Full devolution of Discretionary Housing Payments from 1 April.
More than £90 million will be allocated to local authorities in
2024-25 to support eligible households at risk of hardship
through the Discretionary Housing Payments (DHP) scheme.
The funding enables local authorities to mitigate the impact of
UK Government policies such as the ‘bedroom tax’ and the ‘benefit
cap’ which can reduce how much universal credit or housing
benefit someone receives.
Payments can also be made where Local Housing Allowance doesn’t
meet someone’s rent, or if a household is in hardship and
struggling to meet their housing costs.
Housing Minister said:
“This funding will help to bridge the gap between what people
need in benefits from the UK Government, and what they actually
receive. This can be the difference between a family thriving, or
a family experiencing financial hardship.
“We are clear that this is the right thing to do to support
households – but the Scottish Government should not be forced to
step in and divert money from our own housing and anti-poverty
policies because of UK Government welfare reforms.”
One Parent Families Scotland CEO Satwat Rehman said:
“The Scottish Government is to be commended for taking these
mitigating measures as we recognise it continues to spend massive
sums compensating for welfare cuts made by the UK
government.
“Mitigating the benefit cap is absolutely the right thing to do.
The increased funding and improved support for families affected
by the benefit cap will be greatly welcomed by the many single
parents who have been pushed into further hardship by this
policy. 74% of all capped households in Scotland consist of
single parents with children (92% of whom are women).
“We at OPFS will do everything we can to ensure all single parent
families affected by the benefit cap apply to their local
authority for a Discretionary Housing Payment to replace the
vital income they should have received. Now the UK Government
must act to scrap this poverty creating benefit cap altogether.”
Background
The Scottish Discretionary Housing Payments budget is £90.5
million in 2024-25. The scheme will come under full Scottish
Government control from 1 April 2024.
In Scotland, if you rent your home and you get Housing Benefit or
Universal Credit, but still can't afford your housing costs, you
may be eligible for a Discretionary Housing Payment.
A Discretionary Housing Payment can be made if you:
- are affected by the benefit cap
- are affected by the bedroom tax
- claim Housing Benefit but it doesn't cover all your rent
- claim Universal Credit but still can't afford your housing
costs
- need help with removal costs
- need help with a rent deposit