Child Maintenance Service

(asked on 17th April 2025) - View Source

Question to the Department for Work and Pensions:

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, for what reason the Child Maintenance Service deems receipt of Child Benefit to be sufficient evidence that a child is still in full-time education.


Answered by
Andrew Western Portrait
Andrew Western
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Work and Pensions)
This question was answered on 29th April 2025

To qualify for maintenance payments, a child must meet the Child Maintenance Service's criteria. They must be under 20 years of age and in full time, non-advanced education, or approved training, and eligible for Child Benefit. They must also be habitually resident in the UK and usually living in the same household as the receiving parent. Child maintenance defines a child the same way as Child Benefit does, to offer consistency across rules.

Child maintenance payments usually stop when the child reaches 16, or 20 if they are in full-time education up to A-level or equivalent. Child maintenance will also stop when the child stops being eligible for Child Benefit. Child Benefit may stay in payment for a period after a child under 20 ceases education or training until a terminal date is reached. Child Benefit will remain payable from the date education or training ceased, up to and including the week that includes the first terminal date, as will child maintenance payments.

Child Maintenance Service make automated monthly requests to His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC) asking for all children aged 16 to 19 who are included in its caseload, to establish whether Child Benefit is still in payment.

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