logo
Families, pensioners and disabled people due up to £305 in extra payments this year

Families, pensioners and disabled people due up to £305 in extra payments this year

Daily Record14-07-2025
More than half a million children and families in Scotland received cash help for heating bills last year.
Last winter over half a million children and families across Scotland enjoyed warmer homes after receiving a total of £37.3 million towards their heating bills from Social Security Scotland. Winter Heating Payment (£59.75), Child Winter Heating Payment (£255.80) and Pension Age Winter Heating Payments (between £101 and £305) will be issued again this year to eligible households to help with higher costs over the colder months.
A total of 465,510 Winter Heating Payments, worth £27.3m, were made for 2024/2025, along with 39,590 Child Winter Heating Payments, worth £10m.
Following the UK Government's U-turn on the Winter Fuel Payment eligibility policy, which will see around 9 million pensioners in England and Wales receive between £100 and £300, the Scottish Government announced it would also ensure Scots pensioners would not miss out.
Social Security Scotland delivers the payments using data provided by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and recently updated the dedicated pages on MYGOV.SCOT with information on payments for this winter.
Payments will be made automatically from November and how much someone receives depends on their age, household living circumstances and residency in the UK during the qualifying week of Monday September 15 to Sunday September 21, 2025.
Pensioners in residential care could get £101.70 while people aged between 66 and 79 could receive £203.40 while those aged 80 or over could be due £305.10.
To qualify for either Pension Age Winter Heating Payment or Winter Fuel Payment, people need to have been born before September 22, 1959 with an annual income of £35,000 and below.
Nobody needs to claim either of these payments or be in receipt of Pension Credit, as per the previous eligibility rules.
Winter Heating Payment is paid automatically to people who get certain low-income benefits, including households with young children, disabled people or older people. It has replaced the DWP's Cold Weather Payment in Scotland.
It is a guaranteed payment that everyone who is eligible receives, no matter what the weather - Cold Weather Payment is only paid if the average temperature falls - or is forecast to fall - to freezing or below for a full week.
Child Winter Heating Payment was introduced by the Scottish Government in November 2020 and is only available in Scotland. It is paid once a year to children and young people if they are under 19-years-old and get certain benefits.
The figures, taken from statistics released on April 29 also show that 95 per cent of Winter Heating Payments were made by December 2024 and 93 per cent of Child Winter Heating Payments were made by October 2024.
Benefits and payments only available in Scotland
Below is everything you need to know about devolved benefits and payments with direct links to the dedicated pages on the Social Security Scotland website here.
Winter Heating Payment - £59.75 annual payment
This annual payment replaced the Cold Weather Payment delivered by DWP in 2023 and will be worth £59.75 during winter 2025/26. It is designed to help people on a low income or benefits who might have extra heating needs during the winter - find out more here.
Child Winter Heating Payment - £255.80 annual payment
This is an annual payment to help families of youngsters up to the age of 19 on the highest rate care component of disability benefits and will be worth £255.80 in winter 2025/26. This payment provides support for people on Disability Living Allowance for Children, Child or Adult Disability Payment and Personal Independence Payment (PIP) - find out more here.
Just remember, Adult Disability Payment will fully replace PIP by the end of this year so it's included here as there are still people in receipt of the DWP benefits and intended as information only.
Pension Age Winter Heating Payment - between £101.70 and £305.10 annual payment
Pension Age Winter Heating Payment will help people of State Pension age with higher energy bills during the colder months. It replaces Winter Fuel payments for pensioners with a Scottish postcode.
A full overview of the eligibility criteria and payment structure can be found on MYGOV.SCOT here.
Payments to be issued from November:
People aged over 66 living in residential care will receive £101.70 (visit MYGOV.SCOT for full details)
People aged between 66 and 79 will receive £203. 40 (lower rate)
People aged 80 and over will receive £305.10 (higher rate)

Scottish Child Payment - £27.15 weekly payment
This is a payment of £27.15 per week, per child - some £108.60 every four week pay period. It can help towards the costs of looking after a child under 16 for families who get certain benefits - find out more here.
Best Start Grant Pregnancy and Baby Payment (first child) - £767.50
This is a one-off payment of up to £767.50 from 24 weeks in pregnancy up until a baby turns six months for families who get certain benefits - find out more here.

Best Start Grant - Pregnancy and Baby Payment - £383.75
The Subsequent Child Payment and Multiple Pregnancy Supplement payment will be worth £383.75 in 2025.26 - find out more here.
Best Start Grant Early Learning Payment - £319.80
This is a one-off payment of £319.80 when a child is between two and three years and six months for families who get certain benefits - find out more here.
Best Start Grant School Age Payment - £319.80
This is a one-off payment of £319.80 when a child would normally start primary one for families who get certain benefits - find out more here.

Best Start Foods
This is a pre-paid card from pregnancy up to when a child turns three for families on certain benefits to help buy healthy food - find out more here.
The 2025/26 weekly payment rates are:
Higher rate - £10.80
Lower rate - £5.40

Funeral Support Payment
This is money towards the costs of a funeral at a difficult time like this for people on certain benefits who are responsible for paying for a funeral. The current average payout is £1,800 - find out more here.
Payment rates:

Standard rate: £1,279.15
Lower rate: £156.10
Medical device removal rate: £25.80
Job Start Payment
This is a one-off payment for 16 to 24 year olds who have been on certain benefits for six months or more to help with the costs of starting a job - find out more here.
Payment rates:

Higher rate: £511.65
Standard rate: £319.80
Child Disability Payment - up to £749 every four weeks
This is extra money - up to the value of £749 every four weeks in 2025/26 - to help with the costs of caring for a child with a disability or ill-health condition. It replaces Disability Living Allowance for children in Scotland that was previously delivered by the DWP - find out more here.
Weekly payment rates

Daily living
Lower care award: £29.20
Standard: £73.90
Enhanced: £110.40
Mobility

Standard: £29.20
Enhanced: £77.05
Adult Disability Payment - up to £749 every four weeks
This is extra money - worth between £116.80 and £749.80 every four weeks - to help people who have a long-term illness or a disability that affects their everyday life. It replaces Personal Independence Payment people in Scotland previously delivered by the DWP - find out more here.
Weekly payment rates

Daily living
Standard: £73.90
Enhanced: £110.40
Mobility

Standard: £29.20
Enhanced: £77.05
Pension Age Disability Payment - up to £441 every four weeks
Pension Age Disability Payment has replaced all new claims for Attendance Allowance in Scotland. It will replace Attendance Allowance for existing claimants by the end of 2025.
People living in Scotland-only will receive either £73.90 or £110.40 each week - the same rate as Attendance Allowance. it will be paid every four weeks - £295.60, or £441.60 per pay period.

Pension Age Disability Payment will support older people who have a disability that means they need assistance with looking after themselves, or supervision to keep them safe. Find out more about the new payment here.
Scottish Adult Disability Living Allowance - up to £749 every four weeks
This is a closed benefit, which means nobody can apply for it and is only for pensioners on Disability Living Allowance transferring from the DWP - find out more here.

Weekly payment rates
Daily living
Lower care award: £29.20
Standard: £73.90
Enhanced: £110.40

Mobility
Standard: £29.20
Enhanced: £77.05
Young Carer Grant - £390.25 annual payment
This is an annual payment of £390.25 for people 16, 17 or 18 who care for people who get a disability benefit from the DWP for an average of 16 hours a week or more - find out more here.

Carer's Allowance Supplement - £293.50 paid twice a year
This is an automatic payment of £293.50 made twice a year to people who get Carer's Allowance through the DWP on certain dates each year.
The first payment of 2025 was issued to over 90,000 carers last month and the next one is due in December - find out more here.
Carer Support Payment - £83.30 weekly payment
Carer Support Payment is replacing Carer's Allowance for new and existing claimants in Scotland and will be worth £83.30 each week, some £333.20 every four week pay period. Full details about the new benefit can be found here.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Labour thinktank offers sponsorship packages to meet and influence ‘key policymakers'
Labour thinktank offers sponsorship packages to meet and influence ‘key policymakers'

The Guardian

time26 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Labour thinktank offers sponsorship packages to meet and influence ‘key policymakers'

A Labour thinktank has been offering sponsorship packages where businesses can meet and influence MPs and ministers, according to a report. The Labour Infrastructure Forum (LIF) has been offering companies the chance to sponsor events at which they can meet 'key policymakers' in private and 'shape the discussion', the Times said. An LIF prospectus lists a set of sponsorship packages on offer for companies, including a £7,850 deal for a 'private breakfast/dinner roundtable with an influential Labour figure'. Other deals on offer include £11,750 for a 'parliamentary panel event with key policymakers', and between £21,500 and £30,000 for a 'Westminster drinks reception'. The prices are not inclusive of VAT. The Labour Infrastructure Forum describes itself on its website as 'a thinktank focused on getting Britain building and growing again'. It states that it wants to 'spark dialogue' between the party and 'those working across the infrastructure sector'. The thinktank was launched in September last year at an event with speeches from Darren Jones MP, the chief secretary to the Treasury, and Varun Chandra, a business adviser to Keir Starmer. It is not part of the Labour party and is not a lobbying company, which means it does not need to abide by the rules or guidance for lobbying firms or political parties. A spokesperson for the LIF told the Times that the group used sponsorship money to cover its costs and that 'any LIF activity that is supported by sponsors will be made publicly available at the time and in our annual report, as is common across the industry'. The group does not disclose its sponsors. The Labour party said it had no connection to LIF and does not endorse its activities. 'Commercial partnerships at events are a longstanding practice and have no bearing on party or government policy. The party fully complies with all rules relating to the reporting of donations,' a party spokesperson said. LIF states that its secretariat and work is supported by the lobbying company Bradshaw Advisory. The Times reported that a client of Bradshaw Advisory had been able to have a meeting last year with Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, at the Labour party conference, which has not been declared on transparency records. A Labour party spokesperson said: 'This was a meeting at party conference that was held in a political capacity. All meetings held in a ministerial capacity are declared in the proper way in full accordance with the rules.' Labour came under fire last autumn for offering company bosses breakfast with Reynolds for up to £30,000. For £15,000 plus VAT, companies were told they would get an opportunity to give a keynote speech, photographs with the business secretary and others, and a dedicated member of Labour party staff to help make introductions. For £30,000 they would also get to help decide who would attend. In the pitch, Labour's commercial team called the offer a 'unique opportunity to become a commercial partner at our business policy roundtable over breakfast'. The event ultimately did not go ahead and the party said Reynolds had been unaware of it. The Guardian reported last month that Labour MPs were alarmed at the number of sponsored corporate receptions for backbenchers that have been arranged by the party, amid concerns about perceived conflicts of interest. MPs said they had received invitations for networking receptions that include explicit advertisements for property developers or public affairs firms, sent directly from the parliamentary Labour party (PLP) office.

Keir Starmer faces new sleaze row over Labour caught offering access to influential figures for cash
Keir Starmer faces new sleaze row over Labour caught offering access to influential figures for cash

The Sun

time26 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Keir Starmer faces new sleaze row over Labour caught offering access to influential figures for cash

SIR Keir Starmer faces a new sleaze row over Labour offering access to 'influential' figures for cash. Since last summer a group linked to the party has been flogging sponsorship packages costing £9,500 to private firms. In exchange business leaders are invited to private meetings with 'key policymakers' where they can 'shape the conversation'. Sponsorship packs offered to companies include a £7,850 deal, where buyers can enjoy a 'private breakfast/dinner roundtable with an influential Labour figure'. There's also an £11,750 option to sponsor a 'parliamentary panel event with key policymakers' or £30,000 choice to pay for a 'Westminster drinks reception'. The cash for access, revealed by The Times, is organised by a group called the Labour Infrastructure Forum (LIF). Because it's run by lobbyists and a council of Labour bigwigs, but isn't itself a lobbying company, it is exempt from usual anti-sleaze rules. The organisation so far refuses to reveal which firms have signed up to its lucrative deals and who the influential Labour figures are that have taken part in back-room meet ups. A spokesperson for LIF said the group uses sponsorship cash to cover costs and 'any LIF activity that is supported by sponsors will be made publicly available at the time and in our annual report, as is common across the industry'. A Labour Party spokesman said: 'Commercial partnerships at events are a longstanding practice and have no bearing on party or government policy. The party fully complies with all rules relating to the reporting of donations.' Sir Keir Starmer red-faced AGAIN after Commons opens sleaze probe into his earnings 1

Britain already has a de facto wealth tax
Britain already has a de facto wealth tax

Telegraph

time26 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Britain already has a de facto wealth tax

New figures from the National Institute of Economic and Social Research show that Chancellor Rachel Reeves is on course to miss her borrowing targets by over £40bn, again raising the prospect of fresh tax hikes this autumn. There are few prizes on offer for guessing where the minds of Labour MPs will turn. Yet between inheritance tax, council tax, stamp duty, capital gains, corporation tax, and the tax on interest, there is scarcely an element of an individual's portfolio which isn't in some way squeezed to fund the ever-expanding welfare state. An additional 120,000 people are predicted by HMRC to pay income tax on the interest on their savings this year, bringing the total number paying to 2.64 million. Some of this is due to higher returns; another component, however, is down to the freeze in tax thresholds, driving down the inflation adjusted value of the tax-free limit. Britain is not a country blessed with an excessive level of private savings and with the Government actively attempting to boost investment, it might be thought that penalising one of the channels through which funds can be lent to firms would be discouraged. Such analysis, however, reckons without the obsessive equalising instinct which has taken root in Westminster. With the Government apparently fixated on the curious objective of divorcing living standards from economic contributions entirely, the need for tax revenue today is taking precedence over the need to provide for tomorrow. The result of this short-sighted creation of a hostile environment for wealth will surely be to further undermine the sustainability of the public finances in the long run.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store