Main difference

Jobseeker's Benefit is a social insurance payment. The PRSI contribution record is central to eligibility. Jobseeker's Allowance is a social assistance payment, so a means test is central to the assessment.

Key terms

TermMeaning
PRSIPay Related Social Insurance contributions used for certain social insurance payments.
Means-testedIncome, savings and household circumstances are assessed.
Genuinely seeking workA general jobseeker condition used in official rules.
DurationThe length of time a payment can be paid, subject to rules.

Comparison table

FeatureJobseeker's BenefitJobseeker's Allowance
Based on PRSI?Yes, PRSI contribution conditions apply.No, it is mainly assessed through a means test and other qualifying rules.
Means-tested?No, according to official guidance.Yes.
Duration?Limited duration, depending on PRSI record and current rules.May continue while qualifying conditions are met and means allow.
Who decides?Department of Social Protection.Department of Social Protection.
Official sourcegov.ie and Citizens Information Jobseeker's Benefit pages.gov.ie and Citizens Information Jobseeker's Allowance pages.

Shared jobseeker conditions

Both payments include general jobseeker conditions in official guidance. These can include being unemployed, being capable of work, being available for work and genuinely seeking work.

Common misunderstandings

They are different payment types. Jobseeker's Benefit is PRSI-based, while Jobseeker's Allowance is means-tested.
Eligibility depends on the means test and the general jobseeker conditions.
Official rules set duration limits for Jobseeker's Benefit.

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.