What Illness Benefit is
Illness Benefit is a short-term social insurance payment for people who are unable to work because of illness. The official rules link it to PRSI contributions and medical certification.
This page explains the payment rules only. It does not give medical advice.
Key terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| PRSI | Pay Related Social Insurance contributions. |
| Certificate of Incapacity for Work | Medical certification used to support an Illness Benefit claim. |
| Relevant tax year | The tax year used by the Department to assess average weekly earnings for the rate. |
| Disability Allowance | A separate means-tested payment for people with a disability. |
General rules
Gov.ie says a person must be under pension age, satisfy PRSI conditions and be certified as unfit for work by a doctor. Medical evidence is normally provided through a Certificate of Incapacity for Work.
Illness Benefit is not means-tested in the same way as Disability Allowance. The PRSI contribution record is central to the payment.
Rates and payment information
| Average weekly earnings | Personal rate listed by gov.ie |
|---|---|
| €300 or more | €254.00 |
| €220 to €299.99 | €198.90 |
| €150 to €219.99 | €163.70 |
| Less than €150 | €114.00 |
Illness Benefit vs Disability Allowance
| Feature | Illness Benefit | Disability Allowance |
|---|---|---|
| Payment type | Social insurance payment. | Means-tested social assistance payment. |
| Main basis | PRSI and medical certification. | Disability rules, means test and residence conditions. |
| Typical purpose | Shorter-term inability to work because of illness. | Longer-term disability-related payment. |
Common misunderstandings
Where to check officially
Eligibility and rates can depend on the payment, household circumstances and Department of Social Protection assessment. The official sources below are the places to check current rules.
- gov.ie - Illness Benefit
- gov.ie - Operational Guidelines: Illness Benefit
- Citizens Information - Illness Benefit