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If you're eligible for funding from us, a top-up payment allows you to be accommodated in care homes that charge more than we are offering to pay.

When making your choice of care home, you may choose a setting that costs more than we will pay towards your care and support. There are many reasons why a care home may cost more, such as commercial business reasons or because it considers it provides accommodation of a superior standard.

We have a duty to provide you with funding to meet your eligible care needs. We must ensure that at least one care home is available that is affordable from the funding available. However, you can choose to live somewhere that costs more if you wish. If you do, your family, a friend or someone else such as a charity, must be willing and able to make a top-up payment to cover the difference between what funding is available and what the care home charges. This top-up must be sustainable for the duration of your stay.

We will never force you into having to pay a top-up fee if no suitable accommodation is available for the funding provided by us. In these circumstances, the funding must be made available to meet the costs of the care homes that meet your assessed eligible needs.

All top-up payments are payable to us. If your care provider asks you to pay them directly, please ask them to contact the Income Services Team by telephone: 01904 554684, and we will tell them how our payment system works.

It is very important that you are aware of that the amount of funding we provide will be reviewed regularly and may increase to ensure the amount is still sufficient to meet your eligible needs. However, we cannot guarantee that the care homes will increase their costs at the same rate, and this may affect the level of the top-up payment.

The top-up will always be the difference between the care home’s fees and the funding provided by us.

Whoever is paying the top-up will need to sign a written agreement that they are willing and able to meet the difference in cost and will continue to do so throughout your stay. Prior to signing the agreement, the person paying the top-up will have to satisfy us that they can afford the top-up required by the care home. A financial circumstances questionnaire asks for details of their assets and liabilities, as well as their income and expenditure. If the person offering to pay the top-up cannot satisfy us that they will be able to meet the cost for the likely duration of your stay, we will not agree to arrange care and support in your preferred care home.

The person paying the top-up should be aware that the top-up amount may vary as providers review their fee levels.

If the person paying the top-up is unable to continue to pay the difference you may have to move to another room within the care home or to another care home that charges fees that are affordable from our funding.

Any move to a different care home will only happen after an assessment of your needs - to make sure that the other care home is right for you.

First party top-ups

If you're in residential care, you can only pay a top-up yourself in the following circumstances:

  • you're having planned short breaks as part of a package of non-residential care
  • you're residing in a care home on a temporary or emergency basis
  • you're in permanent care and the value of your property is being disregarded for the first 12 weeks, and you have declined a placement at a lower rate
  • you have sufficient income that is disregarded from the financial assessment to pay a top-up
  • your care and accommodation are provided under Section 117 of the Mental Health Act

If you receive aftercare under Section 117 of the Mental Health Act, then we will meet the cost of care in a care home to meet your specific needs. We are obliged to offer you accommodation at the rate it has agreed to fund.

Should you desire alternative accommodation at a higher cost, then you may be assessed to top up the funding to the higher amount, providing you have the capacity to make that decision, or a legally appointed representative can make that decision at the time. You will be financially assessed to see whether you can afford a top-up from your income, your savings, or property, in which case you may be eligible for a deferred payment agreement. During the time the Section 117 is in place, you will only be responsible for the top-up costs relating to your preferred choice of accommodation.

Third party top-ups

Paying a top-up can be a significant financial commitment. We want to know that you're willing and able to make the top-up payment for the likely duration of the care contract. It will require assurance that you can afford this top-up and will ask you to fill out a financial questionnaire and to sign a written agreement confirming you are willing and able to make the payments.

The written agreement will include the following:

  • the total cost of the care home fees
  • the amount of the top-up payment
  • the amount of funding paid by the Council
  • how often payments must be paid
  • how payments will be collected
  • how often the agreement will be reviewed
  • the consequences should you be unable to continue to make a payment; this could include moving the person receiving care into a difference care home
  • the effect of any increases in charges made by the care home
  • the effect of any changes in the financial circumstances of the person paying the top-up

We recommend that anyone who is considering making a top-up payment seeks independent financial advice.

Also see:

Adult Social Care Community Team

Telephone: 01904 555111, Textphone: 07534 437804

West Offices, Station Rise, York, YO1 6GA

Adult Social Care Emergency Duty Team

Contact the Emergency Duty Team for assistance.

We're available between 5.00pm and 8.30am, Monday to Friday, 24 hours a day over weekends (between 5.00pm Friday until 8.30am Monday), and 24 hours on bank holidays.

Telephone: 0300 131 2131