Paying Housing
Benefit
Tenants of private landlords normally receive their
Housing Benefit, 4-weekly in arrears, in their bank or building
society account.
In the circumstances described below we can pay Housing Benefit to
landlords.
Paying Housing Benefit to landlords
We can pay Housing Benefit to a
landlord who:
- shows us that their tenant is in
rent arrears amounting to 8 or more weeks
- is receiving money from the
Department of Works and Pensions to pay off rent arrears
We can also pay benefit direct to landlords when:
- The tenant has moved, rent is
outstanding, and when some benefit has yet to be paid
Other rules about paying landlords depend on whether the tenant is
affected by the Local Housing Allowance (LHA).
Tenants not affected by the LHA can ask us to pay
Housing Benefit to their landlords.
Tenants who are affected by the LHA cannot simply
ask us to pay their landlord. But we have discretion to pay
landlords in LHA cases if:
- we have previously paid the landlord because there were 8 or
more weeks' rent arrears;
- it is improbable the tenant will pay the rent; or
- it is likely the tenant will have difficulty managing their
financial affairs.
There is more information in
'Discretionary payments to landlords under the LHA'.
We normally pay Housing Benefit to landlords:
- Four-weekly or monthly in
arrears
- Directly to their bank
accounts
Where we have not previously paid Housing Benefit to a
landlord, we will need to send them a form asking for things like
bank account details. We need the completed form back before we can
pay any Housing Benefit.