Pensioners and low income Britons may qualify for £25 if their area is hit by, or forecast to have, very cold weather for seven days in a row.
The payments are made automatically if there is a trigger in the local area.
Eligible people get £25 for each seven day period of very cold weather if there’s a trigger in their local area
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The DWP today told GB News there have not been any Cold Weather Payment triggers thus far this month.
It’s possible to check if a Cold Weather Payment is due in one’s local area thanks to the Cold Weather Payment postcode checker.
To use this service, a person simply submits the first part of their postcode, and it will then state the results for that postcode.
Eligible people will get a payment if the average temperature in their area is recorded as, or forecast to be, zero degrees Celsius or below over seven consecutive days.
These payments are different to Winter Fuel Payments and they won’t affect other benefits.
Those in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland may get Cold Weather Payments if they are getting:
People who live in Scotland can no longer get Cold Weather Payments, but they may get an annual Winter Heating Payment instead.
The DWP says a person will usually get Cold Weather Payments if they get Pension Credit, which is a top-up payment which low income pensioners may be eligible for.
People who get Income Support or income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) will usually get Cold Weather Payments if they have any of the following:
Those who get income-related ESA and are in a work-related activity group or support group usually get Cold Weather Payments.
Otherwise, they might qualify if they have any of the following:
Universal Credit recipients usually get Cold Weather Payments if you are not employed or “gainfully self-employed” and your partner (if you have one) is not employed or gainfully self-employed.
One of the following conditions must also apply:
If you have a disabled child amount in your Universal Credit claim, you will be eligible for Cold Weather Payments and it won’t matter whether you or your partner are employed, self-employed or not working.
You would usually get Cold Weather Payments if you get Support for Mortgage Interest (SMI) and you’re treated as getting a qualifying benefit where one of the following applies:
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