Benefits & Support
Attendance Allowance UK — Complete Guide 2026
Everything about Attendance Allowance for people over State Pension age who need help with personal care. Rates, eligibility, how to claim, and tips for a successful application.
Attendance Allowance helps with extra costs if you’re State Pension age or over and have a disability or health condition that means you need help looking after yourself.
Around 1.7 million people in the UK claim Attendance Allowance, but an estimated 1 million more are eligible and not claiming it. It pays £72.65 or £108.55 per week — £3,778 or £5,644 per year — and because it’s not means-tested, your income, savings, or whether you own your home have no effect on your eligibility.
Perhaps the most important thing to understand is that you don’t need to actually be receiving care to qualify. The assessment is based on what help you need, not what you currently get. Thousands of older people living alone who ‘manage’ by struggling through tasks they can’t do safely are eligible but never claim because they believe they must already have a carer.
Attendance Allowance also acts as a gateway: claiming it can increase Pension Credit, Housing Benefit, and Council Tax Reduction, and enables a family member or friend who provides 35+ hours of care to claim Carer’s Allowance.
What is Attendance Allowance?
Key Facts
| Feature |
Details |
| What it’s for |
Help with extra disability costs |
| Who can claim |
State Pension age and over |
| Based on |
Care needs, not income |
| Tax status |
Tax-free |
| Affects other benefits? |
No — can increase them |
Current Rates (2026/27)
| Rate |
Amount |
When Awarded |
| Lower rate |
£72.65/week |
Need help day OR night |
| Higher rate |
£108.55/week |
Need help day AND night |
| Terminal illness |
Higher rate |
Automatic higher rate |
What It’s Not
| Don’t Confuse With |
Difference |
| PIP |
For under State Pension age |
| DLA |
For those already on it before pension age |
| Carer’s Allowance |
For the person caring for you |
Eligibility
Basic Requirements
| Requirement |
Details |
| Age |
State Pension age or over |
| Care needs |
Need help with personal care |
| Residency |
Usually live in UK |
| Time in UK |
2 of last 3 years (exceptions apply) |
| Disability duration |
Usually 6 months (not if terminal) |
What “Needing Help” Means
| Type of Help |
Examples |
| Personal care |
Washing, dressing, using toilet |
| Supervision |
Someone keeping an eye on you |
| Encouragement |
Being prompted to do things |
| Night needs |
Help or watching during night |
You Don’t Need to Actually Receive Help
| Important |
Details |
| Living alone |
Can still qualify |
| Managing alone |
If you struggle, still counts |
| Family helps |
Their help counts |
| No carer |
Still eligible if you need care |
Conditions That Qualify
It’s About Care Needs, Not Diagnosis
| Focus On |
Not On |
| What you struggle with |
What your condition is called |
| How it affects daily life |
Medical terminology |
| Good days and bad days |
Just your best days |
| Physical and mental |
Both count |
Common Qualifying Conditions
| Physical |
Mental/Cognitive |
| Arthritis |
Dementia |
| Heart disease |
Alzheimer’s |
| COPD/breathing problems |
Mental health conditions |
| Parkinson’s |
Learning disabilities |
| Stroke effects |
Confusion |
| Diabetes complications |
Memory problems |
| Cancer |
Anxiety/depression (severe) |
| Sight/hearing loss |
|
Multiple Conditions
| Situation |
Approach |
| Several conditions |
Describe all of them |
| Combined effect |
Often stronger claim |
| One condition worsens another |
Explain this |
How to Apply
| Method |
Details |
| Phone |
0800 731 0122 (claim line) |
| Post |
Request form AA1 |
| Online |
Download from gov.uk |
| Help |
Someone can fill it in for you |
What You’ll Need
| Information |
Purpose |
| Personal details |
Name, DOB, NI number |
| GP details |
Name, address |
| Hospital/consultant |
If applicable |
| Care needs description |
Main part of form |
| Medications |
List what you take |
| Section |
What It Asks |
| About you |
Personal details |
| Your conditions |
Health problems |
| Daytime help |
Care needs in day |
| Night-time help |
Care needs at night |
| Getting around |
Mobility difficulties |
| Declaration |
Sign and date |
Tips for a Successful Claim
Most AA rejections come not from ineligible claimants but from claimants who described their needs too positively. People who ‘don’t like to complain’ often describe their best days on the form, not their average or worst days. The DWP needs to understand the full picture — including what you can’t do, how long things take, when you need someone to help, and how often things go wrong.
A useful exercise before filling in the form is keeping a two-week diary of your daily difficulties — every time you struggle with a task, take a long time, have pain, get confused, or need someone nearby. This becomes compelling evidence.
Describing Your Needs
| Do |
Don’t |
| Describe worst days |
Only mention good days |
| Be specific |
Be vague |
| Explain what happens without help |
Say “I manage” |
| Include mental health effects |
Focus only on physical |
| Mention falls/incidents |
Downplay risks |
Examples of Good Descriptions
| Instead of |
Say |
| “I can dress myself” |
“It takes me 30 minutes to dress. I can’t do buttons. I often give up and stay in nightclothes” |
| “I can wash” |
“I can’t get in/out of bath safely. I have a strip wash but can’t reach my back or feet” |
| “I cook” |
“I only use microwave now. I’ve burnt pans forgetting them. My daughter brings meals 3 times a week” |
Supporting Evidence
| Helpful Evidence |
How to Get |
| GP letter |
Ask your surgery |
| Consultant letters |
Request copies |
| Care plan |
From social services |
| Occupational therapy report |
If you’ve been assessed |
| Daily diary |
Keep for 2 weeks |
The Decision Process
Timeline
| Stage |
Typical Time |
| Form submitted |
Day 0 |
| Additional evidence requested |
2-4 weeks |
| Decision made |
4-8 weeks usually |
| Longer if complex |
Can be 12+ weeks |
Special Rules for Terminal Illness
| If Terminally Ill |
Details |
| Fast-tracked |
Decision within days |
| No waiting period |
Don’t need 6 months condition |
| Higher rate |
Automatic |
| DS1500 form |
Doctor completes this |
Possible Outcomes
| Decision |
What Happens |
| Higher rate awarded |
£108.55/week |
| Lower rate awarded |
£72.65/week |
| Refused |
Can challenge |
| Asked for more info |
Provide it quickly |
If You’re Refused
Mandatory Reconsideration
| Step |
Details |
| Deadline |
Within 1 month of decision |
| How |
Write asking them to look again |
| What to include |
Why you disagree, new evidence |
| Response |
Usually within 2 weeks |
Appeal to Tribunal
| If Still Refused |
Details |
| Deadline |
1 month from reconsideration |
| Where |
Social Security Tribunal |
| Independent |
Different from DWP |
| Success rate |
Many appeals succeed |
| Help |
Get advice first |
How AA Affects Other Benefits
Many people are surprised to learn that receiving Attendance Allowance can actually increase the other benefits they’re already getting. This is because several means-tested benefits include a higher payment for people with disabilities — but these additions are only triggered when you’re formally receiving AA (or PIP/DLA). If you’ve been putting off claiming AA, you may have been missing out on more than just the allowance itself.
It Can Increase These
| Benefit |
How AA Helps |
| Pension Credit |
Extra “severe disability” addition |
| Housing Benefit |
May get more |
| Council Tax Reduction |
May qualify for more |
| Carer’s Allowance |
Your carer may claim this |
What About Savings?
| Concern |
Reality |
| Will savings affect it? |
No — AA isn’t means-tested |
| Does income matter? |
No — any income level can claim |
| Will it affect my pension? |
No — State Pension unaffected |
Carer’s Allowance Link
| If You Get AA |
Your Carer May Get |
| Either rate |
Carer’s Allowance (£81.90/week) |
| Carer must provide 35+ hours |
Weekly care |
| Carer under State Pension age |
Builds NI credits |
Living in a Care Home
Rules Change
| Situation |
AA Entitlement |
| Self-funding care home |
Can still get AA |
| Council-funded care home |
AA stops after 28 days |
| NHS-funded care |
AA stops after 28 days |
| Temporary hospital stay |
Keeps for 28 days |
Hospital Stays
| Duration |
What Happens |
| Under 28 days |
AA continues |
| Over 28 days |
AA stops |
| Returns home |
Tell DWP, AA restarts |
| Respite care |
Usually counts as hospital |
Reporting Changes
Tell DWP About
| Change |
Why |
| Going into hospital |
AA affected after 28 days |
| Moving to care home |
May affect entitlement |
| Address change |
Need correct details |
| Going abroad |
Rules about time away |
| Condition improves |
Honesty important |
How to Report
| Method |
Details |
| Phone |
Attendance Allowance helpline |
| Post |
Write to DWP |
| Online |
Limited options |
Getting Help Claiming
Free Advice
| Organisation |
Speciality |
| Age UK |
Older people’s benefits |
| Citizens Advice |
General benefits help |
| Independent Age |
Advice line for over 65s |
| Disability Rights UK |
Disability benefits |
| Option |
Details |
| Age UK |
Offer form-filling service |
| Local advice centre |
May help you complete it |
| Family/friend |
Can help describe your needs |
| Welfare rights |
Council may offer service |
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