Postby papinian » Thu Feb 18, 2016 12:04 pm
Gemima: Everything lemonzest says is correct.
A couple of further points:
- Household income is not relevant to child benefit. What is relevant is whether one parent has an income in excess of £50,000. Between £50,000 and £60,000 the amount of child benefit reduces until at £60,000 there is no child benefit.
In the case of a couple where one parent earns £60,000 and the other parent earns £30,000 they get ZERO child benefit. In the case of couple where each parent earns £45,000 they get full child benefit. This illustrates why the child benefit changes introduced by the Conservatives are stupid and unfair.
As you will note, it is certainly possible that if your boss earns thousands more than you but still under £50,000 that your possible gets child benefit and you don't!
- As lemonzest notes, the rules re child benefit give the alternatives of not claiming it or claiming it and then paying it back as part of tax return. The advantage to claiming it and paying it back as part of tax return is that you don't have to do the tax return until the January after the April in which the relevant tax year ends - therefore you get the money for 9-21 months before you have to pay it back.
- As lemonzest noted, it is really really important that you either claim the child benefit or that you notify HMRC that you are not claiming the child benefit. This preserves your state pension entitlement.
Personally, I think it is better to claim it and then pay it back in your tax return.