CCM6870 - Particular Aspects: Estimated Income - Evidence
You should ask the claimant(s) to provide some evidence in
support of their estimated figure. What you want to see will depend
on the particular circumstances. In the case of an employed
claimant(s), you might ask for payslips for, say, the past 4 weeks.
If the claimant(s) is self-employed, they may have had some interim
accounts prepared, or may have had to produce some financial
statements for their bank.
You should consider carefully whatever evidence the
claimant(s) produces, without testing it extensively, to decide
whether you think their estimate is a realistic reflection of their
likely level of income over the year. If so, you should accept the
figure. If not, you are entitled to amend the award using your own
estimate. But you should normally revert to the figure of PY income
stated on the claim form, unless there are compelling reasons for
not doing so, for example, the PY figure turns out to have been
mis-stated. In that case, you should substitute the correct PY
figure.
If you consider that the claimant’s income has indeed
dropped, but not to the extent of the estimate they have supplied,
you should substitute your own estimated figure. This should
normally fall somewhere between the claimant’s estimate and
the figure of PY income. You may occasionally consider that the
income for the year is likely to exceed both the claimant’s
estimate and the PY figure, this may be most likely to happen if
you are examining an estimate close to the end of the year.
For guidance on when it may be appropriate to substitute an
estimate higher than the PY figure, see
CCM6890.
In some cases, you may be examining the claim some time after
the claimant(s) has asked for the award to be recalculated on the
basis of an estimated figure. If so, you should bear in mind that
the claimant’s income may have risen again since the estimate
was submitted. If the claimant tells you this has happened, you
should ask to see evidence covering both the earlier and the later
period and decide, based on a consideration of both, what would be
a reasonable estimate of income
over the year. You should attempt to agree with
the claimant(s) an appropriate estimated figure to cover the whole
year.
