Paying for
Home Care
Our Guide to Funding
Funding for home care
There are a few different options to consider when choosing a quality home care provider, but help is out there and funding for home care is available. If you are unable to self-fund your care, you may be qualified for assistance from your local council, the NHS or other means.
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Local authority funding for care: how it works
There is local authority funding for care in your own home available, but how much they may offer you is up to the local council themselves. Firstly, you’ll need to determine who your local council is, and let them know of your situation. The council will identify the extent of the care required, to enable you or your loved one to live as independently as possible. This is called a ‘needs assessment’ and is free to anyone who would like one.+
If the council find that you require care either in your home or in a residential setting, they will then carry out a “means test”. This is a financial assessment of your ability to fund the care.
If you’re eligible for it, the council could pay for some, if not most, of your care. The council will then decide whether they will pay for the full cost of your care, they will pay for some and you will pay the rest, or you will pay for all of your care yourself. The table below shows how much you will put towards the care home fees depending on your capital (savings and assets), which is calculated using the means test:
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How much you will pay related to your capital
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Over £23,250, you pay the full fees
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Between £14,250 and £23,250, the council will fund a portion of your care and you will pay for the rest of it
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Below £14,250, the council will pay for most or all of your care fees
What are the factors involved in the means test?
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The means test looks at your income, benefits, entitlements, savings and other assets (such as property) to calculate your capital. You must ensure that you are getting all of your benefits and entitlements as the means test will assume that you are receiving them.
However, certain types of income and capital will not be counted in the means test, such as money from certain disability benefits.
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Paying for home care if the council have agreed funding:
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If the council are happy to pay for your care, you’ll receive what’s known as a ‘personal budget’. The exact amount will be worked out by the council when they make care plans with you. You can choose to receive your personal budget in three ways:
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A monthly direct payment into your bank account (the council will ask for receipts to verify you’re spending the money on your care)
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The council will arrange and pay for the care for you (you won’t need to send receipts or arrange anything at all)
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A mixed personal budget where the council arranges some of your care, but you organise and pay for the rest from your personal budget
If the council are arranging your care, it’s important to know that you still have the right to decide how your budget is spent. If you’re unhappy with the type of help that the council suggests, you are able to research services and ask them to change it if possible.
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Funding for home care: what you can get for free:
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Your council must provide some things if you’ve been assessed as needing them. It doesn’t matter how much you have or earn, they must provide:
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Small pieces of equipment or adaptations to the home which each cost less than £1,000
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Care after you’ve been discharged from a hospital
This is particularly important if you plan to receive care from your home, instead of residential care. These adaptations are helpful to make care easier at home, so make sure you question your local council about them.
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Will I have to sell my home to pay for home care fees?
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If you wish to remain in your home, the means test won’t include the value of your property. However, if you need to permanently move into a care home, the test may include the value of your property. The value of your property is calculated by looking at its present value minus any mortgage or loans you have on it, as well as 10% of its value to account for selling costs. In some situations, your home won’t be taken into account in the means test, even if you are looking to move into a care home permanently. Your home won’t be taken into account if it is occupied by:
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Your partner or former partner, unless they are estranged from you
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Your estranged or divorced partner, IF they are also a lone parent
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A relative who is aged 60 or over
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A child of yours aged under 18
If your property is included in the permanent care home means test, the council must not take it into account for the first 12 weeks of your care. This will give you space and time to consider if this is the right option for you and to decide what you want to do with your properties and home care fees.