Carer Payment at 50 Hours of Care Per Week
If you provide 50 hours of care per week to someone with a severe disability, medical condition, or frailty, you may be eligible for Carer Payment. This page explains how the constant care test applies to 50 hours of weekly care and what payments you could receive. At 50 hours per week, you are well above the minimum threshold and would clearly meet the constant care requirement.
Last verified: 20 March 2026You Likely Meet the Constant Care Test
At 50 hours of care per week, you are likely to meet the "constant care" requirement for Carer Payment. Centrelink generally considers care of 20 or more hours per week, combined with a qualifying ADAT (Adult Disability Assessment Tool) or DCLAD (Disability Care Load Assessment Determination) score, as meeting the constant care test. The care must be provided in the home of the person you are caring for. Providing 50 hours per week clearly demonstrates a high care load and strongly supports your claim.
Carer Payment Rates (2025-26)
| Payment | Single rate/fn | Couple rate/fn (each) |
|---|---|---|
| Carer Payment | $1,116.30 | $841.40 |
| Carer Allowance (on top) | $153.00 | $153.00 |
| Total | $1,269.30 | $994.40 |
Carer Allowance is not income or asset tested. Carer Payment includes base pension and Pension Supplement. Energy Supplement is additional. Current from 20 March 2026.
Income Test
Singles can earn up to $204 per fortnight before Carer Payment is reduced. Above that, your payment reduces by 50 cents for every dollar earned. Couples have a combined income free area of $360 per fortnight. Carer Allowance is NOT affected by income.
Assets Test
Single homeowners can have up to $314,000 in assets. Single non-homeowners: $566,000. Couple homeowners: $470,000 combined. Couple non-homeowners: $722,000 combined. Above these limits, Carer Payment reduces by $3 per fortnight for every $1,000 of excess assets.
Respite Provisions
As a Carer Payment recipient, you are entitled to 63 days of respite care per year (temporary cessation of care). During respite, you continue to receive Carer Payment. This can be used for holidays, hospitalisation of the person you care for, or any break from caring. Unused respite days do not carry over to the next year. Additional respite may be available in special circumstances (e.g., if the care receiver is hospitalised for an extended period). At 50 hours of care per week, respite is especially important for your own wellbeing — make sure you use your respite days.
Work Limits
You can work up to 25 hours per week (including travel time) while receiving Carer Payment, as long as you continue providing constant care. At 50 hours of care per week, combining work with caring requires careful planning. Your employment income is assessed under the income test.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do 50 hours of care per week qualify for Carer Payment?
How much is Carer Payment at 50 hours per week?
Can I work while providing 50 hours of care per week?
What is respite care and how does it work?
What if the person I care for passes away?
Related tools & calculators
This tool provides general information and estimates only based on publicly available data from Services Australia and the Department of Social Services. It does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Results may not reflect your specific circumstances. Always verify with Services Australia before making decisions about your entitlements.
Sources: Services Australia, Department of Social Services. Rates current from 20 March 2026.