The Bedroom Tax (also known as Spare Room Subsidy) is a change to Housing Benefit Entitlement that restricts housing benefits for tenants of working age (16-61) living in a housing association or council property that is deemed to have one or more spare bedrooms. Tenants with one spare bedroom lose 14% of entitled housing benefit and those with two or more spare bedrooms lose 25% of entitlement. Possible exemptions exist for tenants receiving a state pension, rent a shared ownership property, have a severely disabled child who requires their own room, have a foster child, or have a child how is on duty in the armed forces.
Statistics are shown for this demographic
Constituency
City
Parish
Response rates from 1.5k Islington London voters.
53% Yes |
47% No |
30% Yes |
47% No |
15% Yes, but only if they refuse to move to an available smaller property |
|
8% Yes, but with exception for those with disabled family members |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 1.5k Islington London voters.
Loading data...
Loading chart...
Trend of how important this issue is for 1.5k Islington London voters.
Loading data...
Loading chart...
Unique answers from Islington London voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@8S9H8FK4yrs4Y
Yes but only if they have been living in that property for under 10 years, any longer then they should automatically be exempt from paying any bedroom tax.
@9ZSRHLC3mos3MO
If a council property is underoccupied the tenants should be required to move to a smaller property. If one is unavailable it is the governments responsibility therefore they should not have to pay extra.
@9QWT87J7mos7MO
No, but housing should on a ‘need’ basis and re-assessed yearly so people can move to their ‘need’ level.
@9QW6FF87mos7MO
No/Maybe - The housing association should be fined for not finding or acquiring suitable accommodation. Fine the tenant only if tenant refuses to downsize given a suitable offer.
@9QLSK838mos8MO
Yes but only if they refuse to move to a smaller property with the exception being they can stay in that home if they have been there for ten years or more
@9QJWJ698mos8MO
Yes, but only with certain exceptions, such as disabled family members or they refuse to move to an available smaller property etc.
@9QBRZFX 8mos8MO
Only if the number of bedrooms greatly outweighs the number of occupants, no disabled people live at the property, there is need for their property by others and a refusal to move to a suitable smaller property
@9Q72V5Y8mos8MO
We should have good quality housing and if the tenant refuses a social house they should go to the back of the queue. If a house is clearly too big then this should be reviewed
Join in on the most popular conversations.