Disability Allowance
- What is Disability Allowance?
- How to qualify for Disability Allowance
- How your income is assessed for Disability Allowance
- Rate of Disability Allowance
- How to apply for Disability Allowance
- Where to apply for Disability Allowance
What is Disability Allowance?
Disability Allowance (DA) is a weekly allowance paid to people with a disability. You can get DA from 16 years of age. You can get Disability Allowance even if you are in school.
If you qualify for DA, you may also get extra social welfare benefits with your payment and other supplementary welfare payments.
Budget 2024: Disability Allowance increase and once-off payment
It was announced in Budget 2024 that people on the maximum rate of Disability Allowance will get an increase of €12 per week from January 2024. There will be proportional increases for qualified adults and people on reduced rates of payment.
Once-off payment
People getting the Carer’s Support Grant, Disability Allowance, Invalidity Pension or Blind Pension will get a once-off payment of €400.
You will get one payment only, even if you qualify for more than one of these payments or you are caring for more than one person.
People getting the Disability Allowance, Invalidity Pension or Blind Pension will receive this between 22 November 2023 and 24 November 2023 (you will get the once-off payment on the same day you get your primary payment).
How to qualify for Disability Allowance
To qualify for Disability Allowance you must:
- Have an injury, disease or physical or mental disability that has continued for at least one year or is expected to continue for at least one year
- Be substantially restricted because of your disability from doing work that would be suitable for a person of your age, experience and qualifications
- Be aged between 16 and 66.
- Pass a means test – a means test looks at any income that you have – see ‘How your income is assessed for DA’ below
- Live in Ireland and meet the habitual residence condition.
Medical assessment
Your doctor must complete a report on your medical condition as part of the application form. This report is reviewed by one of the DSP’s medical assessors.
The medical report will allow the DSP to determine if you:
- Have an injury, disease or physical or mental disability that has continued for at least one year or is expected to continue for at least one year
And
- You are substantially restricted because of your disability from doing work that would be suitable for a person of your age, experience and qualifications
Can I get Disability Allowance in hospital or residential care?
You can get Disability Allowance, if you are in hospital or residential care.
If you are already getting DA and go into hospital or residential care, you will continue to get your payment, as long as you continue to meet the qualifying conditions above.
If you were not getting DA before you started living in residential care, you can apply for DA.
How your income is assessed for Disability Allowance
DA is a means-tested payment.
In a means test the Department of Social Protection examines all your sources of income. To get DA, your income must be below a certain amount.
The main items included in the means test are:
- Cash income that you or your spouse, civil partner or cohabitant may have. Some cash income may not be included in the means test.
- Capital, for example, the value of savings, investments, shares or any property you have (but not your own home). The first €50,000 of your capital is not taken into account. Find out more about capital not included in the means test.
- Maintenance paid to you. More information is available in our document about how maintenance is assessed as means.
Living with your parent
Your parent’s income is not taken into account when you are assessed for Disability Allowance.
Income from the sale of your home
The means test does not take into account up to €190,500 of the money you get if you sell your home and:
- Move to different accommodation (you can either buy or rent)
- Move in with someone who is caring for you and getting a carer's payment
- Move to sheltered or special housing in the voluntary, co-operative, statutory or private sectors
- Move into a registered private nursing home
Income from work
Some of your income from work is not taken into account. This includes self-employed work.
You can work and earn up to €165 a week (after paying PRSI, pension contributions and union dues) without your DA payment being affected.
If you earn more than €165 a week, 50% of your earnings between €165 and €375 will not be taken into account in the DA means test. Any earnings over €375 are assessed in full.
If you start work, you need to notify the Department of Social Protection (DSP) and provide proof of your earnings. A wage slip, your contract of employment or a letter from your employer can be used as proof of your earnings.
You can read more in our document about how disability payments are affected by work.
If your partner works
If your spouse, civil partner or cohabitant works, it can affect your Disability Allowance. Some of their income from work as an employee is not taken into account, but all income from self-employment is assessed in the means test.
Your spouse, civil partner or cohabitant's net weekly earnings from work as an employee are assessed as follows:
- €20 per day (up to a maximum of €60) from work is deducted from your spouse, civil partner or cohabitant’s average net weekly earnings and
- Then 60% of the balance is assessed as weekly means.
The weekly means is then deducted from your rate of Disability Allowance (your rate of DA is your personal rate plus the maximum Increase for a Qualified Adult and any Increases for Qualified Children).
Net earnings are your gross (or total) earnings less PRSI, superannuation (pension contributions) and Union dues.
Income from PhD scholarship
PhD scholarship of up to €20,000 per year for up to 4 years is not taken into account when you are assessed for Disability Allowance.
Rate of Disability Allowance
The weekly maximum rate of Disability Allowance in 2023:
Personal rate (claimant) | €220 |
Adult dependant | €146 |
Child dependent under 12 | €42 (full rate)
€21 (half rate) |
Child dependent aged 12 years or over | €50 (full rate)
€25 (half rate) |
If you are married, in a civil partnership or cohabiting and you both qualify for Disability Allowance, you will each get a weekly personal rate of Disability Allowance. You can both get the maximum rate if you both qualify for it.
If you qualify for DA and your or your spouse, civil partner or cohabitant is getting another social welfare payment, you will each get the weekly personal rate of your own payment.
Payments for dependants
If you are married, in a civil partnership or cohabiting, you may get an Increase for a Qualified Adult (IQA) in your DA payment. You may also get an Increase for a Qualified Child (IQC) in your payment for dependent children.
If you have children living with you and you are parenting alone, you may get an IQA for a person who is caring for your child, if the person is aged 16 or over, living with you and being supported by you. This person could be one of your other children.
How to apply for Disability Allowance
You can get an application form for Disability Allowance (pdf) from:
- Intreo Centre or a Social Welfare Branch Office
- Citizens Information Centre
If you think you have been wrongly refused DA you can appeal this decision.