Money Saving Expert Martin Lewis has warned that parents who had children between 1978 and 2010 could be owed substantial state pension payments, with one woman receiving £31,000
Personal finance guru Martin Lewis has revealed pensioners could be owed tens of thousands of pounds in missing cash due to an administrative cock-up. Mr Lewis on his BBC podcast revealed anyone who had children during a 32-year span could be entitled to backdated payments.
The money-saving expert disclosed people might be eligible for hefty payouts, with one person telling him she pocketed £31,000. He said: “This is an important heads up about a state pension error that mainly affects women between the ages of 40 and 90, and especially those in their 60s and 70s, because it’s for people who took time off work between 1978 and 2010 to look after their children or to care for someone who is long-term disabled.
“You were meant to have got a thing called Home Responsibilities Protection, which should have given you National Insurance years to replace the ones you weren’t getting by working, and you need those National Insurance years to get a full state pension.
“But it’s possible over 100,000 women didn’t. And whilst the government had been trying to contact those women, it has stopped doing so now, so the onus is on you. To show you how big this could be, Cilla got in touch with me and said, ‘I’ve just received 15 years back pay from HMRC of £31,674 for underpayment of my pension, thank you’.”
HMRC is utilising National Insurance (NI) records to attempt to identify as many people as possible who may have been eligible for HRP between 1978 and 2010 yet have no HRP recorded on their NI file, and is posting out letters, reports the Mirror.
The Department for Work and Pensions ( DWP ) estimates it has underpaid pensioners between £300m and £1.5billion in state pension due to errors in recording Home Responsibilities Protection (HRP). Accounting firm Robson Laidler has suggested that people could be owed roughly £5,000 in backdated payments on average.
HRP was a scheme designed to protect parents’ and carers’ State Pension rights and was replaced by NI credits from April 6, 2010. HMRC is using National Insurance (NI) records to track down as many people as possible who may have qualified for HRP between 1978 and 2010 but have no HRP on their NI file, and is sending out correspondence to some.
Mr Lewis added: “So what you need to do is you need to go onto gov.uk to see if you’re projected to get the full state pension. If you’re not, you need to see when your gaps in years were, were they between 1978 and 2010, and if so were they the years that you were not working to look after your children or someone who had long-term disabilities. If they were, you need to go and do your research on Home Responsibilities Protection, because you could be owed money.”
HM Revenue and Customs has declared: “HMRC will send you a letter if we think you may have missing Home Responsibilities Protection (HRP). We want to help you make sure you receive the right amount of State Pension, so we’re asking you to check if you were eligible for HRP between 1978 and 2010. You may have been eligible if you received Child Benefit for a child under 16.
“The letter will tell you how you can check if you’re eligible to claim missing Home Responsibilities Protection and how to make a claim.”
A Robson Laidler spokesperson revealed: “It is estimated tens of thousands of people are due an average of £5,000 in back payments. HMRC and DWP are also conducting a wider campaign to ensure that everyone who may be eligible is aware of the corrections exercise.”
If HRP is missing from someone’s NI record, it doesn’t automatically mean their State Pension calculation is wrong, but it could be, especially if they spent significant periods out of employment raising children. The Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury has announced: “The State Pension is the foundation of state support for people in retirement. We are urging people to check their National Insurance records to make sure they will receive the pension they deserve.”
Incomplete Records and Continuing Repayments. A Robson Laidler spokesperson remarked: “We would therefore advise checking your own NI records rather than waiting for a letter from DWP/HMRC to arrive. There is no time limit for applying for HRP if it has not been awarded.
“Anyone who may have claimed Child Benefit before May 2000, when it was not mandatory to provide your National Insurance Number on your claim, may not have the correct number of years for State Pension purposes on their NI record, if you first made a claim after May 2000, you will not be affected.”