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Wednesday, 3 December 2008

Home Responsibilities Protection

Home Responsibilities Protection (HRP) is a scheme, not a benefit, to help you protect your entitlement to State Pension if you're not paying National Insurance contributions because you don't work, or your earnings are low because you're caring for a child, or a sick or disabled person.

Who is eligible

Qualifying automatically for Home Responsibilities Protection

You should get Home Responsibilities Protection automatically if you're getting either:

  • Child Benefit in your name for a child under the age of 16 and you have given the Child Benefit Office your National Insurance number
  • Income Support and you don't need to register for work because you're caring for someone who's sick or disabled

Applying for Home Responsibilities Protection

You should apply for Home Responsibilities Protection if you are either:

  • regularly spending at least 35 hours a week looking after someone getting Attendance Allowance, Disability Living Allowance at the middle or highest rate for personal care, or Constant Attendance Allowance

or

  • a registered foster carer throughout a full tax year and are not getting Child Benefit and are not in paid work, or do not earn enough in a tax year for it to count towards the basic State Pension.

Who isn't eligible

Carer's Allowance

If you get Carer's Allowance you'll automatically get National Insurance credits and will not usually need Home Responsibilities Protection.

Married women or widows

If you're a married woman or a widow, you can't get Home Responsibilities Protection for any complete tax year if you have chosen either:

  • to pay reduced rate Class 1 National Insurance contributions as an employee (commonly known as the small stamp)
  •  not to pay Class 2 National Insurance contributions when self-employed

How it works

When working out your basic State Pension, the number of years you get Home Responsibilities Protection is taken away from the number of qualifying years needed to calculate your pension.

But for a full basic State Pension, Home Responsibilities Protection can't reduce the number of qualifying years below 20.

You also build up your additional State Pension if you qualify for Home Responsibilities Protection because you either:

  • get Child Benefit for a child under the age of six
  • are looking after a sick or disabled person (including a child over the age of six)

How to claim

To claim Home Responsibilities Protection, you need to contact your local Jobcentre Plus office to get leaflet: 'How to protect your State Pension if you are looking after someone at home', and claim form CF411.

Foster carers

When you fill in form CF411, if you're a foster carer you need to give a letter from your local authority or the agency you work for that confirms you have been an approved foster carer throughout the full tax year.

When to claim

If you're claiming Home Responsibilities Protection for years you've spent caring for someone with a long-term illness or disability between April 1978 and April 2002, you can claim at any time up to State Pension age.

For the tax years 2002-2003 onwards, you must claim Home Responsibilities Protection within three years of the end of any tax year you spent caring for someone with a long-term illness or disability. For example, if you were caring for someone with a long-term illness or disability throughout the 2004-2005 tax year, you must claim Home Responsibilities Protection before 5 April 2008.

What to do if your circumstances change

You must tell The Pension Service if:

  • you go into hospital or someone you claim benefit for goes into hospital
  • you go to live abroad
  • if you or the person you care for goes into a residential care or nursing home

What else you need to know

Home Responsibilities Protection also helps protect bereavement benefits for your husband or wife or civil partner.

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