Voluntary work and social welfare payments
- Introduction
- Disability payments and volunteering
- Carer’s payments and volunteering
- Jobseeker’s payments and volunteering
- Other social welfare payments
Introduction
Voluntary work is a good way to keep active, learn new skills and get involved in your local community. You can do some unpaid work as a volunteer and keep your social welfare payment. However, you must continue to meet all the conditions attached to your payment.
Your Intreo Centre or Social Welfare Branch Office or the section paying your social welfare payment will usually decide whether you can keep your social welfare payment and work as a volunteer.
Disability payments and volunteering
If you are getting Illness Benefit or Invalidity Pension you must get permission to work as a volunteer. You must apply to the section that pays your social welfare payment before starting any voluntary work.
If you are getting Illness Benefit, you apply to the Partial Capacity Benefit section for permission to do voluntary work.
If you are getting Invalidity Pension, you must apply directly to the Invalidity Pension section for permission. You can find out more about how the DSP makes decision on voluntary work.
If you are getting Disability Allowance or Blind Pension, you do not need permission to participate in voluntary work.
Carer’s payments and volunteering
To qualify for a carer’s payment you must be providing full-time care. If you are getting Carer’s Allowance or Carer’s Benefit, you can do a maximum of 18.5 hours per week of voluntary work. Before you start working as a volunteer, you must get permission from the Carer’s Allowance or Carer’s Benefit section in the Department of Social Protection.
Jobseeker’s payments and volunteering
To get Jobseeker's Allowance or Jobseeker's Benefit you must be available and looking for work. If you want to do voluntary work, you must first get permission from a Deciding Officer at your Intreo Centre or Social Welfare Branch Office. You must continue to satisfy the conditions of your jobseeker’s payment.
The Deciding Officer considers a number of factors when deciding if the work involved is voluntary.
These include:
- The aims and standing of the voluntary organisation (they can be national or local voluntary groups)
- The type of work involved
- The weekly number of hours worked.
Examples of unpaid voluntary work a jobseeker can do include assisting youth clubs, care groups, sports groups, and local residents associations.
If you want to do voluntary work and continue to get Jobseeker’s Allowance or Jobseeker’s Benefit, you must apply under the voluntary work option before you start any voluntary work. To apply, fill in application form (VW1), which is available from your Intreo Centre or Social Welfare Branch Office.
Other social welfare payments
If you are getting one of the payments listed below, there are no restrictions on the number of hours or type of unpaid work you may do. In addition, you don’t need prior permission to do voluntary work.
- State Pension (Contributory)
- State Pension (Non-Contributory)
- State Pension (Transition)
- Widow’s/Widower’s/Surviving Civil Partner's (Contributory) Pension
- Widow’s/Widower’s/Surviving Civil Partner's (Non-Contributory) Pension
- Guardian's Payment (Contributory)
- Guardian's Payment (Non-Contributory)
- Blind Pension
- One-Parent Family Payment (OFP)
- Farm Assist
- Maternity Benefit
- Paternity Benefit
- Adoptive Benefit
- Health and Safety Benefit