You should ask why they are charging £250 as £233.70 is the maximum allowable for a course of treatment.
www.nhs.uk/chq/Pages/1781.aspx?CategoryID=74
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Council Tax - why do seniors have to pay the full amount?
(158 Posts)I think the policy of allowing a 50% reduction in Council Tax for disabled people, even if they work full time, yet allowing no reduction for people in receipt of State Retirement Pension is appalling.
What do you think?
NHS dentist isn't free unless you are on benefits I m just about to pay £250 for treatment and I m on a state pension plus a very very small work pension I m just outside the need for help but I don't really think about it too much I do get a FREE. Bus pass which is worth its weight in gold I also pay my £30 and get reduced rail fares and I get free prescriptions if I need them so I consider I m bloody well off I also get a single persons council tax which is slightly lower Don't you stop paying the tv licence after 75 ....not there yet
I made a mistake about dentistry, but all 60+s receive free prescriptions anyway. They don't have to be in receipt of Pension Credit.
Dentistry isn't free to over 60s. If you don't have an exemption certificate or Pension Credit Guarantee Credit then normal charges apply.
It doesn't seem like rocket science to use the data involved in deciding whether someone is entitled to Pension Credit to indicate whether they should be entitled to free prescriptions, wfa and free prescriptions.
Errrmmm, sorry, I was wrong. Over 60s don't receive free dentistry. I have an NHS Low Income Scheme exemption, which is why I get free dental treatment, not because of my age.
I didn't realise that even if an NHS Dentist is used that it was free? We are on Denplan at the moment, but it is becoming one of the things we may have to think about dropping. As far as I am aware though you do have to pay for treatment on the NHS? Am I wrong? I do hope so.
Pride phoenix I won't get a state pension until I'm at least 67 and 7 months apparently. The goal posts will no doubt have moved by then. I don't think age should give you any entitlement at all.
daphnedill
of course, m'dear, help yourself!
There are also flack jackets, just look in the cupboard under the stairs, on the rack to the right, various sizes, but sadly not a lot of choice when it comes to colours.
@phoenix
Do you have a spare tin helmet?
Very little is free when you turn 60 these days. As far as I know:
Prescriptions
Eye tests (but not glasses)
Senior Railcard costs £30, which then gives reduction on many fares
Old rules still apply regarding Working Tax Credit to anybody in an area where Universal Credit hasn't been introduced. Once a claimant turns 60, WTC can be claimed if working 16 hours (30 for working age people). This is all changing.
On the other hand, 60 year olds can't claim loans for any kind of course. 
If anybody knows of anything else, let us all know (especially those of us waiting another six/seven years for our state pension :-()
I could claim a 25% reduction on our CT because my H has a diagnosis of dementia. I don't claim it as our income is the same whether he has it or not, it didn't seem fair to me to claim.
I thought some things became free at 60, never mind what your retirement age might be. Prescription and eye tests certainly are.
As for dental charges, you're very lucky if you can find an NHS practice where I live, so what I save on the above I lose on the Denplan payments!
Tin helmet time warning!
I know people who are "seniors" with savings in the realm of several thousands, get winter fuel allowance, free tv licence, pay no road tax (mobility car, 4 wheel drive thingy) of course get free prescriptions, dental care etc, in fact they get every benefit going. Currently trying to decide wether to go to Malta for a couple of months, or to visit family in Australia.Oh, and housing association property with all maintenance done for them, at no cost to them.
Working it out, even they admit that they have had more out of the "system" than they have ever put in!
As one of the many women caught between the shifting goal posts of the pension age , I will get nothing until I'm 66! So not only do I have another 8 years of working, but another 8 years of dental charges, prescription fees etc etc
So, sorry, I don't think that being a "senior" should be an automatic entitlement to anything.
There you have it, tin helmet on, chin strap fastened and now safely ensconced behind the sofa.
I take it you mean replacement joints? My mum had one hip done, which transformed her life! Then she had the knee done but it was harder to get over, (she was older, of course) and hasn't given her that much more mobility. She has decided not to have the other knee done as the cons outweigh the pros at her age.
I've just found a bit oc the CA site that says permanent = 1 year or longer, which has to be confirmed by your GP.
According to the council web site the disability has to be permanent, they do not issue temporary BB's. I'm not sure how you determine permanent, if I have to wait until the joint gets to the severe stage that could be a long while as I am not able to walk on it, so why should it suddenly get worse.
MY only hope is that the Physio says they cannot improve the situation and my doctor tries to get me accepted for replacement or the condition becomes classed as permanent (it's replacement I want).
Even if the physio/Dr refer me, it is likely that I will not be able to walk for another 6 months or more. All very depressing atm.
That's down to the local area not policing the BB parking properly, though.
I'm surprised you can't get a BB. I applied for one for my 88yo mum when the council made parking near shops so difficult I couldn't get her close enough that she could walk. She has osteoarthritis and isn't very mobile at all. It wa sgranted and came v quickly. Maybe try again? They can be granted temporarily, at least in Scotland.
She gets her wheelie bin uplifted too, as she can't manage to get it to the pavement. Every year the council phones to ask if she still needs it picked up for the same reason and every years she tells them she's a year older than when they asked her the same question last year. 
Sue, it wasn't the nice car that annoys me (although I was green with envy for the Lamborghini) It's the fact that I am disabled enough not to be able to get in/out of such a low car and yet can't qualify for a blue badge.
I see so many abuses of the blue badge system, people who are probably not the disabled person, using them to park in disabled places.
I don't see a case for wealthier pensioners getting a CT discount. Why should they? And I say that as a retired couple who have to pay stonking CT rates!
I also don't see why someone with a Blue Badge shouldn't have a nice car. Not all disabilities are visible or even physical. I know someone with a BB because her older son is severely autistic and it takes an incredible amount of effort to get him into and out if there car, plus he has no awareness of danger from traffic. She doesn't have a Lamborghini but I wouldn't grudge her one if she did.
A BB for someone sight-impaired is useful for avoiding difficult areas of walking especially at night. The state of some of our pavements are bad enough even with all of one'S faculties. Though I believe BB should not be used if the holder isn't the one accessing the families such as shops.
I tend to agree with you Nellie. I have a blue badge because I can walk about 100 yards.I have joint problems but frequently I see a blind person sitting in a car parked in a disabled bay and the carer nipping around the supermarket.
My driving days are limited because of my sight problems but I would only keep my badge to allow somebody to drive me to an OPD appointment, especially where parking is dire and I had problems walking.
I don't think my MIL who was getting Pension Credit paid any Council Tax.
I think quite a few of us still have more disposable income than younger families.
I think getting a discount if there is only one householder is fine; otherwise no.
It annoys me that I cannot get a blue badge. I cannot walk further than 50 yards even with two sticks, and atm there is no prospect of improvement until it gets worse. But it is considered a temporary condition, even if it goes on for a years or more, and does not qualify. Yet I see sports cars in disabled bays that I could never get in or out of, last month there was a Lamborghini in a disabled bay with a badge !
I find this a bit of an anomally. Those people registered blind automatically get a disabled parking badge whether or not their physical mobilty is affected.
This sounds wrong to me. If you go somewhere in a car and you are blind you obviously should have a driver and persumably that driver could act as your guide.
Many people who have been blind for most of their lives tend to have very good mobility just using their guide dogs or long canes. I await flak now.
There is a reduction if you live alone.
Means testing sounds a great idea but it costs money in staff, paperwork, admin etc. That is why child benefit is not means tested - it costs less that way.
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