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Welfare benefits
| Means-tested welfare benefits
The main benefits are:
- Income support – living cost support for people not expected to be available for work.
- Income-based Jobseekers' Allowance – living cost support for people who have to be available for work.
- Housing benefit – help with rent(and rates in Northern Ireland).
- Council tax benefit – help with the council tax.
Most full-time medical students can’t claim ‘means- tested’ welfare benefits. The financial support you receive through grants and student loans is a replacement for these benefits.
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| For means-tested welfare benefits you’re counted as being a full-time student from the first day of your course until the last day of the course in your final academic year, including all the vacations, unless you abandon the course or are dismissed from it. (This does not usually include Freshers’ Week unless your course actually starts during it but it does include periods during which you have resits.) |
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BUT there are important exceptions to this rule:-
- Lone parents.
- Student couples with a child/ren.
- Students with a disability who get the disability or severe disability premium.
- Students who receive the Disabled Students’ Allowance (DSA) because of deafness.
- Couples where one partner is not a student.
- Students who have had to suspend their studies because of sickness or to care for someone who are now able to return to their course but cannot do so, eg until the beginning of the next academic year because of the way the course is organised. You can claim for up to a maximum of one year.
- Students from abroad whose funds have been temporarily disrupted e.g. a Government scholarship delayed because of a natural disaster.
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| IS can help with mortgage costs. Normally you only get help after waiting 39 weeks but it's possible for time when you’re not actually receiving any IS to count towards this. Get further information from one of the organisations listed in the Seeking Advice section. |
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| Non means-tested benefits
There are some non means-tested welfare benefits that you may be entitled to as a student because you’ve been working or because you have a disability. These include:
- Incapacity Benefit.
- Contribution-based Jobseekers’ Allowance(but you must be available for work).
- Maternity Allowance.
- Disability Living Allowance. A non means-tested benefit for disabled people who need help with personal care or who have mobility problems.
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| There are significant changes to welfare benefits for lone parents and those unable to work because of ill health/disability from October 2008. These changes will affect students. Follow the links for more information. |
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