Universal Credit and students

You cannot usually get Universal Credit if you are studying full-time. There are some exceptions

Studying full-time



You may be able to get Universal Credit if you are studying full-time and any of the following apply:

  • you’re aged 21 or under, in full-time non-advanced education
  • and do not have parental support
  • you are responsible for a child
  • you live with your partner and they are eligible for Universal Credit
  • you have reached the qualifying age for Pension Credit
  • and live with a partner who is under that age
  • you are disabled and have limited capability for work and are getting:
    • Personal Independence Payment
    • Disability Living Allowance
    • Attendance Allowance
    • Armed Forces Independence Payment



You may also be able to get Universal Credit if you’re studying in full-time non-advanced education, you do not get a student loan or maintenance grant and you are available for work. If the course is more than 12 hours a week, this only applies from 1 September following your 19th birthday. This is because your parents can claim benefits for you before that date.

You may be asked to provide evidence of the course you are doing.

 


Aged 21 or under, in non-advanced education and do not have parental support

This includes if you have left care provided by the local council or you are without parental support.

You may be eligible for Universal Credit if:

  • you’re on a full-time course of non-advanced education or training that started before you reached age 21
  • you reach age 21 while you are on the course

You can continue to get Universal Credit until:

the end of the academic year in which you reach age 21

the end of the course, if it ends before you reach age 21



You are responsible for a child

The child may be adopted or a foster child.

For couples, one of you or both of you may be a student.

 

 

 

What counts as a full-time course

The education or training provider usually decides whether a course is full-time.

If you attend a full-time course on a part-time basis, you will be treated as studying full-time.

A course is an arrangement of study, tuition or training. It can be academic, practical, or a combination of both. It is usually done at, or by arrangement with, an education or training provider.

It will often lead to a qualification when it is completed. Some non-advanced study, tuition or training, may not lead to a qualification. This does not mean that it is not a course.

 

Examples of full-time courses of advanced education

Full-time courses of advanced education include those leading to:

  • a postgraduate degree or comparable qualification
  • a first degree or comparable qualification
  • a diploma of higher education
  • a higher national diploma
  • any other course of study of a standard above:
    • advanced GNVQ or equivalent
    • a Scottish higher or advanced higher national qualification

Examples of full-time courses of non-advanced education

Non-advanced education is any qualification up to A Level, or equivalent. Full-time courses include:

  • National Qualification Framework level 3 or the Scottish Qualification framework level 6
  • General Certificate of Education Advanced level (A Level)
  • AS Level
  • Advanced Diploma
  • National Diploma, Certificate or Award
  • Level 3 NVQ, Award, Certificate or Diploma

Studying part-time study

  • You may be able to get Universal Credit if you are available for work and studying part time.
  • If the course is more than 12 hours a week non-advanced education, this only applies from 1 September following your 19th birthday. This is because your parents can claim benefits for you before that date.
  • You may be asked to provide evidence of the course you are doing.

Student income and your Universal Credit

Your student income can affect how much Universal Credit you get.

Universal Credit is usually paid once a month and is based on your circumstances during that month. This is called your ‘assessment period’.

For each assessment period that you attend the course, an amount for any student income you get will be taken off your Universal Credit. The amount is worked out from the actual student income you get that month less a set amount for expenses.

However, no student income will be taken off your Universal Credit if:

  • the assessment period covers the first day of the summer holidays
  • you are on summer holiday for the whole of a subsequent assessment period
  • your course ends during the assessment period

Student loans

  • You may be entitled to Universal Credit if you receive a student loan. There are different types of student loans and there are different rules depending on which loan you receive.
  • When working out your Universal Credit, any loan amount that is intended to cover tuition fees and other costs of study will be excluded.
  • Loans that cover maintenance, such as living expenses, rent and bills, will be deducted from your Universal Credit. Most loans pay tuition and maintenance in separate payments.
  • However, if you receive a Special Support Loan or Grant, this will not be deducted from your Universal Credit. This provides help towards costs of study, such as for books, equipment, travel etc.

Special Support Loan or Grant

You may get a Special Support Loan or Grant if you get or qualify for:

  • Income Support
  • income-related Employment and Support Allowance
  • Housing Benefit
  • the housing element of Universal Credit

You may get the Special Support Loan or Grant if, for example, you are a lone parent or have certain disabilities.

If you live in England the Special Support Grant was replaced by the Special Support Loan from the beginning of the 2016 to 2017 academic year. If you live in Wales, it is called a Special Support Grant.

You will be told if you can get the Loan or Grant when you apply for student finance.

If you receive a loan that pays maintenance and tuition in a single payment, for example a Postgraduate Master’s Degree Loan, a proportion of your loan will be excluded from your Universal Credit payment and the rest is deducted.

Postgraduate Master’s Loan

A Postgraduate Master’s Loan can help with course fees and living costs while you study a postgraduate master’s course.

Funding for postgraduate loans is different if you normally live in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland. Moving somewhere to study does not count as normally living there.

Postgraduate Doctoral Loan

A Postgraduate Doctoral Loan can help with course fees and living costs while you study a postgraduate doctoral course, such as a PhD.

Funding for a Postgraduate Doctoral Loan is different if you normally live in Wales.

The Postgraduate Master’s and Doctoral loans are paid as one payment in 3 instalments over each year of the course and are all treated the same way when working out your Universal Credit. They are all a contribution to both living costs and tuition fees.

When working out your Universal Credit, 30% of the loan will be taken into account and the rest will be excluded.

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Grants

If you are a full-time higher education student, you may be able to get a non-repayable grant from the government to help with accommodation and other living costs. There are also other types of grants that can help with things like childcare, tuition fees or examination fees. If you are in receipt of Universal Credit and you receive a student grant, it will be fully excluded from the calculation if the grant is for the following:

  • tuition and examination fees
  • your disability
  • expenses for residential study away from an educational establishment
  • living away from your usual place of study
  • maintenance of dependent adult
  • books and equipment
  • travel expenses
  • childcare costs

Claimant commitment

  • To be able to get Universal Credit, everyone has to agree to a claimant commitment.
  • If you are claiming Universal Credit as a student who has taken time out from your course, you may be expected to take some actions as part of your claimant commitment. You will have to talk with your work coach to find out.
  • If you are claiming Universal Credit as a student under 21 doing a course that leads to qualifications up to A level standard, you will not have to do anything under your claimant commitment.
  • If you are claiming Universal Credit as a student and you receive student income such as a grant or loan, you will not have to do anything under your claimant commitment.

Even if you do not fall into either of these two groups, you might not have to do anything under the normal rules on claimant commitments.

CALCULATING STUDENT INCOME

UC is paid for an ‘assessment period’ of one month. Student income counts as income in assessment periods that fall during the course, as well as in the assessment period in which the course, and any subsequent year of the course, begins. Student income is ignored in the assessment period in which the end of the course or the start of the long vacation falls. The long vacation is the longest holiday, lasting at least a month, in a course which is at least two years long. Student income is also ignored in any other assessment period that falls completely within the long vacation.

In each assessment period, £110 of student income is disregarded.

To work out how much of your student income is taken into account:

Step one: calculate your annual loan or grant or, if the course lasts for less than a year, the amount of loan or grant for the course.

Step two: work out how many assessment periods apply for that year, or for the course if it is less than a year long.

Step three: divide the amount from Step one by the number of assessment periods in Step two.

Step four: deduct £110.

 

Example

Claire gets a student loan of £10,815 in total. This includes a special support element of £4,014, which is disregarded, leaving £6,801. Year one of her course runs from 27th September 2021 to 13th May 2022. Her assessment periods run from the 20th of the month to the 19th of the following month. Her loan counts as income for seven assessment periods.

£6,801 ÷ 7 = £971.57

£971.57 - £110 = £861.57

Claire’s UC is calculated on student income of £861.57 a month from 20th September 2021 to 19th April 2022.