HMRC issues alert on app offering benefit payments 'within a week'

Claims can be backdated for up to three months.

By Katie Elliott, Senior Personal Finance Reporter based in London

UK HM Revenue and Customs tax form and money

HMRC issues alert on app offering benefit payments 'within a week' (Image: Getty)

Myrtle Lloyd, HMRC’s director general for customer services, commented: “With more babies set to be born on September 26 than any other day, we hope that parents of these newborns take full advantage of their Child Benefit entitlement.

“We’ve made it simpler than ever to claim online and receive a first payment within as little as three days – so download the app today or search on GOV.UK .”

HMRC has released a YouTube video which explains what new parents need to do.

To make a claim, families will need:

  • Their child’s birth or adoption certificate
  • Bank details
  • National Insurance number for themselves and their partner, if they have one
  • Child’s original birth or adoption certificate and passport or travel document, for children born outside the UK

A mother using a laptop with a baby on her lap

Child Benefit claims can be backdated for up to three months. (Image: Getty)

HMRC is urging eligible Britons to claim Child Benefit using the HMRC app to receive their payment “within a week”.

With around 2,000 babies born on September 26 each year, more than any other day, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is urging parents to claim their Child Benefit entitlement.

Claiming online means families could receive their first payment within just a week of their baby’s birth.

Child Benefit is worth up to £1,331 a year for the first child and £881 for each additional child.

Claims can be made using the free and secure HMRC app, or made online, 48 hours after the baby’s birth has been registered. With payments typically made within three days, this means parents could receive their first payment within a week. Claims can also be backdated for up to three months.

The payment amount reduces if one person in the household earns between £60,000 and £80,000 and is subject to the High Income Child Benefit Charge.

For families who fall into this category, the online Child Benefit tax calculator provides an estimate of how much benefit can be claimed, and what the charge may be.

Families who were subject to the High Income Child Benefit Charge when the threshold was £50,000 and opted out of payments but now wish to restart their payments, can use the online form on GOV.UK

By claiming Child Benefit, claimants will also receive National Insurance (NI) credits. People need a minimum of 10 years of NI credits to claim some state pension, with around 35 years of NI credits needed to obtain the full state pension. This can help people who are not in paid employment and not receiving NI credits through their employer.

A person living in a household subject to the High Income Child Benefit Charge will still receive NI credits if they claim Child Benefit but opt out of receiving a payment that they may have to repay.

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