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Third self-employed grant worth up to £7,500 opens for applications today – how to apply

SELF-EMPLOYED workers can now apply for the third round of coronavirus support from the government worth up to £7,500.

The self-employment income support scheme (SEISS) gives grants to help those who work for themselves if their income has been negatively impacted.

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Self-employed workers can apply for the grant from today, November 30Credit: Stigla

SEISS has so far given out two rounds of grants to the self-employed since the pandemic began.

The third SEISS grant opened for applications today, November 30, and for many it will be important to check if they are eligible for support.

Applications for the first grant closed on July 13, 2020 and the second grant, worth up to £6,570, opened for applications on August 17 and closed on October 19, 2020.

Then in September, Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced a third grant as he extended the self-employed scheme to help workers survive the winter.

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What other help is there for self-employed workers?

THE government has also introduced the following measures to help self-employed workers and businesses during the coronavirus outbreak:

Income-tax deferrals: Self-assessment income tax payments, that were due in July, can be deferred to the end of January next year.

Rent support: Businesses who were struggling to pay their rents were protected from eviction until the end of June.

Coronavirus business interruption loan scheme: SMEs can get loans and overdrafts of up to £5million for up to six years and the government will guarantee up to 80 per of these.

Grants of up to £10,000: Small firms can get grants of up to £10,000 to help with ongoing business costs.

VAT payments: VAT payments can be deferred for three months.

Tax bill help: SMEs that cannot afford their tax bills can ask HMRC for a “time to pay” arrangement so any debt collection is suspended.

Business rates holiday: A 12-month business rates holiday has been introduced for many businesses.

Earlier this month, Mr Sunak increased the grant to £7,500, covering 80% of trading profits for November to January.

But self-employed workers still have to meet a stringent set of criteria to be eligible for the payout as the government seeks to avoid widespread fraud.

So before you miss the chance of claiming, we've outlined how to check if you're eligible for the SEISS grant, how much you'll get and how to apply.

How to check you're eligible for a third self-employment grant

For those unsure of whether they are elible for the third grant, there's a simple checklist of criteria to go through:

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  • In order to claim the payout, self-employed workers must have been eligible for the first and second grant - even if you didn't claim them. (This is with the exception of some people who became eligible after a couple of rule changes in August, which are outlined below.)
  • You must declare that you intend to continue to trade and that you're either currently actively trading but are impacted by reduced demand due to the coronavirus.
  • Alternatively, you must declare that you were previously trading but are temporarily unable to do so due to the pandemic.
  • You must have filed a tax return for 2018/19, meaning you must have been self-employed before April 6, 2019.
  • You must also earn more than half of your total income from self-employment.
  • Your trading profit must be less than £50,000 a year.

The grants are calculated based on an average of your profits over three tax years - 2016/17, 2017/18 and 2018/19.

If you didn't trade in 2016/17, then it will be based on your average profits in 2017/18 and 2018/19, or in 2018/19 if that's the only year you traded.

Sadly, self-employed workers who are company directors or run their businesses as limited companies can't apply.

But if you claim maternity allowance this will not affect your eligibility for the grant.

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Self-employment grant: who can claim?

YOU can claim if you're a self-employed individual or a member of a partnership and you:

  • have submitted your self assessment tax return for the tax year 2018/19
  • traded in the tax year 2019/20
  • are trading when you apply, or would be except for coronavirus
  • intend to continue to trade in the current tax year (2020/21)
  • have lost trading profits due to coronavirus

How have the eligibility rules changed?

The government tweaked the rules on August 17 so you may have been eligible to claim the second grant and now the third despite missing out on the first payout.

New parents who were excluded from the first grant because they were pregnant or caring for a new child may now be able to make a claim.

Self-employed mums and dads who didn't file their taxes for one or more of the following reasons are now included in the scheme:

  • Because you were pregnant or you gave birth,
  • You were caring for a child under the age of one,
  • You were caring for an adopted child who had been with you for less than a year.

In order to qualify, you'll also need to meet the other criteria, such as you must have been self-employed in 2017/18 and submitted a tax return for the year before April 23 2020.

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