Mobile Menu

  • Home
  • About
  • PIP
    • PIP Overview
    • PIP Claim
    • PIP Assessment
    • PIP Decision
    • PIP Reconsideration
    • PIP Appeal
    • PIP Appeal Challenge
  • ESA
    • ESA Overview
    • ESA Claim
    • ESA Assessment
    • ESA Decision
    • ESA Reconsideration
    • ESA Appeal
    • ESA Appeal Challenge
  • ITV News
  • Articles
  • Charges
  • Contact

PIP GUIDE

  • Personal Independence Payment
  • PIP Claim
  • PIP Assessment
  • PIP Decision
  • PIP Reconsideration
  • PIP Appeal
  • PIP Appeal Challenge

ESA GUIDE

  • Employment & Support Allowance
  • ESA Claim
  • ESA Assessment
  • ESA Decision
  • ESA Reconsideration
  • ESA Appeal
  • ESA Appeal Challenge
  • Menu
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Before Header

Office: 029 2000 2425 | info@disabilityclaims.uk | @disabilityclaims

Disability Claims

Header Right

  • Home
  • About
  • PIP
    • PIP Overview
    • PIP Claim
    • PIP Assessment
    • PIP Decision
    • PIP Reconsideration
    • PIP Appeal
    • PIP Appeal Challenge
  • ESA
    • ESA Overview
    • ESA Claim
    • ESA Assessment
    • ESA Decision
    • ESA Reconsideration
    • ESA Appeal
    • ESA Appeal Challenge
  • ITV News
  • Articles
  • Charges
  • Contact
  • PIP assessment points
  • Can you study while on PIP?
  • PIP and carer’s allowance
  • PIP in a care home
  • PIP & mental health
  • PIP appeal process

Do I still get PIP in a care home?

The mobility component of personal independence payment is not affected by going into a care home, regardless of how long you stay. After the first 28 days in a care home, your award of the daily living component is likely to be affected, but it depends, so read to the end of this article.

Qualifying services

One key thing to find out and be clear about is what legal provisions have been used to fund the costs of any qualifying services. For our purposes, a ‘care home’ is somewhere that provides accommodation, as well as nursing or personal care. For PIP, the ‘qualifying services’ are those that cover the accommodation itself, your board and your personal care.

It is worth noting that these qualifying services only affect your PIP if they are provided under certain Acts of Parliament, so be sure to find out what provisions have been used in your case. Even then, there are exceptions, so keep reading. 

Which provisions count?

If one of the following Acts are used in your case, your PIP daily living component will normally be affected:

  • Part III of the National Assistance Act 1948
  • the Mental Health Act 1983
  • Sections 59 and 59A of the Social Work (Scotland) Act 1968
  • Part 4 of the Social Services and Well-being (Wales) Act 2014
  • Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003
  • the Community Care and Health (Scotland) Act 2002
  • section 57 of the Health and Social Care Act 2001
  • Part 1 of the Care Act 2014  
  • for our purposes with PIP, any other Acts that relate to people with disabilities or young people, education or training.

That looks pretty comprehensive, and in the majority of cases, the council will use one of these to pay for the services that the care home provides but they can also use housing legislation or the Local Government Act 1972 to cover the cost, and if they do, then your PIP is unaffected. Also, it was held in a 1997 case that an appeal tribunal has the power to decide that someone’s placement is being paid for using a different legal provision than the one stated by the local authority. A huge amount of money can be involved, so that if your circumstances are at all unusual, get specialist help to make sure that the council has not used the wrong legislation. 

What are the exceptions?

For our purposes, the daily living component of PIP remains in payment to a student, where the accommodation is wholly or partly paid for using a student grant or loan, or if they are using a grant from educational institutions. Your PIP is not affected if you are terminally ill and are in a hospice, unless that hospice is a hospital within the NHS. You will need to have told the DWP about entering a hospice, preferably in writing. Neither is your PIP daily living component affected if you are 16 or 17, and you are receiving services from the local authority in a private home, rather than in a care setting. This could be with a relative, a family or another suitable person. The other major exception is for those who are ‘self-funding’.

What counts as self-funding?

Your PIP will not be affected if you are paying for all of your ‘qualifying services’ yourself, even if this is with help from someone else or a charity. It does not matter who owns the care home, or whether DWP benefits or credits such as universal credit or pension credit are being put towards the cost. What counts is who is paying for the qualifying services, so that you can still be self-funding if the local council arranged your placement and the contract; what counts is that you are paying for those ‘qualifying services’. 

What if I cannot pay until my house is sold?

If you are likely to become self-funding when your property has sold, then payment of your PIP daily living component should be suspended. When the sale goes through and you repay the council what it has paid so far, inform the DWP and they should both reinstate your ongoing PIP payments, and pay to you the arrears that have built up since the suspension. If the Department closed your claim, rather than suspending it, you should not accept this. Instead, ask them to revise the decision to close the claim, on the grounds that their decision involved an ‘official error’. 

Recent Posts

  • Is it better to claim Personal Independence Payment (PIP) or Attendance Allowance (AA)?
  • Can cancer patients get PIP?
  • Can you study while on PIP?
  • PIP assessment points
  • PIP and carer’s allowance
  • Do I still get PIP in a care home?
  • PIP tips & tricks
  • What grants can I get on PIP?
  • How much is PIP?
  • Can I get a mobility car on standard rate PIP assessment?
  • Do I have to tell PIP if I start work?
  • PIP Supersession Requests
  • PIP Form Help
  • PIP mandatory reconsideration
  • PIP payments backdated
  • Challenging a PIP tribunal decision
  • How to do a PIP reconsideration
  • Enhanced PIP Benefits
  • PIP Claim – Change of Circumstances
  • What other benefits can I claim with PIP?
  • What illness qualifies for PIP?
  • PIP & ESA appeal over 29 months
  • PIP for Depression and Anxiety
  • PIP Appeal in Sutton
  • How long does it take to claim PIP?
  • Does Carers Allowance Affect PIP?
  • This PIP appeal in North London needed Pebbles help
  • PIP appeal hearing date arrives before the PIP appeal papers
  • The impact of Fibromyalgia on a PIP Claim
  • Fibromyalgia and PIP
  • Questions asked at PIP assessment
  • PIP Appeal in Cornwall
  • Section IV: The PIP appeal process and alleviating your stress levels
  • Section III: The PIP appeal process and alleviating your stress levels
  • Section II: The PIP appeal process and alleviating your stress levels
  • Section I: The PIP appeal process and alleviating your stress levels
  • PIP appeal in Cambridge
  • Can you work full-time and have a substantial PIP award?
  • What you need to know about PIP rates and components
  • PIP Appeal Tribunal Awarded Six Times The Number Of Points Awarded By The DWP
  • A Good Outcome, With The Client Receiving Exactly The Award We Wanted.
  • PIP Appeal in Central London
  • Personal Independence Payments (PIP) and Your Mental Health
  • How Many Days?
  • No Need To Score Points To Be Successful
  • Personal Independence Payments (PIP) for over 65
  • Would The Ambulance Crew Make It In Time?
  • Personal Independence Payment (PIP) Descriptors
  • Personal Independence Payment (PIP) Points
  • PIP appeal in Southampton
  • PIP appeal in East London
  • PIP appeal in Inverness
  • ESA and PIP appeals in Birmingham
  • From DLA to PIP
  • Deciding Appeals in the Absence of Claimants
  • Now that’s what I call a PIP reconsideration request..
  • Moving from DLA to PIP
  • PIP appeal in Leicester
  • 15 Points for Mobilising and Support Group Placement
PIP Articles

Is it better to claim Personal Independence Payment (PIP) or Attendance Allowance (AA)?

By DC-ADMIN | 18/02/2023
PIP Articles

Can cancer patients get PIP?

By DC-ADMIN | 15/02/2023
PIP Articles

Can you study while on PIP?

By DC-ADMIN | 18/01/2023
PIP Articles

PIP assessment points

By DC-ADMIN | 15/01/2023
PIP Articles

PIP and carer’s allowance

By DC-ADMIN | 18/12/2022
PIP Articles

Do I still get PIP in a care home?

By DC-ADMIN | 15/12/2022
PIP Articles

PIP tips & tricks

By DC-ADMIN | 18/05/2022
PIP Articles

What grants can I get on PIP?

By DC-ADMIN | 15/05/2022
PIP Articles

How much is PIP?

By DC-ADMIN | 18/04/2022
PIP Articles

Can I get a mobility car on standard rate PIP assessment?

By DC-ADMIN | 15/04/2022
Previous Post: «PIP Articles PIP tips & tricks
Next Post: PIP and carer’s allowance PIP Articles»

Footer

Address

37 First Avenue
Trecenydd
Caerphilly
CF83 8PE

PIP Guide

  • PIP Claim
  • PIP Assessment
  • PIP Decision
  • PIP Reconsideration
  • PIP Appeal
  • PIP Appeal Challenge

ESA Guide

  • ESA Claim
  • ESA Assessment
  • ESA Decision
  • ESA Reconsideration
  • ESA Appeal
  • ESA Appeal Challenge

Get in Touch

Office: 029 2000 2425

info@disabilityclaims.uk

@disabilityclaims

@personalindependencepayment

Site Footer

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Home
  • About
  • PIP
  • ESA
  • ITV News
  • Articles
  • Charges
  • Contact

©2011-24 DISABILITY CLAIMS  |  Privacy  | Cookies  |  Terms  |  Accessibility  |  Sitemap  |  Disclaimer 

You agree to the use of cookies for analytics, personalised content and ads. Accept
Cookies

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT