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Dublin Live
Dublin Live
National
Emma Nevin

Social welfare Ireland: Weekly payment worth €928 officially ends

Recipients of the Fuel Allowance received their final weekly payment this week until the scheme resumes in September.

The social welfare benefit is a weekly payment of €33 that paid out over 28 weeks from September until April. The date of the last payment for the 2022/2023 year was 10 April 2023.

The date that the fuel allowance will resume for the 2023/2024 season has not yet been confirmed. However, recipients can expect the payment to return by the end of September.

Read more: Exact date confirmed for over one million to receive €200 cost of living payment

To be considered eligible for Fuel Allowance, you must live alone (or only with certain people listed below), be getting a qualifying payment (unless you are 70 or over), and satisfy a means test.

If you are 70 or over, you don’t need a qualifying payment to qualify for Fuel Allowance. Here are the qualifying payments for those aged under 70:

  • State Pension (Contributory)

  • Widow's, Widower's or Surviving Civil Partner's (Contributory) Pension

  • Incapacity Supplement under the Occupational Injuries Benefit scheme

  • Invalidity Pension

  • Guardian's Payment (Contributory)

  • Death Benefit under the Occupational Injuries Scheme

  • A pension or benefit from a country covered by EU Regulations or a country with which Ireland has a bilateral social security agreement (provided there is an equivalent Irish payment)

  • Qualifying social assistance payments

  • State Pension (Non-Contributory)

  • Widow's, Widower's or Surviving Civil Partner's (Non-Contributory) Pension

  • Disability Allowance

  • Blind Pension

  • Deserted Wife's Benefit or Allowance

  • One-Parent Family Payment (OFP)

  • Guardian's Payment (Non-Contributory)

  • Farm Assist

  • Basic Supplementary Welfare Allowance for more than a year (this is 364 days over 12 months - it is paid on a 7-day week basis so 12 months’ payment is reached after day 364)

  • Jobseeker's Allowance for more than 312 days (over 12 months - it is paid on a 6-day week basis so 12 months’ payment is reached after day 312). Days on Jobseeker's Benefit (JB) and PUP can count towards the 312 days, if your JB was immediately before your JA claim. You can keep your Fuel Allowance if you move to JA from OFP, Carer’s Allowance or JST.

  • Jobseeker's Transitional payment (JST)

  • If you are taking part in certain schemes - Back to Work Allowance, Back to Work Enterprise Allowance (BTWEA), Rural Social Scheme, Tús or Community Employment and are entitled to keep your secondary benefits

You must live alone or only with:

  • A dependent spouse, civil partner or cohabitant and/or dependent children

  • A person who is getting Carer's Allowance or Carer's Benefit and is caring for you or for your dependent spouse, partner or cohabitant on a full-time basis

  • A person getting short-term Jobseeker's Allowance or basic Supplementary Welfare Allowance

  • Other people who are getting the qualifying payments and who would also be eligible for a Fuel Allowance in their own right.

Only one Fuel Allowance payment is paid to a household. If more than one person in the household is getting a social assistance payment, you can decide who applies for Fuel Allowance.

To find out more information, click here .

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