Everything you need to know about Fuel Allowance

Fuel Allowance is a means tested social welfare payment.
- A spouse, civil partner or cohabitant who qualifies for an increase on your pension or social welfare payment or is getting a qualifying payment in their own right
- Dependent children
- A person who is getting Carer’s Allowance or Carer’s Benefit and is caring for you or for your spouse, partner or cohabitant or qualified child dependant on a full-time basis
- A person getting short-term Jobseeker’s Allowance or basic Supplementary Welfare Allowance
- Other people who are getting a qualifying payment and who would be eligible for a Fuel Allowance in their own right
- A person aged 70 or over
a single person over 70 can have income of €500 per week and a couple can have income of €1,000 per week
people over 70 no longer need to be in receipt of a qualifying social welfare payment to be eligible for Fuel Allowance
in the case of a couple where one person is over 70 and one is under 70, they will be assessed under the Over 70s Means Test criteria
the amount of savings that are disregarded in the means assessment for the Fuel Allowance payment for people aged over 70 has increased from €20,000 to €50,000
South Munster Citizens Information telephone lines in Cork City are monitored from 10am to 4.30pm, Monday to Friday. In addition, the Cork City Centre CIC in Cornmarket Street is open to the public Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, from 9.45am to 1pm and Wednesdays from 2pm to 4.30pm. The Blackpool CIC is open to the public from 10am to 4pm, Tuesday and Thursday. Full details for all Citizens Information Centres and their opening times are available on https://www.citizensinformationboard.ie/