SSP1 Form
SSP1 Form
SSP1 Form
Our services
Jobcentre Plus has a range of recruitment services and initiatives that can
help you build your workforce. These services range from incentives to help
and encourage you to attract a diverse group of people, to recruitment
support and advice.
Find out more about these services at
www.gov.uk/jobcentre-plus-help-for-recruiters/overview
If you still disagree, you can phone HM Revenue and Customs Statutory
Payments Dispute team on 03000 560 630 for advice.
What to do now
If you are still off work because of an illness or disability, you can make
a claim for benefit from Jobcentre Plus.
You may be able to get money and support:
l to help you get back to work, or
l if you are not able to work in the long term
How the Department for Work and Pensions collects and uses information
When we collect information about you we may use it for any of our purposes. These include:
l social security benefits and allowances
l child maintenance
l employment and training
We may get information about you from other parties for any of our purposes as the law allows to check
the information you provide and improve our services. We may give information about you to other
organisations as the law allows, for example to protect against crime.
To find out more about our purposes, how we use personal information for those purposes and your
information rights, including how to request a copy of your information, please see www.gov.uk
Address
Postcode
2
Part B: Why you cannot get Statutory Sick Pay
I am filling in this form because
I have ticked the boxes below to tell you why you cannot get SSP.
Part E tells you about the reasons in more detail.
A You can claim a social security benefit again that you claimed
before because of an illness or disability.
D You will soon have been getting SSP for 28 weeks or you have had
SSP for 28 weeks.
F You are expecting a baby soon or you have just had a baby.
G You have been sick on and off for more than 3 years.
J You were working outside the UK on the day you first became sick
and I was not liable to pay employer’s Class 1 NI contributions on
your earnings on that day.
3
Part C: Medical statements
Please send this form to your employee with any medical statements you have which
cover a period you cannot pay SSP for.
Medical statements are also known as medical certificates, doctor’s statements or sick
notes.
Tick one of the following boxes
I have enclosed medical statements that cover a period I cannot pay SSP for.
I declare that the information I have given on this form is correct and complete as far
as I know and believe.
I understand that if this employee has been getting SSP, I must continue to pay SSP
up to and including the date before the date I have written on page 3 of this form.
Employer’s name
Employer’s signature
Date / /
Position in firm
Phone number
Fax number
Email address
Employer’s address
Postcode
Employer’s stamp
4
Part E: Reasons why you cannot get SSP
A You cannot get SSP if you claimed Employment and Support Allowance
during the last 12 weeks.
B You cannot get SSP if you are sick after your contract has ended.
C You cannot get SSP after your contract has been ended by your
employer. But your employer will have to pay you SSP if they ended your
contract of employment solely or mainly to avoid paying SSP.
D You cannot get SSP after you have had SSP for 28 weeks in a row. Or for
periods of sickness that are 8 weeks or less apart and which are more
than 28 weeks in total.
E You cannot get SSP if your average weekly earnings were less than the
Lower Earnings Limit for the 8 weeks before you went sick. When your
employer works out your average weekly earnings, they do not take off
tax or National Insurance contributions.
Some employers have a special arrangement with HM Revenue &
Customs to pay Class 1B NI contributions on some of your earnings.
This could mean that your employer could not count all your earnings
when working out your average earnings. Ask your employer if any
of your earnings were included in such an arrangement. And if they
have not done so, ask them to recalculate your earnings as if you had
been paying Class 1 NI contributions on the earnings in the special
arrangement.
5
Part E: Reasons why you cannot get SSP continued
I You cannot get SSP and your SSP will stop if you:
l are in legal custody, or
l were sentenced to a term of imprisonment
J You cannot get SSP if you are employed outside the United Kingdom
(UK) on the day you first became sick unless your employer is
liable to pay the employer’s share of Class 1 National Insurance
contributions for you, or would be if your earnings were high enough.
K You cannot get SSP until you start working for an employer, even if
you have a contract of employment.