Guides

Child Benefit guide

Child Benefit explained for UK families

Child Benefit is a regular payment that can help after a child joins your family. It is separate from nursery funding and Tax-Free Childcare, and it can still matter even if a higher earner may need to pay some or all of it back.

Eldest or only child£27.05per week, about £1,406.60 per year
Each additional child£17.90per week, about £930.80 per year
Higher earner check£60,000charge starts from this adjusted net income

Start here

What Child Benefit is

Child Benefit is a government payment for people responsible for bringing up a child. It is not the same as Tax-Free Childcare, funded nursery hours or Universal Credit.

What it helps with

It can help with everyday family costs. You can choose how to use it: nappies, clothes, savings, food, childcare or normal household bills.

Why it still matters

Even if a higher earner may need to pay it back through the High Income Child Benefit Charge, claiming can still help protect National Insurance credits for a parent or carer who is not working or earning enough.

Eligibility

Who qualifies for Child Benefit?

You do not usually need to be working to claim Child Benefit. The key question is whether you are responsible for the child.

  • Usually one person claims for each child. If two people try to claim for the same child, only one claim can be paid.
  • The child normally needs to live with you. If the child lives with more than one parent or guardian, you may need to agree who claims.
  • You can claim for a baby after birth or adoption. You do not need to wait until you return to work.
  • Family changes matter. Tell the Child Benefit Office if the child moves house, someone else becomes responsible for them, or your family situation changes.

Rates

How much Child Benefit you get

For 2026/27, the eldest or only child gets the higher weekly rate. Each additional child gets the additional child rate.

Example yearly totals before any High Income Child Benefit Charge

1 child
£1,406.60 a year
2 children
£2,337.40 a year
3 children
£3,268.20 a year

How it is usually paid

Child Benefit is usually paid every 4 weeks into a bank account. Some people can get it paid weekly, for example if they are a single parent or receive certain benefits.

Apply

How to apply

You can claim Child Benefit after the birth is registered, or after a child comes to live with you through adoption. Applying early matters because backdating is limited.

1

Gather details

You will usually need details about you, your partner if you have one, the child and where payments go.

2

Apply through GOV.UK

Use the official claim route and check what evidence is needed for your situation.

3

Watch for updates

After the claim is sent, GOV.UK says it can take several weeks to process.

Backdating

Do not leave the claim too late

GOV.UK says Child Benefit can usually only be backdated for up to 3 months. If you delay longer than that, you may miss money you could have received.

A simple missed-payment example

If you waited 4 months to claim for a first child, but only 3 months could be backdated, you could miss around £108.20 for the extra month. The exact amount depends on the dates.

Higher income

High Income Child Benefit Charge

The High Income Child Benefit Charge can apply when the higher earner has adjusted net income over £60,000. If it reaches £80,000 or more, the charge can equal all the Child Benefit received.

Who it affects

It is based on the higher earner, not the total household income. This can surprise families where one parent earns more and the other earns less or is on leave.

Why some families still claim

Some families claim Child Benefit but choose not to receive payments, or claim and pay some back later. This can help protect National Insurance credits without creating a monthly overpayment problem.

Keep it updated

Payments and changes

Once your claim is running, keep details up to date so payments stay correct.

  • Update your bank details if the account changes.
  • Tell the Child Benefit Office if the child moves to live with someone else.
  • Update them if a child leaves approved education or training.
  • Check your position again if income changes and the High Income Child Benefit Charge may apply.

Common mistakes

Things people often assume

“I earn too much, so I should not claim.”

You may still want to claim, especially because of National Insurance credits. You can choose not to get payments.

“I can apply whenever and get it all backdated.”

Backdating is usually limited to 3 months, so delaying can mean missing money.

“Child Benefit is the same as Tax-Free Childcare.”

They are separate. Child Benefit is a payment; Tax-Free Childcare is a childcare cost top-up scheme.