Daily Mail

Stay-at-home mum in the 80s or 90s? You could be owed £80,000 in missing state pension

- By Fiona Parker

HELEN JAMES was shocked to discover last year that she was entitled to not a penny of the state pension. The grandmothe­r had always assumed she’d receive the benefit, having worked in a variety of jobs, including one role at a school and another in a local shop.

But civil servants pointed to a 12-year career break she took from the late-1970s to care for her two children. They informed her she did not meet the minimum requiremen­t of ten years of National Insurance (NI) contributi­ons to receive even the smallest weekly payment in retirement.

It has since emerged that Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) officials were wrong in their assessment. Helen, 67, from South Wales, is just one of thousands of pensioners who may have been short-changed after similar blunders were made.

HISTORIC FAILINGS

THE errors stem from a failure to take into account changes to the way NI contributi­ons are calculated for stayat-home parents.

Now, experts are urging those who took time out of work to care for their children in the 1980s and 1990s to check if they have been underpaid. They could be entitled to payouts of up to £80,000.

In Helen’s case, she won back £4,000 and is now entitled to a state pension worth £79 a week.

‘It is quite wrong that I was told I wasn’t entitled to any pension,’ she says. ‘If my daughter hadn’t read Press coverage about the issue, I might still be getting nothing.’

It is the latest in a long line of scandals to rock the DWP in recent years. In 2020, an investigat­ion by former pensions minister Steve Webb and our sister website, This Is Money, revealed tens of thousands of people — mainly women — had been hugely underpaid in retirement.

The mistakes dated back to 1985 and related to the failure to boost their state pensions in line with what their husbands were owed.

In July, a DWP report revealed that around 221,000 people missed out on vital state pension payments because of historic admin errors — a 67 pc rise on the previous projection of 132,000. It was estimated the cost of repaying those affected would be more than £1.3 billion.

The report also detailed a new blunder: credits for time spent at home caring for children — known as Home Responsibi­lities Protection — were not recorded accurately on some NI records.

The DWP said this accounted for the second largest number of underpayme­nts. Sir Steve Webb, now a partner at consultant­s LCP, says: ‘The DWP has admitted that even more people are being underpaid state pension than previously thought, with a whole new category of errors coming to light.

‘ Undoubtedl­y, this means many thousands have been underpaid for years.’

Ros Altmann, another former pensions minister, adds: ‘It’s just so dishearten­ing . . . Once again women are the casualties.’

To qualify for the full new state pension — worth £185.15 a week — you must build up 35 qualifying years of NI contributi­ons. Any years which were ‘contracted out’ in exchange for lower contributi­ons will not be included.

Those who retired before

April 6, 2016, are entitled to £141.85. If you accrue more than ten

years of NI contributi­ons but fewer than 35, you will receive a smaller weekly payment.

INCOME BOOST

SINCE 1978, mothers and fathers have been able to safeguard their pensions if they have taken time off to care for their children and receive child benefit.

For stay-at-home parents who reached state pension age before April 6, 2010, the DWP was supposed to reduce the number of years of contributi­ons required to qualify for the state pension.

Those retiring after this date were to receive NI credits for each year they were stay- at- home parents. The DWP is working with HMRC to investigat­e how many people have been caught out, but no update is expected until autumn at the earliest.

In the meantime, LCP has launched a campaign to encourage pensioners to find out if they are being underpaid by checking their NI records online or by phone.

Those who think their contributi­ons may not have been recorded properly can then send a claim by post to HMRC.

Lorraine Wainwright was able to boost her weekly pension by £20 a week by doing just this.

Like Helen, the mother of two had stayed at home looking after her children during much of the 1970s and 1980s. However, she later went back to work and ran a care home alongside her husband, eddie, 67.

When Lorraine, now 68, first applied for her state pension in 2020, she was told she had only accrued 31 qualifying years of NI contributi­ons so would not receive the full new state pension.

But with Sir Steve’s support, she made a claim to DWP this year, recovering £1,500 in underpayme­nts as well as the weekly uplift.

Lorraine, who lives in Gloucester­shire,

says: ‘I would encourage any parent who spent time bringing up their children to check that they are getting credits on their NI record. If I had not checked my own record carefully, it is quite possible I would still be getting the wrong rate of pension.’

A Government spokesman says: ‘This year we will spend more than £110 billion on the state pension and support over 12.5 million pensioners. We are investigat­ing an issue with the historical recording of Home Responsibi­lities Protection, with work under way to identify those affected.’

Have you been underpaid? Write to us at moneymail@ dailymail.co.uk or Money Mail, Northcliff­e House, 2 Derry Street, London W8 5TT.

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