Council Tax Reduction in Scotland: 2021-2022
Council Tax Reduction (CTR) awarded by age, household structure, income sources and employment status, deprivation index, and Council Tax band in the financial year from April 2021 to March 2022. It makes references to the previously published March 2021 for comparative purposes.
1. Introduction
The CTR scheme provides lower income households with a reduction in their Council Tax liability. The reduction can be any proportion of the liability, up to and including 100 per cent (i.e. the household has their Council Tax liability reduced to zero and pays no Council Tax).
CTR data is reported monthly from CTR extracts provided by local authorities on a monthly basis. This publication provides the data on the number of CTR recipients and the weekly income forgone from April 2021 to March 2022. It also makes references to the previously published March 2021 statistics for comparative purposes as the publication covers the period when the Covid-19 pandemic was ongoing. The publication also includes detailed analysis of additional characteristics and weekly awards for March 2022 CTR data and therefore supplements the monthly release for the data period up to March 2022 published on 24 May 2022.
Since introduction, entitlement to CTR in Scotland has broadly replicated, as far as possible, previous entitlement to Council Tax Benefit (the previous UK-wide benefit abolished in 2013).
The 2017-18 and 2018-19 Local Government Finance settlements included agreement between the Scottish Government and local government for locally determined Council Tax increases to be capped at 3 per cent in cash terms. In 2019-20 and 2020-21 they were capped at 3 per cent in real terms, which was 4.79 per cent (in 2019-20) and 4.84 per cent (in 2020-21) in cash terms. In 2021-22, Council Tax rates were frozen.
1.1 How CTR awards are calculated
Entitlement to CTR and the amount awarded is based on the characteristics and income of the applicant and their household. Figure 2 shows the process an application goes through to calculate whether CTR is awarded. Please note that this is a simplified version and does not include some additional features of the scheme (such as capital rules, non-dependant deductions and the second adult rebate). Figure 3 provides an illustration of a CTR calculation in 2021-22.
A single parent, with two children aged 12 and 14, who lives in a Band C property in Edinburgh.
The Band C Council Tax liability was £17.11 after single person discount of 25%.
Household weekly income consisted of:
- Net Earnings of £176.00
- Working Tax Credit of £57.78
- Child Tax Credits £109.42
Income
Net Earnings £176.00
Working Tax Credit £57.78
Child Tax Credits £109.42
Total Income £343.20
Earnings Disregard (Lone Parent) - £25.00
Earning Disregard (Tax Credit) - £17.10
Total Income for CTR £301.10
Calculation of household's CTR award
The applicable amount is calculated.
This household would receive the single
personal allowance and two child personal
allowance.
Single Personal Allowance £74.70
Two Child Personal Allowance £171.50
Applicable Amount £246.20
This household's excess income is then £54.90 (£301.10 - £246.20).
As the total income is greater than the applicable amount, partial CTR is awarded and the household is expected to contribute 20% of their excess income towards their Council Tax liability. So the Weekly Household Contribution is £10.98 (20% of £54.90).
The weekly CTR is £6.13 (£17.11 - £10.98) and their council tax liability (i.e. the amount of council tax they need to pay) is £10.98.
Contact
Email: eddie.chan@gov.scot
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