals:
An Adjudication
Officer at the DSS makes the decision on your claim. If you disagree
with the decision, you have the right of appeal to an independent tribunal
- Social Security Appeal Tribunal - within 3 months of the decision
being sent to you. If you don't agree that you are fit for work it is
well worth appealing. While you are appealing, you can 'sign on' as
available for work for Jobseekers Allowance. This does not prejudice
your chance of winning an appeal on incapacity for work. By 'signing
on' you will protect your right to National Insurance credits, whether
or not your appeal is successful.
Further Information:
Welfare Benefits Handbook,
published by Child Poverty Action Group, 94 White Lion Street, London,
N1 9PF.
Benefits and Mental Health: a guide to the benefits you can claim if you
have a mental health problem. Alban Hawsworth, Disability Alliance, February
2001.
Disability Rights Handbook, available from Disability Alliance, 1st Floor
East, Universal House, 88-94 Wentworth Street, London E1 7SA.
Rights Advice Line: 020 7247 8763 (minicom available)
Website: www.disabilityalliance.org
DSS Leaflet IB201, Incapacity Benefit, order by telephone on 0800 868
686
Mental Health and Incapacity for Work: an information pack for people
claiming Incapacity Benefit, Income Support and Sever Disablement Allowance
available from the Department of Social Policy and Social Work, the University
of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT.