Benefits & Entitlements

Housing Benefit Guide UK — Help With Rent Payments

How Housing Benefit works, who qualifies, how much you can get, Local Housing Allowance rates, and how to apply. A complete guide for UK renters.

Housing Benefit helps people on low incomes pay their rent. While it is gradually being replaced by Universal Credit for working-age claimants, it remains an important benefit — particularly for pensioners and those in supported accommodation.

Who Can Claim Housing Benefit?

GroupCan Claim Housing Benefit?
State Pension age (not on UC)Yes
Working age (in supported accommodation)Yes
Working age (already on HB, not moved to UC)Yes, until migrated
Working age (new claim)Usually must claim UC housing element instead
HomeownersNo (HB is for renters only)

How Much Can You Get?

Private Renters: Local Housing Allowance (LHA)

LHA rates set the maximum Housing Benefit based on your area and property size:

Bedrooms AllowedBased On
Shared room rateSingle, under 35, no dependants
1 bedroomSingle (35+) or couple with no children
2 bedrooms1 child, or 2 children of same sex under 16
3 bedroomsLarger families (rules vary)
4 bedrooms (max)Very large families

LHA rates are set at the 30th percentile of local rents — meaning 30% of local properties should be available at or below the rate.

Social Housing Tenants

CircumstanceAmount
Full rent coveredIf income is low enough
Bedroom tax applied14% reduction for 1 spare room, 25% for 2+

How Income and Savings Affect Your Claim

FactorEffect
Income below applicable amountFull Housing Benefit
Income above applicable amountHB reduced by 65p for every £1 over
Savings under £6,000No effect
Savings £6,000–£16,000£1/week deducted per £500 over £6,000
Savings over £16,000Not eligible (unless on Pension Credit Guarantee)

The Bedroom Tax (Under-Occupancy Charge)

If you rent from a social landlord and have more bedrooms than the government says you need:

Spare BedroomsReduction
1 spare bedroom14% of eligible rent
2+ spare bedrooms25% of eligible rent

Exemptions

  • Foster carers (1 extra room allowed)
  • Overnight carers (additional room)
  • Armed forces personnel (children away serving)
  • Bereaved where a child or partner has recently died
  • Disabled people needing an extra room for equipment

How to Apply

Pension-Age Claimants

MethodDetail
Contact your local councilApplications made to your local authority
Evidence neededProof of rent, income, identity, savings
Processing timeUp to 2 weeks (new claims can take longer)

Working-Age Claimants

Most working-age people should claim Universal Credit instead, which includes a housing cost element. Apply at gov.uk/universal-credit.

Discretionary Housing Payments (DHPs)

If Housing Benefit does not cover your full rent, you can apply for extra help:

FeatureDetail
What it isExtra payment from your council to help with housing costs
Who can claimAnyone receiving Housing Benefit or UC housing element
When to applyShortfall between benefit and rent; moving costs; rent in advance
How to applyContact your local council
AmountVaries — decided by council
DurationCan be short-term or longer

Changes in Circumstances

You must report changes to your local council immediately:

ChangeEffect
Income increases/decreasesHB adjusted
Someone moves in/outRecalculated
Rent changesRecalculated
Savings change significantlyRecalculated
Moving houseNeed new claim

Common Issues

IssueSolution
LHA does not cover full rentApply for Discretionary Housing Payment; negotiate with landlord
Bedroom tax appliedApply for DHP; check exemptions; consider downsizing
Late paymentContact council; chase; consider switching to direct payment
OverpaymentCouncil may recover; appeal if incorrect
Facing evictionContact Shelter or Citizens Advice immediately

For related support, see our Universal Credit guide and council tax reduction guide.