Operational Guidelines: Carer's Support Grant
Foilsithe
An t-eolas is déanaí
Teanga: Níl leagan Gaeilge den mhír seo ar fáil.
Foilsithe
An t-eolas is déanaí
Teanga: Níl leagan Gaeilge den mhír seo ar fáil.
The Carer’s Support Grant (formerly called the Respite Care Grant) is an annual payment for carers who look after certain people in need of full-time care and attention.
Carers, in receipt of, or entitled to receive, Carer's Allowance , Carer's Benefit or Domiciliary Care Allowance on the 1st Thursday in June are paid the Grant automatically on that date.
A carer, not in receipt of one of these payments may still qualify for the ‘standalone’ Carer’s Support Grant.
Initial application for this payment is made by completing an application form CSG1.
Application Form: Carer’s Support Grant (CSG1)
Irish language version 10.20
The ‘standalone’ Carer’s Support Grant scheme is administered by:
The Carer’s Support Grant is €1,850 (2020: €1,700) per person being cared for.
Payment is usually made by direct lodgement to an account in a financial institution. This account must be a current or deposit savings account, not a mortgage account. A carer may also receive payment at a Post Office, but must have a Social Welfare or Public Services Card to do so.
A carer who receives Carers Allowance or Carers Benefit or Domiciliary Care Allowance, will usually receive the Grant by the same payment method.
'carer' means a person ordinarily resident in the State who has attained the age of 16 years and who-
'relevant person' means a person who is ordinarily resident in the State and is so incapacitated that he or she requires full-time care and attention.
A relevant person shall not be regarded as requiring full time care and attention unless-
(i) continual supervision and frequent assistance throughout the day in connection with normal bodily functions, or
(ii) continual supervision in order to avoid danger to himself or herself
The Minister may make regulations specifying the circumstances and conditions under which a person is to be regarded as providing full-time care and attention to a relevant person.
'Institution' means a hospital, convalescent home or home for people suffering from physical or mental disability or ancillary accommodation, nursing home for the care and maintenance of dependent elderly people or any other similar establishment providing residence, maintenance care
The following guidelines will apply when eligibility for Carer’s Support Grant is being considered for a carer who does not live with the person being cared for.
A carer may be regarded as providing full-time care and attention to a relevant person where:
The carer is undergoing medical or other treatment of a temporary nature in an institution for a period or periods amounting to not more than 13 weeks or where the relevant person:
A Carer may also continue to be regarded as providing full-time care and attention for a period not longer than 18 months in circumstances where a child born on or after 1st January 2023 (otherwise eligible for Domiciliary Care Allowance) remains in hospital immediately after birth or, is transferred to another hospital for medical or other treatment. A carer may also continue to be regarded as providing full-time care and attention for a period not longer than 26 weeks in a twelve-month period in circumstances where a child (otherwise eligible for Domiciliary Care Allowance) is admitted to an institution on a full-time basis for the purpose of receiving medical or other treatment of a temporary nature.
The Minister may make regulations specifying the circumstances and conditions under which a person is to be regarded as providing full-time care and attention to a relevant person.
The carer may attend an educational or training course or take up voluntary or community work for up to 18.5 hours per week. Alternatively, the carer may be employed or self-employed for up to 18.5 hours per week.
Note: The aggregate of such employment or self-employment or course of training/education cannot exceed 18.5 hours per week.
Adequate care must be arranged by the carer for the person being cared for during any absence for work or training.
The carer will not qualify for Carer’s Support Grant if he or she is entitled to or receiving Jobseeker's Allowance or Benefit, or is signing for credited contributions.
The person being cared for may attend a non-residential course of rehabilitation training or non-residential day care centre approved by the Minister for Health and Children.
The carer will not qualify for Carer’s Support Grant if the person being cared for is permanently resident in an institution.
The due date of the Carer’s Support Grant is the 1st Thursday in June. The earliest date for receipt of claims for a given year is 8 weeks before the due date (i.e. a date in early-April) and the latest date is the 31st December of the following year.
The carer should complete a Carer’s Support Grant application form CSG 1 in respect of each person being cared for.
The application form is divided into 5 parts.
Claims are decided by Deciding Officers appointed by the Minister under Section 299 of the Social Welfare (Consolidation) Act 2005. They are independent in the exercise of their function in deciding on entitlement to Carer’s Support Grant.
See separate guideline on Decision-Making.
See separate guideline on Revised Decisions
If the carer does not agree with the decision on their application, they may appeal against it. The appeal should be made by writing to the Chief Appeals Officer, D'Olier House, D’Olier St, Dublin 2, within 21 days of notification of the Deciding Officer's decision, stating the grounds of appeal.
When notified of such an appeal the Deciding Officer prepares a statement on the facts relied on in the making of the decision and on the extent to which the facts and contentions advanced by the appellant are admitted or disputed. This statement is sent with the file to the Appeals Office.
Where new information is made available as part of an appeal by the claimant, a Deciding Officer may revise a decision on entitlement, if it is to the advantage of the claimant. A person may be interviewed by a Social Welfare Inspector regarding any facts or evidence put forward in support of an appeal, where the facts/evidence conflict with previous statements made by the claimant. The notification of the revised decision will request the claimant to advise whether s/he is satisfied with the revised decision or wishes to pursue the appeal.
The Homemakers Scheme was introduced on 6th April 1994. A Homemaker for the purposes of the Homemakers Scheme is a customer who gave up work to take care of a child under age 12 or an incapacitated child/adult age 12 or over.
A homemaking year is a year in which you are out of the workforce for the full tax year (only a full year can be disregarded). Up to a maximum of 20 homemaking years can be disregarded for State Pension (Contributory) purposes.
Homemaker’s credits can be awarded for part of a year at the start of the homemaking period, from the date you become a homemaker up to the end of the tax year. Likewise, homemaker’s credits can also be awarded for part of a year when the homemaking period ends, from the start of the tax year up to the date you stop homemaking.
(See separate guideline Homemakers for full details.)
The main legislative provisions relating to Carer’s Support Grant are contained in Sections 224 to 226 of Part 5 of the Social Welfare Consolidation Act 2005, as amended.
Up to June 2005, the Carer’s Support Grant was payable only to persons who were in receipt of either Carer's Allowance or Carer's Benefit payments on the date that the Grant was payable (the first Thursday of June). The Social Welfare Consolidation Act 2005 amended the 1993 Act by, amongst other things, extending entitlement to the grant, subject to certain employment-related conditions, to all persons giving full-time care and attention to a person or persons requiring such care.
The legislation also confers power on the Minister for Employment Affairs and Social Protection to make regulations providing for the conditions and procedural requirements for entitlement to the Grant.
Articles 162 to 171 of Part 5 of the Social Welfare (Consolidated Claims, Payments and Control) Regulations 2007 (S.I. No. 142 of 2007), as amended, provides for such matters as the: