What this guide covers
A child's earnings do not directly affect Universal Credit for the parents while the child is in non-advanced education up to age 19. Child Benefit continues through age 19 if the child is in approved education or training, and stops if they start a paid apprenticeship or full-time work. The 16-19 Bursary Fund is means-tested on household, not child, income.
The simple version
UK benefits for families with children are structured around two ideas:
- The child is part of the household until they finish education or start their own benefits claim
- Once the child reaches a defined break point (16+ apprentice, 18+ generally, 20 latest in non-advanced education), they're considered an adult and form their own benefits unit
So a 16-year-old part-timer earning £200/month at Tesco generally doesn't cost the family any benefits, because their earnings stay in the child's name — not the household income calculation.
Child Benefit — when it ends
Child Benefit (£26.05/week for the first child, £17.25/week for additional children, 2026/27 rates) continues until:
- Your child turns 16 if they leave education and training, OR
- Your child turns 20 if they're still in approved education or training (sixth form, college, T-Level, etc.)
"Approved education" means full-time non-advanced — A-levels, BTECs, T-Levels, certain vocational courses. Not university, paid apprenticeships, or part-time-only courses.
You must tell HMRC within a month if your child:
- Leaves education or training
- Starts a paid apprenticeship (Child Benefit ends — the apprentice now earns their own wage)
- Starts higher education (university — Child Benefit ends)
- Gets married or starts living with a partner
- Starts work for 24+ hours/week and isn't in approved education
High Income Child Benefit Charge
If you (or your partner) earn over £60,000/yr, you face the High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) — you're effectively asked to repay some or all of the benefit via Self Assessment.
- Earning £60,000–£80,000: tapered repayment (1% per £200 of income above £60k)
- Earning £80,000+: repay the full Child Benefit via tax
HICBC was changed in April 2024 to apply per individual (not the highest earner in a couple). If both partners earn £55k each, neither triggers HICBC. If one earns £100k and the other £20k, the higher earner repays the full Child Benefit.
Note: your teenager's part-time wages do not count toward HICBC. Only the parents' incomes.
Universal Credit and teenager's earnings
If your household claims Universal Credit, the rule on teenagers' earnings depends on the child's status:
| Teen's situation | Effect on household UC |
|---|---|
| 16-19 in approved education, part-time job | No effect — child remains a dependant, earnings ignored |
| 16-19 in approved education, full-time apprentice | Child leaves household UC — they're now an earner |
| 16-17 left education, no work yet | Stays in household UC if "available for work"; some couples leave this until 18 |
| 18+ at university | No longer counts in parents' UC — they're an adult dependant outside the household |
| 16-17 with own UC claim | Out of parents' UC entirely |
If your teen starts work for 16+ hours/week and is no longer in non-advanced education, their UC dependency ends. The Child Element (£333.33/month, 2026/27, for one child) drops out of your award.
Other implications:
- Limited Capability for Work-Related Activity element for disabled teens stays in the household claim regardless of part-time earnings
- Housing element may shrink if the teen moves out
- Council Tax Reduction single-person discount may apply if the teen leaves the household
16-19 Bursary Fund and EMA — how earnings interact
Means-tested support for staying in 16-19 education:
- England: 16-19 Bursary Fund, up to £1,200/yr Vulnerable Student Bursary plus Discretionary Bursary at school/college discretion.
- Wales: Welsh EMA, £30/week.
- Scotland: Scottish EMA, £30/week.
- NI: EMA NI, £30/week.
These are all means-tested on household income, not the child's. A part-time job paying £200/month doesn't affect eligibility — the household income test is the parents'.
EMA does have an attendance requirement — miss too many classes and you lose the £30 for that week. Family income thresholds for EMA differ slightly across the three nations — check current rates with the local authority or college.
UK Tax Drag (2026). Universal Credit when a child starts earning. Parent guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/parent-universal-credit-when-child-earns.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0). CC BY 4.0.