Overpayments of housing benefit
What happens if the claimant receives an overpayment of housing benefit.
An overpayment is any housing benefit that has been paid (whether to the claimant, their landlord or someone else) and to which the claimant was not entitled.
To be able to recover an overpayment, the local authority must:
determine whether the overpayment is legally recoverable
calculate the amount that has been overpaid
decide whether the overpayment should be recovered and from whom
determine how much should be recovered, by what means and at what rate
notify the claimant and any other affected persons within 14 days.
Is the overpayment recoverable?
Many, but not all, overpayments are legally recoverable by the local authority. The rules are explained below.
Payment on account
The local authority must recover the overpayment where it has overestimated a claimant's housing benefit entitlement when making an 'interim payment' (also known as a 'payment on account' - for more information see Payment on account.[1]
Official error
Where the overpayment is the result of an official error, the local authority cannot recover it unless the claimant or payee (eg a landlord or agent of the landlord) could reasonably have been expected to realise that it was an overpayment.[2]
It is up to the local authority to demonstrate that the claimant would have known that s/he had been overpaid in such a case.[3]
An official error is a mistake, whether in the form of an act or an omission, by the local authority or the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) or a person working on behalf of either and can include a:[4]
mistake in calculating the claimant's entitlement
mistake in calculating the claimant's average earnings from fluctuating part-time employment [5]
failure to reduce the entitlement when informed of a change in the claimant's circumstances [6]
failure to ask a relevant question in the claim form [7]
How long the authority can take to process information received before its inaction becomes official error will depend on the facts of the individual case.[8]
An error caused in part or wholly by the claimant, someone acting on their behalf, or the recipient of the housing benefit payments is recoverable. Note that they must have caused the error, not the overpayment.[9]
Other overpayments
Any other overpayment is recoverable, but recovery is at the local authority's discretion.[10]
Special rules apply to the recovery of overpayments where a claimant has been sequestrated.
Sequestration (bankruptcy)
There are significant restrictions on when a local authority can make deductions from a claimant's ongoing housing benefit if that person is subject to a bankruptcy.[11] in Scotland the bankruptcy process is called sequestration.
Local authorities were able to lawfully recover overpayments of housing benefit from undischarged bankrupt claimants,[12] until the Supreme Court held otherwise in 2011.[13] After that date, if a housing benefit claimant is subject to an undischarged bankruptcy order, the local authority cannot commence or continue to recover any overpayments of housing benefit accrued before the making of the bankruptcy order. Any outstanding amount of overpayment must be written off when the bankrupt claimant is discharged from bankruptcy (usually one year after the making of the bankruptcy order), except when the overpayment resulted from fraud.
If, after 14 December 2011, a local authority made deductions from housing benefit to recover overpayments that predated an undischarged bankruptcy order, then the claimant will be entitled to a refund of the amount deducted and should raise this matter with the local authority. However, as such a refund will qualify as arrears of housing benefit, it can be set against any housing benefit overpayments that accrue after the date of the bankruptcy order.
Bankruptcy is an insolvency measure for certain people unable to pay their debts when they become due. A bankruptcy order covers all debts owed by an individual at the time of the making of the bankruptcy order (ie there is no need to list the creditors and debts covered by the order as in the case of DROs).
Whilst a person is bankrupt most of her/his assets might be used to pay off her/his debts. After the bankruptcy period (usually one year) most of the debtor's outstanding debts accrued before the making of the bankruptcy order, including benefit overpayment, are written off. However, this does not apply if an overpayment resulted from fraud, in which cases recovery can recommence once the bankruptcy order has been discharged at the end of the bankruptcy period.[14]
Calculating the overpayment and underlying entitlement
To calculate the amount of the overpayment, the local authority should:
identify the period over which the recoverable overpayment was paid and work how much housing benefit was paid during that period
calculate the claimant's correct entitlement of benefit for that period (known as 'underlying entitlement' or 'offsetting'). This must take into account all the true circumstances of the case, including any changes of circumstances that the authority was not aware of when determining the claimant's entitlement.
The amount of the overpayment is the difference between the amount of housing benefit paid and the correct entitlement for that period.[15]
The DWP states that the most common occurrence of underlying entitlement not being considered by the local authority is when the DWP cancelled a passported benefit for a past period and the claimant may have been entitled to housing benefit because of her/his low income.[16] The passported benefits are income support, jobseeker's allowance (income-based), employment and support allowance (income-related) and pension credit (guarantee).
The amount of overpayment to be recovered may be reduced where the overpayment was caused by the claimant's capital being wrongly taken into account to recognise that the claimant would have used some of this capital had they not received any housing benefit. This will only apply if the overpayment lasted for more than 13 weeks. Such deductions are calculated according to the 'diminishing capital rule', which dictates that the local authority should assume that the claimant's capital reduces by the amount of the overpayment for each 13-week period.[17] However, if the claimant reclaims housing benefit subsequently, the full amount of capital is taken into account.
Rate of recovery
The local authority can decide how much of the recoverable overpayment it will recover and whether to do so as a single lump sum or in instalments from payments of housing benefit or other benefits. Overpayments to local authority tenants can be recovered by adjustments to their rent account.
Recovery can also be enforced through the courts. The amount that a local authority can recover is not limited by any decision of a criminal court to impose a compensation order where a claimant has been found guilt of fraudulently claiming housing benefit.[18]
Recovery by deductions to benefits
The rate of recovery by deductions to housing benefit or other benefit payments is subject to a maximum limit.[19]The maximum weekly deduction is set annually at a standard rate, which is higher for claimants admitting or found guilty of fraud.
The maximum deduction is:[20]
£18.50
where the overpayment resulted from fraud
£11.10
in any other case.
The total deduction can then be increased by up to 50% of:
any £5, £10, £20 or £25 earned income disregard
the amount of the employment and support allowance permitted work earning where the weekly limit is £20
any disregard of regular charitable or voluntary payments (such as payments from family, friends or charities)
the £10 disregard of war disablement or bereavement pension.
It is normally possible for a claimant for whom the weekly deductions would cause financial hardship to negotiate a lower rate of deductions.
Claimant moved home
If the claimant has moved home, the local authority can recover an overpayment related to the claimant's previous home through deductions from their housing benefit entitlement in relation to the new home:
when the housing benefit has been payable to the same person at both addresses (whether the claimant or landlord/agent), and
the overpayment arose as a consequence of payments being made on a property in which the claimant was no longer residing. [21]
Who the overpayment can be recovered from and how it can be recovered
An overpayment will usually be recovered from the person to whom it was paid; however, in certain circumstances, an overpayment can be recovered from someone else.
Claimant and partner
If the overpayment was made to the claimant, it can be recovered from the claimant or from her/his partner provided that they were a couple both at the time of the overpayment and when the deduction is made.[22]
The overpayment can be recovered from the claimant's housing benefit, or other prescribed benefits, at the rate set out above.[23]
An overpayment can be recovered by an attachment of (the claimant's) earnings.[24] Regulations set out the rate at which deductions can be made.[25]
Landlord
If the overpayment was made to the claimant's landlord (or the landlord's agent), it can be recovered from the claimant, the landlord, or agent of the landlord, depending on the circumstances.[26] Recovery from the landlord (or the landlord's agent) may be through sending the landlord a bill, or deductions from future payments of housing benefit or other benefits, or deductions from payments made to that landlord in respect of other tenants. The last case is often referred to as 'recovery by schedule' or 'recovery from a blameless tenant' and the landlord must make sure s/he adjusts her/his accounts so that the 'blameless tenant' is not affected by the recovery.[27]
Where a local authority seeks to recover an overpayment from a landlord, it is open to the landlord on an appeal to dispute whether the tenant was indeed overpaid, even though the tenant did not dispute the same point in earlier proceedings between the tenant and the local authority.[28]
Where an overpayment is recovered from the landlord, the landlord could then claim the recovered sum from the claimant.
Other person
If someone else caused the overpayment (eg they were responsible for the relevant misinformation), it can be recovered from her/him instead.[29]
Misrepresentation/non-disclosure
Where the overpayment arose as the result of a misrepresentation of or a failure to disclose a material fact, the overpayment can only be recovered from the person who misrepresented or failed to disclose the material fact.[30]
Court action
Where the local authority cannot recover the overpayment using the methods outlined above and has not been able to agree repayments with the claimant, it can apply to the county court on form N322A for enforcement.
Notification
When the local authority has decided to recover an overpayment, it must inform the claimant in writing (or the person from whom the payment is to be recovered) within 14 days.[31]
The notification must state that:[32]
the overpayment is legally recoverable and why
the amount of the overpayment, how this was calculated and the period to which it relates; how and from whom recovery will be made, and that
the claimant or the person from whom the overpayment is to be recovered has the right to request a review of the overpayment decision or to make an appeal to the tribunal (see the section on Appealing housing benefit decisions).
In one case it was held that where an applicant had lodged an appeal in the First-tier tribunal against an overpayment decision, the authority’s response should have included copies of all documents relevant to the case, including a statement explaining how the overpayment had been calculated. [33]
Fraud or negligence and overpayments
Where an overpayment is found to be the result of fraudulence in relation to the claim, the claimant could face a criminal prosecution if the offence is considered to be sufficiently serious. It is a criminal offence to make false or dishonest representations in order to claim housing benefit. Criminal law sanctions include fines or, in the most serious cases, imprisonment.
Where an overpayment results from carelessness or negligence, either on the part of the claimant or by someone else acting on the claimant's behalf, the claimant may be given a civil penalty.
Administrative penalty as an alternative to prosecution
The DWP may offer the claimant the option of paying an administrative penalty instead of bringing a prosecution where: [34]
the claimant's act or omission has caused a recoverable overpayment, and
the DWP is satisfied that there are grounds for prosecuting the claimant.
The offer of an administrative penalty must be made in writing and must give the claimant 14 days to change her/his mind. The claimant should be informed that her/his benefit may be subject to a sanction even if an administrative penalty is accepted.
For offences that were committed on or after 8 May 2012, the penalty is 50 per cent of the overpayment, subject to a statutory minimum and maximum amount. For offences committed partly or wholly before 8 May 2012, the penalty is 30 per cent of the overpayment.
The penalty is added to the overpayment and recovered in the same way as the overpayment. The claimant may choose to opt for prosecution instead of accepting an administrative penalty. If the claimant successfully requests a reconsideration or appeals against the decision, the penalty will be repaid.
Civil penalties
A fixed civil penalty for a claimant's error can be imposed by a local authority when an overpayment of housing benefit has been made. [35] A civil penalty cannot be issued where the claimant has been offered an administrative penalty or is being prosecuted for the offence.
It will be added to, and recovered along with and by the same means as, the overpayment. An appeal against the civil penalty is made by appealing against the amount of the overpayment. There is a right of appeal against the imposition of a civil penalty.
The penalty will only apply to claimants who:
negligently made an incorrect statement or representation, or negligently gave incorrect information or evidence in connection with a claim without taking reasonable steps to correct it
failed, without reasonable excuse, to provide information or evidence about a claim when requested
failed, without reasonable excuse, to notify a relevant change of circumstances.