Benefits

Child Benefit UK — Complete Guide 2026

How much Child Benefit you can claim, who's eligible, how to claim, and how the High Income Child Benefit Charge works. Updated for 2026/27 rates.

Child Benefit is a tax-free payment for people bringing up a child. You can claim for each child you’re responsible for — there’s no limit on the number of children.

What is Child Benefit?

Key Facts

Feature Details
Who can claim Anyone responsible for a child under 16 (or under 20 in approved education/training)
Based on income? No — but High Income Charge applies above £60,000
Taxable? No (but HIBC claws back via tax if income over £60k)
Paid to Usually the primary carer
Payment frequency Every 4 weeks (some single parents: every week)

2026/27 Rates

Child Weekly Rate Annual Amount
First child £26.05 £1,354.60
Each additional child £17.25 £897.00

Example: A family with 3 children receives £26.05 + £17.25 + £17.25 = £60.55 per week (£3,148.60/year).

Eligibility

Who Can Claim

Requirement Details
Child’s age Under 16, or under 20 in approved education/training
Responsibility You’re responsible for the child (they live with you or you pay the most towards their upkeep)
Residency You live in the UK
Habitual residence You’re habitually resident in the UK, Channel Islands, Isle of Man, or EEA

Approved Education and Training (16–19)

Child Benefit continues until your child turns 20 if they’re in approved education or training:

Qualifies Doesn’t Qualify
A levels or Scottish Highers University/HE courses
NVQs up to level 3 Apprenticeships (paid)
Home education (if started before 16) Employment
BTECs (non-advanced)

You must tell HMRC when your child leaves approved education or training.

Who Is “Responsible” for a Child?

Only one person can claim Child Benefit for a child at a time. If two people could claim (e.g., separated parents), it usually goes to the person the child lives with.

The High Income Child Benefit Charge (HIBC)

How It Works

If either you or your partner earns over £60,000, you’ll need to pay back some or all of Child Benefit through your tax return.

Income You Pay Back
Under £60,000 Nothing — keep all Child Benefit
£60,000–£80,000 1% of Child Benefit for every £200 over £60,000
Over £80,000 All of it — 100% clawed back

Example: You earn £70,000. The excess over £60,000 is £10,000. 1% × (£10,000 ÷ £200) = 50% of Child Benefit is repaid.

What Counts as Income for HIBC?

Included Not Included
Salary and wages Child Benefit itself
Self-employment profit Non-taxable benefits
Rental income ISA interest
Pension income Pension contributions (these reduce your adjusted net income)
Savings and dividend income above dividend allowance

Tip: Making pension contributions reduces your adjusted net income, which is used for HIBC calculations. Contributing more to your pension can bring you under the £60,000 threshold.

Should You Still Claim?

Even if you’ll pay it all back, you should still claim Child Benefit because:

  1. NI credits — Claiming gives you Class 3 NI credits towards your State Pension while your child is under 12
  2. Your child gets an NI number automatically at age 16
  3. Your child counts as a dependant for Pension Credit and other calculations

If you don’t want to receive the payments (to avoid having to file a Self Assessment return), you can opt out of payments but still register for Child Benefit. This protects your NI record.

NI Credits from Child Benefit

Why These Matter

If you’re not working or earning too little to pay NICs, Child Benefit gives you free NI credits:

Child’s Age Benefit
Under 12 Class 3 NI credits (full State Pension qualifying years)
12 or over No NI credits

These credits fill gaps in your NI record that would otherwise cost £824.20 per year to buy voluntarily.

Partners and NI Credits

If you’re not the main Child Benefit claimant but you’re their partner, you can apply for NI credits to be transferred to you instead — for example, if you’re the stay-at-home parent.

How to Claim

Online

  1. Sign in to your HMRC account at gov.uk/child-benefit
  2. Add a new child claim
  3. You’ll need the child’s birth certificate details

By Post

  1. Download form CH2 from gov.uk
  2. Complete and send to: Child Benefit Office, PO Box 1, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE88 1AA

When to Claim

Claim as soon as possible after your child is born or comes to live with you. Child Benefit can only be backdated 3 months, so delays cost money.

What You’ll Need

Information Details
Child’s details Full name, date of birth
Your NI number Your National Insurance number
Bank details Where to pay the benefit
Birth certificate Or adoption certificate
Partner’s details If applicable

Payments

How You’re Paid

Detail Information
Payment method Direct to your bank account
Frequency Every 4 weeks
Single parents Option to receive weekly
First payment Usually within 3 weeks of claim

When Payments Stop

Child Benefit stops automatically on 31 August after the child’s 16th birthday — unless they stay in approved education/training. If they do, you must tell HMRC or payments stop.

Child Benefit also stops if:

  • The child leaves education/training
  • The child starts work (16+ hours/week)
  • They begin an apprenticeship
  • They go into local authority care

Changes You Must Report

Tell HMRC immediately if:

Change Why
Child leaves school or training Payments must stop
Child goes into care Payments must stop
Child lives with someone else Payments may need to transfer
Your income goes over £60,000 HIBC applies
You leave the UK Eligibility may change
Child dies Payments must stop — but you get an 8-week run-on

Child Benefit and Other Benefits

Universal Credit

Child Benefit counts as income in UC calculations. Roughly speaking, each £1 of Child Benefit you receive reduces your UC by 55 pence (the UC taper rate). This doesn’t mean you should stop claiming — you’ll almost always be better off claiming both.

Child Tax Credit

Child Tax Credit was replaced by Universal Credit for new claimants. If you’re still on Child Tax Credit (legacy), Child Benefit doesn’t reduce it.

Housing Benefit and Council Tax Reduction

Child Benefit doesn’t usually directly reduce these benefits.

Appealing a Decision

If your Child Benefit claim is refused:

  1. Request a Mandatory Reconsideration within 1 month
  2. If refused, appeal to the Social Security and Child Support Tribunal
  3. Get free help from Citizens Advice

Quick Reference

Question Answer
Rate — first child £26.05/week
Rate — additional children £17.25/week each
Taxable? No (HIBC may apply above £60k income)
Claim deadline No deadline, but 3-month backdating limit
NI credits? Yes, for children under 12
Maximum income before HIBC £60,000 (adjusted net income)
HIBC fully claws back at £80,000+
Claim online? Yes, via HMRC account