EIM76172 - Social security benefits: widowed
parent's allowance
Section 39A Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act
1992
Widowed parent's allowance (WPA) replaced widowed mother's
allowance (WMA) from 9 April 2001, but WMA continues to be paid to
claimants receiving that benefit before 9 April 2001 (see
EIM76177).
WPA is a weekly benefit that consists of:
- a taxable basic allowance for the
surviving parent equivalent to the state retirement pension
(£72.50 in 2001/02)
- a non-taxable allowance for each dependant
child (children under the age of 16 or under the age of 19 when
still in full-time education)
- additional state earnings related pension
(SERPS) if the surviving parent qualifies (taxable).
Entitlement to WPA requires:
- the deceased parent to have made
sufficient National Insurance contributions prior to his or her
death or for death to be caused by his or her job and
- the surviving parent to have a child and
be entitled to child benefit or for a woman to be expecting her
late husband's baby (this includes any pregnancy arising as a
result of artificial insemination or in vitro fertilisation) as
long as the woman was living with her husband immediately before
his death.
In the case of a man whose wife died before bereavement benefits
were introduced on 9 April 2001, a claim to WPA can be accepted
from that date if the entitlement conditions are met.
The allowance ceases when the widowed parent's entitlement to
child benefit ceases.
A parent who is aged 45 or over when the WPA ceases will be
entitled to claim bereavement allowance, see
EIM76173.