Majority of pensioner homeowners fail to claim benefits entitlement

Six in 10 eligible pensioners are failing to claim their full State Benefit Entitlement, leading to hundreds – and in some cases, thousands – of pounds of lost income.

Related topics:  Retirement
Rozi Jones
6th February 2017
pension, retirement, house, hands
"Free guidance, from the government backed Pension Wise service, should be made the default option for all those heading into retirement unless they specifically opt out."

Just - the new brand of Just Retirement and Partnership - found that of the half of pensioner homeowners who are entitled to receive benefits, more than six in 10 (62%) are either failing to claim or are receiving less than they should.

This is also the third consecutive rise – from a quarter to a third – in the numbers claiming but not receiving their full entitlement.

Those failing to claim are missing out on an average of £576 per year, but in one case the amount not being claimed was £2,330.

Couples are more likely to claim benefits with about seven in 10 of those eligible claiming compared to six in 10 for single pensioners. Older people are also more likely to take-up benefits with 75% of over-75s who are eligible claiming compared to 56% of those aged 65-74 and just 43% of those aged 55-64.

Guarantee Pensions Credit is the benefit most likely to be claimed by those who are eligible with take-up at around 85%. Those not claiming are missing out on £572 a year on average. However, of those who are claiming Guarantee Pensions Credit, more than one in four do not receive their full entitlement which in one case was £1,059 a year.

Savings Pension Credit was only claimed by 39% of those who were eligible. Those failing to claim were on average missing out on £431 a year with the biggest loss £906 a year.

Council Tax support was only claimed by 49% of those eligible to claim it. The average loss to those failing to claim was £529 a year, but in the worst case £1,810 a year.

Stephen Lowe, group communications director at Just, said: “This is the seventh year we have carried out this research and the seventh time we have issued the same warning. Take-up rates are far too low and it is costing pensioners dearly, in some cases several thousand pounds a year.

“Pensions and benefits are now so complex that few retirees understand all the options without professional help and it is costing them dearly. Take-up rates of State benefits are lower among homeowners than non-homeowners. Yet owning bricks and mortar doesn’t mean you are not struggling financially.

“Our view is that free guidance, from the government backed Pension Wise service, should be made the default option for all those heading into retirement unless they specifically opt out and should include information and advice about eligibility for and access to State benefits.

“It’s interesting that the largest amount of ‘missing’ benefit we found was £2,330 which was for a 92 year old in the Midlands, who was not claiming any benefit until our adviser crunched the numbers and found she should be receiving £45 a week. We can’t tell exactly how much she missed out on over the years but it could be in the tens of thousands of pounds.

“About one in 10 of those eligible to claim were missing out on more than £1,000 a year with nearly half not claiming any benefit at all. And another two in 10 were missing out on between £500 and £1,000 a year.

“These are life-changing amounts of money which in many cases are not being claimed by those who are struggling the most. Even once in the system, people have to take care they are claiming the correct amount.”

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