For three years my tenants rent has been paid directly into my account from her Universal Credit payments. This morning, two days before this months rent is due, I have an email telling me that it is to be stopped yet I can apply to have it re-instated only if she has a change in circumstance. Have I missed something ? She tells me nothing has changed in her circumstance. Does anyone have a contact number for UC in St Austell rather than me trawling through the Gov/UK website?
Universal credit payment direct to landlord
Collapse
X
-
Tenant is entitled to request payment back from to you and then to her. Your agreement is not required.
In terms of who owes you rent it is always the tenant, not UC or LHA/HB.
Did you mean the job centre in St Austell please?
https://www.jobcentreplusoffices.com...ell-jobcentre/
Artful, in receipt of 6 benefits, thank you you generous taxpayers...I am legally unqualified: If you need to rely on advice check it with a suitable authority - eg a solicitor specialising in landlord/tenant law...
-
Tenant is entitled to request payment back from to you and then to her............................Sorry, did not quite understand this sentence
This is what the tenant has received. c2309dfb-35bb-4fb2-8857-90ac48fe55d7.jpg
Comment
-
I think Artful means she can change it from being paid to you to being paid to her, and then she pays it to you. Seems odd that they have done this if she hasn't requested it.
[QUOTE=theartfullodger;n1180362]
Artful, in receipt of 6 benefits, thank you you generous taxpayers...[/QUOTE
Out of interest what 6 benefits do you receive? Think I might be missing out on some!
Comment
-
I do know this stuff.
And can usually explain it better than the DWP/contractors phone jockeys.
The people you talk to on the phone for UC enquiries are G4/Securitas not the DWP; contracted out so they don't have much clue.
(Not that most DWP staff have a clue anyway, but that's another story).
I believe that the email/journal entry from UC will be because any outstanding rent arrears have now been paid off over the three years.
(At least according to the UC computer; which has been known to be wrong).
The Change-of-Circumstances bit is for if the tenant gets into arrears again , that would be a change of circumstances and you could apply for another direct payment (MPTL) to be set up.
So the question has to be is your tennant still in arrears?
UC doesn't like Alternative Payment Arrangements, including Managed Payments To Landlords (MPTL's), they would rather the claimant mananges their own payments.
The DWP/UC will do APAs when necessary, but will stop any APA/MPTL as soon as they can.
You should look into setting up a Direct Debit or Standing Order to pay you the rent on the date that your tenant recieves their UC payment.
You will need your tenants agreement to do that, but you had their agreement for a MPTL anyway so it shouldn't be a problem.
PS. Did your tenant send you that screenshot of their UC journal?
It is illegal for anyone except the claimant to have access to their Journal. (Unless an apointee/guardian has been set up).
There is a current court case ongoing against a multi-property landlord who has been changing his tenants rent details on their UC journals.
Comment
-
Originally posted by jpucng62 View Post...................
Out of interest what 6 benefits do you receive? Think I might be missing out on some!
State Pension, Free 'bus pass, £10 Xmas Bonus, Free eye tests, Winter Fuel Allowance, Free prescriptions.
For anyone (especially tenants..) to find out what benefits they are likely to qualify for try..
https://www.gov.uk/benefits-calculatorsI am legally unqualified: If you need to rely on advice check it with a suitable authority - eg a solicitor specialising in landlord/tenant law...
Comment
-
Originally posted by theartfullodger View Post
State Pension, Free 'bus pass, £10 Xmas Bonus, Free eye tests, Winter Fuel Allowance, Free prescriptions.
https://www.gov.uk/benefits-calculators
Comment
-
Good use?? Certainly not! I use the winter fuel allowance on wine rather than leccy/gas. Don't (well, hardly ever, especially during covid f*** u* by this government ) use the 'bus pass.I am legally unqualified: If you need to rely on advice check it with a suitable authority - eg a solicitor specialising in landlord/tenant law...
Comment
-
Not without the tenants consent/request, and only rarely from the start of the claim even then.
(Unless you are a social landlord, or possibly if you are a private landlord in Scotland which has slightly different rules on APAs).
However if you already had direct payments from Housing Benefit before the tenant moved to UC then a UC MPTL can be set up from the start of the UC claim.
You have to remember that benefits are the claimants entitlement, not yours.
Monies received for that benefit entitlement can then be spent however the claimant chooses. (Just like wages can be spent however a wage earner chooses).
At the DWP's discretion part of that entitlement may be paid to someone else in certain circumstances if it is in the claimants interest to do so.
Comment
Latest Activity
Collapse
-
by Etong6885Hi,
I bought a property in auction which tenanted. After completion, went to see the tenant to ask her to sign new agreement. She refused to and saying she want to move out. After few weeks of she keeps on changing her mind to stay or to leave, I’m getting fedup. Just found out she’s...03-07-2022, 19:56 PM -
Reply to ‘Tenant’ on benefits, how to evictby jpkeatesIf an AST agreement doesn't have any specific provision about what happens when the fixed term ends, it automatically continues as a periodic tenancy.
If the rent was paid monthly, it will be a monthly periodic tenancy.
So it is wrong to think that anything "ended" last...05-07-2022, 08:19 AM -
Reply to ‘Tenant’ on benefits, how to evict1st thing, serve notice(s) compliant with S48 and s3. (So you fully become landlord in addition to owner.
(Assuming previous AST valid -eg not in fact a rent act tenancy,) they have an entirely valid periodic AST. (Almost all same terms as original AST). Obvs. When did tenant 1st move in?...04-07-2022, 18:15 PM -
Reply to ‘Tenant’ on benefits, how to evictby Etong6885She’s previously on AST and her contract ended July last year....04-07-2022, 16:34 PM
-
Reply to ‘Tenant’ on benefits, how to evictby Etong6885The agreement with previous landlord is AST and ended July last year. They might holding under month to month basis agreement previously but nothing in writing. What else should I do to evict the tenant legally? At forst we already agreed that she will moved out on 30/6 but suddenly on the day she wants...04-07-2022, 16:32 PM
-
Reply to ‘Tenant’ on benefits, how to evictHave you served notice(s) compliant with S48 and s3? If not no rent due (S48) and possible fines and criminal record (s3)04-07-2022, 10:37 AM
-
Reply to ‘Tenant’ on benefits, how to evictby jpkeatesWhen the purchase completed, the tenant became your tenant on the terms of the agreement in place with the seller.
Hopefully, you have copies of that agreement so you know what the terms are.
If the tenant paid a deposit to the previous owner, you are also responsible for keeping...04-07-2022, 08:00 AM -
Reply to ‘Tenant’ on benefits, how to evictby nukecadOf course she is your tenant, when you bought the property she became your tenant.
You can't just buy a property with a sitting tenant and kick them out.
You can't force a tenant to sign a new contract if they don't want to.
Did you issue the legally required section...04-07-2022, 06:33 AM -
Reply to UC Tenant refusing to pay rent.by jpkeatesYou have to send a letter before action (which is meant to have a lot of additional information and advice for the person receiving it).
You might want to see if you can buy a template online.
There's nothing to stop you, but the tenant might complain about it and a judge might agree...30-06-2022, 14:52 PM -
by CottonI issued a s21 in November 2021 as
1. Tenant is always underpaying their rent
2. Tenant is a liar (e.g. tenant secretly works, tenant secretly live with her husband who also works full time)
3. They abuse the system by claiming financial difficulty in order to...30-06-2022, 09:13 AM
Comment