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This is what should have happened.cherrystrawberry777 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 1:38 pmMy husband is a British citizen and he is working part-time and also on Universal Credit . I’m on a spouse visa in the UK and I’m not eligible to public funds. We opened a claim as a joint claim but DWP closed my account because I’m not eligible. My husband received the payments as a single claimant.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... or-couplesIf you are part of a couple you and your partner will need to make a joint claim for Universal Credit.
You begin by creating a Universal Credit online account each. The first person to create their account will be given a partner code, which will be displayed on screen.
This code will need to be input by your partner when they register for their Universal Credit online account. This ensures the accounts are joined together and you are correctly claiming as a couple.
Once you’ve created your account a claim can be made for Universal Credit. You’ll have 28 days from creating the account to make a claim. You should aim to complete the application as soon as possible to get your claim started.
If 28 days pass and a claim is not made you’ll need to register for an online account again.
If one of you isn’t eligible, their capital and income may still be taken into account.
I have friends who have followed the official guidance JB007 has posted above and it was fine.JB007 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 6:04 pmThis is what should have happened.cherrystrawberry777 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 1:38 pmMy husband is a British citizen and he is working part-time and also on Universal Credit . I’m on a spouse visa in the UK and I’m not eligible to public funds. We opened a claim as a joint claim but DWP closed my account because I’m not eligible. My husband received the payments as a single claimant.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... or-couplesIf you are part of a couple you and your partner will need to make a joint claim for Universal Credit.
You begin by creating a Universal Credit online account each. The first person to create their account will be given a partner code, which will be displayed on screen.
This code will need to be input by your partner when they register for their Universal Credit online account. This ensures the accounts are joined together and you are correctly claiming as a couple.
Once you’ve created your account a claim can be made for Universal Credit. You’ll have 28 days from creating the account to make a claim. You should aim to complete the application as soon as possible to get your claim started.
If 28 days pass and a claim is not made you’ll need to register for an online account again.
If one of you isn’t eligible, their capital and income may still be taken into account.
That is not correct. They must claim as a couple because they are partners and they must be linked. From the quote I gave above on the gov.uk site "This ensures the accounts are joined together and you are correctly claiming as a couple." This is how UC links partners.
That's not how Universal Credit works. An employer must advise HMRC on the RTI (Real Time Information) every time they pay an employee. Universal Credit uses HMRC's RTI to calculate how much the couple have earned in their monthly assessment period and then use those figures towards calculating what their UC payment will be that month.
If they haven't been using your monthly income towards calculating your husband's UC monthly payment for the last half a year, it is likely he has had an overpayment.cherrystrawberry777 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2023 1:38 pmHowever after half a hear of claiming UC the new DWP worker started asking my husband to provide information about my income!