With new maternity and paternity rights being introduced for babies born on or after 6 April 2003, it is worth running through the changes to see what help is now available for families with babies.
The legal minimum that a mother should receive is statutory maternity pay (SMP), which will be paid for up to 26 weeks and which is taxable. But the mother must:
SMP can be paid even if the mother is not going back to work after the baby is born. It is paid at 90 per cent of average weekly pay for the first six weeks, and £100 a week for the next 20 weeks.
Average weekly pay is based on the eight weeks immediately before the "qualifying week" (the 15th week before your baby is due).
Women can work until the week the baby is due and still be entitled to 26 weeks' SMP. The earliest that SMP is paid is the 11th week before the one in which the baby is due.
For those who do not qualify for SMP because, for example, they do not earn enough or have not worked for the employer for long enough, they may be able to claim maternity allowance instead, for which entitlement is also based on average earnings.
Women will receive maternity allowance if they:
The standard rate of maternity allowance is £100 a week, paid to women with average earnings of £77 or more a week. If earnings are on average between £30 and £77, maternity allowance is 90 per cent of weekly earnings. There is also an extra £33.65 for an adult dependant, but this depends on how much they earn.
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