Check how much Housing benefit you can get
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Housing Benefit can help with all or part of your rent. How much you get will depend on if you pay your rent to the council, a social housing organisation or a private landlord.
Use our benefit calculator to help you understand what Housing Benefit you can claim, and check what other financial help you can get.
Our benefits calculator is to be used as a guide only. The calculator may give you details of benefits you are already claiming.
Housing Benefit if you are paying council and social housing rent
How much you get depends on:
- your ‘eligible’ rent
- if you have a spare room
- your household income - including benefits, pensions and savings (over £6,000)
- your circumstances – for example the age of people in the house, or if someone has a disability
Eligible rent
Eligible rent means the reasonable rent for a suitable property in your area. It includes service charges, for example lift maintenance or a communal laundry. It does not include things like heating.
Spare bedrooms
Your Housing Benefit could be reduced if you live in council or social housing and have a spare bedroom. The reduction is:
- 14% of the ‘eligible rent’ for 1 spare bedroom
- 25% of the ‘eligible rent’ for 2 or more spare bedrooms
Example: reduced Housing Benefit
Your eligible rent is £100 per week. Housing Benefit pays £50 and you pay £50. You have 1 spare bedroom, so the reduction is 14%. This means your Housing Benefit will be reduced by £14 per week.
Sharing bedrooms
The following are expected to share:
- an adult couple
- two children under 16 of the same sex
- two children under 10 (regardless of sex)
The following can have their own bedroom:
- a single adult aged 16 or over
- a child that would normally share, but shared bedrooms are already taken, for example, you’ve 3 children and 2 already share
- children who can’t share because of a disability or medical condition
- a non-resident overnight carer for you or your partner (but only if they must stay overnight)
One spare bedroom is allowed for:
- an approved foster carer who is between placements but only for up to 52 weeks from the end of the last placement
- a newly approved foster carer for up to 52 weeks from the date of approval if no child is placed with them during that time
Rooms used by students and members of the armed or reserve forces will not be counted as ‘spare’ if they’re away and intend to return home.
Housing Benefit if you are paying private rent
How much you get is usually based on:
- the Local Housing Allowance Limit in your area
- your income - including benefits, pensions and savings over £6,000
- your circumstances – for example the age of the people in the house, or if someone has a disability
If you’ve been getting Housing Benefit since before 7 April 2008, these limits only apply if you:
- change address
- have a break in your claim for Housing Benefit
How you're paid
We pay Housing Benefit as follows:
- council tenants - into your rent account (you won’t receive the money)
- private tenants - into your bank or building society account
The benefit cap
The benefit cap limits the amount of benefit that most people aged 16 to State Pension age can get.
If you’re affected, your Housing Benefit will go down to make sure that the total amount of benefit you get isn’t more than the cap level.